Big U.S. banks’ day of reckoning is delayed

Heading into third-quarter earnings season, analysts were expecting relatively upbeat results for the largest U.S. banks. 

Credit costs were expected to decline from the previous quarter, and they did, to a greater extent than expected. Among the 10 largest U.S. banks, eight reported better-than-expected earnings, with some beating estimates by a wide margin. 

But most of the stocks have declined since earnings season began. Below are tables comparing actual results to analysts’ estimates and to previous quarters.

Loan losses rise only slightly

The largest banks made outsized provisions for credit losses (the amount added to loan loss reserves, which directly lowers pre-tax earnings) during the first and second quarters, to prepare for an expected wave of loan defaults. This is normal activity in any recession.

So two quarters of earnings were depressed or wiped out for many banks that focus on lending, as opposed to trust and custody or investment banks. That changed during the third quarter, with much lower provisions. 

Capital One Financial Corp. US:COF released $742 million in loan loss reserves during the third quarter — that is, the bank’s net loan charge-offs exceeded its provisions for reserves by that much, boosting earnings. Its loan losses during the third quarter were down tremendously from the second quarter of 2020 and even from the year-earlier quarter.

During a recession and recovery cycle, sequential comparisons of banks’ results can be more important than the usual year-over-year comparisons, not only because of loan defaults and losses but because of the rapid decline in interest rates. For the largest banks, third-quarter provisions were down significantly from the second quarter.

Here are the 10 largest U.S. banks by total assets, with third-quarter provisions for loan losses compared with consensus estimates among analysts polled by FactSet from our Oct. 8 earnings preview, along with actual figures for the previous quarter and the third quarter of 2019. 

All dollar figures in the following tables are in millions, except for total assets, which are in billions. Scroll the table to see all the data.

BANK TICKER PROVISION FOR LOAN LOSS RESERVES - Q3 2020 ESTIMATED PROVISION FOR LOAN LOSSES - Q3 2020 - OCT. 7 ACTUAL Q3 PROVISION, LESS ESTIMATE PROVISION FOR LOAN LOSS RESERVES - Q2 2020 PROVISION FOR LOAN LOSS RESERVES - Q3 2019 TOTAL ASSETS ($ BILLIONS)
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. US:JPM $611 $2,885 -$2,274 $10,473 $1,514 $3,246
Bank of America Corp US:BAC $1,389 $2,236 -$847 $5,117 $779 $2,738
Citigroup Inc. US:C $1,809 $4,004 -$2,195 $7,903 $2,071 $2,234
Wells Fargo & Co. US:WFC $769 $1,921 -$1,152 $9,534 $695 $1,922
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. US:GS $278 $550 -$272 $1,590 $291 $1,132
Morgan Stanley US:MS $0 N/A N/A $246 $0 $956
U.S. Bancorp US:USB $635 $806 -$171 $1,737 $367 $540
Truist Financial Corp. US:TFC $421 $603 -$182 $844 $117 $499
PNC Financial Services Group Inc. US:PNC $52 $394 -$342 $2,463 $183 $462
Bank of New York Mellon Corp. US:BK $9 $40 -$31 $143 -$16 $428
Capital One Financial Corp. US:COF 331  $2,160 -$1,829 $4,246 $1,383 $422
State Street Corp. US:STT $0 $18 -$18 $52 $2 $272
Source: FactSet

Click on the tickers for more about each bank holding company, including news coverage, analysts’ ratings and price targets.

“The jury is still out” on how severely the pandemic credit crisis will be for loan portfolios, according to Pri de Silva, a senior corporate bond analyst at Aware Asset Management in New York. During an interview, de Silva said credit losses tend to peak at the end of a recession. 

“That trend should hold steady this time. If you look at the COVID-19 recession, three quarters in, losses are still in line with 2019.”

Net charge-offs are loan balances written off and charged against reserves, less any recoveries. Here are those totals from the third quarter, compared with the second quarter of 2020 and the third quarter of 2019:

BANK TICKER NET CHARGE-OFFS - Q3 2020 NET CHARGE-OFFS - Q2 2020 NET CHARGE-OFFS - Q3 2019
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. US:JPM $1,200 $1,560 $1,371
Bank of America Corp US:BAC $972 $1,146 $811
Citigroup Inc. US:C $1,919 $2,206 $1,913
Wells Fargo & Co. US:WFC $683 $1,113 $645
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. US:GS $340 N/A N/A
Morgan Stanley US:MS N/A N/A N/A
U.S. Bancorp US:USB $515 $437 $352
Truist Financial Corp. US:TFC   $326 $390 $153
PNC Financial Services Group Inc. US:PNC $155 $236 $155
Bank of New York Mellon Corp. US:BK -$2 -$3 $1
Capital One Financial Corp. US:COF $1,073 $1,505 $1,462
State Street Corp. US:STT   $0 $0 $0
Source: FactSet

For most of the big banks listed here, net charge-offs declined sequentially during the third quarter. Here’s another look at charge-off activity relative to average loans:

