Comerica to Exit Mortgage Banker Finance Business by End of Year

(Reuters) Comerica Inc said on Tuesday it was planning to exit mortgage banker finance business by the end of the year, in a bid to improve the U.S. regional lender's loan-to-deposit ratio and capital efficiency.

The bank in a presentation at a Morgan Stanley conference said the exit will help to blunt the effects of seasonality and cyclicality on its loan portfolio.

Shares of the bank rose 5.5% to $43.30 in early trading and were down nearly 39% this year, in the aftermath of the biggest crisis to hit the sector since 2008.

Since the collapse of three banks earlier this year, following a deposit run, regional lenders have been trying to shore up liquidity to boost investor confidence by shedding loan portfolios in a high interest rate environment.

Comerica's exit is expected to improve its loan-to-deposit ratio by about 150 basis points at year-end.

Earlier this month, Canada's Fairfax Financial Partners agreed to buy a huge chunk of California-based regional lender PacWest Bancorp's real estate loans from property investment firm Kennedy-Wilson for $2.1 billion.

In the first-quarter, Comerica's average deposits fell about 5% to $67.8 billion from the previous quarter, as spooked customers moved their money out of smaller banks and into the perceived safety of bigger 'too-big-to-fail' Wall Street institutions.

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