BANK TICKER NET CHARGE-OFFS/ AVG. LOANS - Q3 2020 NET CHARGE-OFFS/ AVG. LOANS - Q2, 2020 NET CHARGE-OFFS/ AVG. LOANS - Q3, 2019
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. US:JPM 0.63% 0.59% 0.59%
Bank of America Corp US:BAC 0.47% 0.44% 0.37%
Citigroup Inc. US:C N/A 1.21% 1.15%
Wells Fargo & Co. US:WFC 0.48% 0.37% 0.28%
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. US:GS N/A 0.70% 0.57%
Morgan Stanley US:MS N/A 0.09% 0.01%
U.S. Bancorp US:USB 0.56% 0.50% 0.48%
Truist Financial Corp. US:TFC N/A 0.34% 0.38%
PNC Financial Services Group Inc. US:PNC 0.37% 0.32% 0.24%
Bank of New York Mellon Corp. US:BK -0.01% -0.01% 0.00%
Capital One Financial Corp. US:COF 1.72% 2.38% 2.38%
State Street Corp. US:STT 0.22% 0.07% 0.00%
Source: FactSet

Net charge-off ratios aren’t yet available for all the banks because average loans won’t be available until their full 10-Q reports are filed. But you can see small sequential and year-over-year increases in net charge-off rates, which are still at historically low levels for any economy. Capital One Financial’s charge-off rates are higher than the others because of its concentration in credit-card loans, which made up 42% of the bank’s total loans held for investment as of Sept. 30. That also explains Capital One’s much higher net interest margin, below.

During J.P. Morgan Chase’s US:JPM  third-quarter earnings call, CEO Jamie Dimon said that under his team’s “base case” economic projections, the bank was “probably something like $10 billion over-reserved.” Dimon also cautioned that it was “hard to predict” the direction and timing of a continuing economic recovery and said the bank was “prepared for a relatively adverse case.”

Being over-reserved by $10 billion points to an eventually release of reserves that would pad earnings and support good comparisons several quarters out. When asked about $10 billion in potential reserve releases, de Silva said “it is possible.”

JPM, Citigroup US:C  and Bank of America US:BAC  “have reserved the most because they are the biggest credit card issuers. Any time realized losses come in better than expected, those are the ones that are going to outperform,” de Silva said. 

Dan Eye, head of asset allocation and equity research at Fort Pitt Capital Group in Pittsburgh, said JPM is his favorite stock in the space right now, because of its “fortress balance sheet, great management team and great capital position.”

But Mark Doctoroff, the global co-head of MUFG’s Financial Institutions Group, said it’s too early to expect a rosy credit cycle. The effect of the federal government’s stimulus programs to help consumers and businesses, along with loan forbearances for mortgage borrowers and delays of evictions for renters who are unable to pay, has been “kind of kicking the can.” 

“Going forward, stimulus talks continue and there is a lot of damage to the economy. In New York City, there are for-rent or lease signs everywhere,” he added during an interview. He expects to have a better indication of whether or not banks will see actual damage to their balance sheets from loan losses in the first quarter of 2022.

Declining interest income

With the Federal Reserve lowering the target for the short-term federal-funds rate to a range of zero to 0.25% and pushing down long-term interest rates by buying bonds, the yield curve has flattened, making it more difficult for banks to earn their usual spread income.

BANK TICKER NET INTEREST INCOME - Q3, 2020 NET INTEREST INCOME - Q2, 2020 NET INTEREST INCOME - Q3, 2019
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. US:JPM $13,013 $13,853 $14,228
Bank of America Corp US:BAC $10,129 $10,848 $12,187
Citigroup Inc. US:C $10,493 $11,080 $11,641
Wells Fargo & Co. US:WFC $9,368 $9,880 $11,625
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. US:GS $1,084 $944 $1,008
Morgan Stanley US:MS $1,486 $1,600 $1,218
U.S. Bancorp US:USB $3,227 $3,200 $3,281
Truist Financial Corp. US:TFC $3,362 $3,448 $1,700
PNC Financial Services Group Inc. US:PNC $2,484 $2,527 $2,504
Bank of New York Mellon Corp. US:BK $703 $780 $731
Capital One Financial Corp. US:COF $5,555 $5,460 $5,737
State Street Corp. US:STT $478 $559 $644
Source: FactSet

Net interest income was down for most of the big banks not only because of narrower spreads but because of declining lending activity. During the third quarter, mortgage lending volume declined from the second quarter, when there was a spike in refinancing activity because of the sharp decline in interest rates, according to Eye.

A bank’s net interest margin is its interest income, less interest on deposits and borrowings, divided by average total assets. 

Net interest margins have narrowed for most of the big banks:

BANK TICKER NET INTEREST MARGIN - Q3, 2020 NET INTEREST MARGIN - Q2, 2020 NET INTEREST MARGIN - Q3, 2019
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. US:JPM 1.82% 1.99% 2.41%
Bank of America Corp US:BAC 1.72% 1.87% 2.41%
Citigroup Inc. US:C 2.03% 2.17% 2.56%
Wells Fargo & Co. US:WFC 2.13% 2.25% 2.66%
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. US:GS N/A 0.38% 0.44%
Morgan Stanley US:MS N/A 0.90% 0.60%
U.S. Bancorp US:USB 2.67% 2.62% 3.02%
Truist Financial Corp. US:TFC 3.26% 3.13% 3.37%
PNC Financial Services Group Inc. US:PNC 2.39% 2.52% 2.84%
Bank of New York Mellon Corp. US:BK N/A 0.88% 0.99%
Capital One Financial Corp. US:COF 5.68% 5.78% 6.73%
State Street Corp. US:STT 0.85% 0.93% 1.42%
Source: FactSet

There’s always hope from the banks that the yield curve will steepen. 

“We can still see rates move on the longer end of the curve,” Eye said. “What would drive that would be better economic data and some inflation in the system as well.” 

Those might lead to a curtailment of bond purchases by the Federal Reserve. It is also possible that a continuing $3 trillion federal budget deficit will flood the market with enough new bonds to push long-term interest rates higher. 

Fee income

“You see the earnings power of banks like J.P. Morgan Chase — it is pretty impressive. But the driving factor in overperformance has been trading revenue and investment-banking fees, which are volatile,” Doctoroff said.

Here’s non-interest income for the third quarter compared with consensus estimates among analysts polled by FactSet from our Oct. 8 earnings preview, along with actual figures for the second quarter of 2020 and the third quarter of 2019:

BANK TICKER NON-INTEREST INCOME - Q3 2020 ESTIMATED NON-INTEREST INCOME - Q3 2020 - OCT. 7 ACTUAL Q3 NON-INTEREST INCOME LESS ESTIMATE NON-INTEREST INCOME - Q2 2020 NON-INTEREST INCOME - Q3 2019
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. US:JPM $16,134 $14,911 $1,223 $24,049 $15,239
Bank of America Corp US:BAC $10,207 $10,476 -$269 $11,512 $10,632
Citigroup Inc. US:C $6,835 $6,501 $334 $8,773 $6,987
Wells Fargo & Co. US:WFC $9,494 $8,266 $1,228 $12,334 $10,815
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. US:GS $9,697 $8,789 $908 $12,461 $7,805
Morgan Stanley US:MS $10,171 $9,338 $833 $11,932 $11,052
U.S. Bancorp US:USB $2,712 $2,504 $208 $2,049 $1,873
Truist Financial Corp. US:TFC $2,215 $2,004 $211 $2,545 $1,195
PNC Financial Services Group Inc. US:PNC $1,797 $1,523 $274 $1,584 $1,830
Bank of New York Mellon Corp. US:BK $3,117 $3,131 -$14 $3,157 $3,134
Capital One Financial Corp. US:COF $1,826 $1,157 -$1,157 $1,096 $1,222
State Street Corp. US:STT $2,306 $2,265 $41 $2,163 $2,100
Source: FactSet
EPS

Most of the 10 largest U.S. banks beat third-quarter consensus earnings-per-share estimates:

BANK TICKER EPS - Q3 2020 ESTIMATED EPS - Q3 2020 - OCT. 7 ACTUAL Q3 EPS LESS ESTIMATE EPS - Q2 2020 EPS - Q3 2019
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. US:JPM   $2.92 $2.22 $0.70 $1.38 $2.68
Bank of America Corp US:BAC   $0.51 $0.49 $0.02 $0.37 $0.56
Citigroup Inc. US:C   $1.40 $0.89 $0.51 $0.50 $2.07
Wells Fargo & Co. US:WFC   $0.42 $0.44 -$0.02 -$0.66 $0.92
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. US:GS   $9.68 $5.28 $4.40 $0.55 $4.79
Morgan Stanley US:MS   $1.66 $1.24 $0.42 $1.96 $1.27
U.S. Bancorp US:USB   $0.99 $0.90 $0.09 $0.41 $1.15
Truist Financial Corp. US:TFC   $0.79 $0.81 -$0.02 $0.67 $0.95
PNC Financial Services Group Inc. US:PNC   $3.40 $2.02 $1.38 $8.43 $2.94
Bank of New York Mellon Corp. US:BK   $0.98 $0.94 $0.04 $1.01 $1.07
Capital One Financial Corp. US:COF   $5.06 $2.08 $2.98 -$2.21 $2.69
State Street Corp. US:STT   $1.45 $1.41 $0.04 $1.86 $1.42
Source: FactSet

So 2020, so far, can only be called a good year for the banks — the group looked ahead during the first and second quarters and set aside a lot of money to weather the expected loan loss storm, which was delayed by unprecedented government and central-bank stimulus.

But “you can’t keep the patient on life support forever,” Doctoroff said, pointing to a possible spike in loan losses during the fourth quarter and first quarter of 2021. There’s no way of knowing how long this credit cycle may last because of all the uncertainty about containing the coronavirus.

Once there is a clear light at the end of the tunnel, reserve releases and a steepening yield curve may set up a long period of rising earnings for the banks. Eye said Fort Pitt Capital Group has “a slight overweight with the financials, so the rebound play is in line with our view.”

This article originally appeared on MarketWatch.

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