Deep Dive: These Bank Stocks Could Be Crushed If The Fed Keeps Lowering Interest Rates

The Federal Reserve’s looser monetary policy doesn’t bode well for bank profits. And a new report from Keefe, Bruyette & Woods analyst Frederick Cannon paints a far uglier scenario if the U.S. moves closer to the negative-rate environment of other developed economies.

Cannon’s report was published Sept. 25 and included price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios based on KBW’s earnings estimates for 2021, and also another set of P/E ratios based on a scenario under which the federal funds rate moves to a range of 0% to 0.25% by the end of 2020 and the yield on 10-year U.S. Treasury Notes TMUBMUSD10Y, -2.20%  “goes negative” in the third quarter of 2020.

While it may still seem far-fetched to have negative yields in the U.S., it’s important to keep in mind that the federal funds rate target was 0% to 0.25% for seven years through Dec. 16, 2015. We can easily go back there and if demand for U.S. dollars continues to be strong, negative yields on the 10-year bond may even be likely, unless a significantly strengthening economy forces the Fed to change direction again.

Cannon also analyzed another scenario that combines low rates with a recession. But in this article we are only looking at numbers drawn from the negative-rate scenario, leaving out a recession.

Negative interest rates would not only affect banks, they would also hurt most financial-services companies whose profits depend on the spread between what they pay for funding and what they earn on loans. Charles Schwab SCHW, -2.20%,  the pioneering discount broker that is technically a savings-and-loan holding company, is a prime example. The company announced this month that it would cut 600 jobs, with CEO Walt Bettinger citing the decline in interest rates.

According to Schwab’s second-quarter income statement, net interest revenue totaled $1.61 billion, or 60% of total net revenue. Schwab’s shares trade for 16.2 times KBW’s current 2021 earnings-per-share estimate, but for 41.8 times the 2021 EPS estimate under the firm’s “negative-interest-rate scenario.” Under that scenario, KBW’s 2021 earnings estimate for Schwab drops 61% to a dollar a share from $2.58.

Here are the 20 financial-services companies in KBW’s coverage universe whose earnings estimates would decline the most under the firm’s negative-interest-rate scenario:

Company Ticker Closing price - Sept. 25 KBW's current 2021 EPS estimate KBW's 2021 EPS estimate under negative-interest-rate scenario KBW's 2021 EPS estimate decline under negative-interest-rate scenario P/E - current 2021 EPS estimate P/E - scenario 2021 EPS estimate
Charles Schwab Corp. SCHW, -2.20% $41.80 $2.58 $1.00 61.2% 16.2 41.8
E-TRADE Financial Corp. ETFC, -4.81% $44.12 $3.90 $1.85 52.6% 11.3 23.8
SVB Financial Group SIVB, -3.74% $214.05 $17.00 $10.50 38.2% 12.6 20.4
CIT Group Inc. CIT, -0.99% $45.68 $5.01 $3.12 37.7% 9.1 14.6
TriState Capital Holdings Inc. TSC, -2.76% $21.71 $2.16 $1.35 37.5% 10.1 16.1
ProAssurance Corp. PRA, -0.21% $40.67 $0.79 $0.51 35.4% 51.5 79.7
Interactive Brokers Group Inc. Class A IBKR, -0.54% $51.73 $2.42 $1.56 35.5% 21.4 33.2
Comerica Inc. CMA, -0.79% $65.50 $6.98 $4.59 34.2% 9.4 14.3
Zions BanCorp. N.A. ZION, -0.92% $44.37 $4.40 $3.09 29.8% 10.1 14.4
M&T Bank Corp. MTB, -0.21% $157.24 $14.63 $10.36 29.2% 10.7 15.2
Citizens Financial Group Inc. CFG, -1.24% $35.60 $4.05 $2.90 28.4% 8.8 12.3
Metropolitan Bank Holding Corp. MCB, -0.10% $40.82 $5.26 $3.80 27.8% 7.8 10.7
Amalgamated Bank AMAL, -0.37% $16.16 $1.60 $1.16 27.5% 10.1 13.9
Fifth Third Bancorp FITB, -0.98% $27.66 $3.24 $2.35 27.5% 8.5 11.8
East West Bancorp Inc. EWBC, -2.96% $45.60 $4.60 $3.40 26.1% 9.9 13.4
Western Alliance Bancorp WAL, -1.81% $46.53 $4.45 $3.30 25.8% 10.5 14.1
Huntington Bancshares Inc. HBAN, -0.80% $14.37 $1.28 $0.95 25.8% 11.2 15.1
UMB Financial Corp. UMBF, -1.67% $65.82 $4.25 $3.20 24.7% 15.5 20.6
Wintrust Financial Corp. WTFC, -1.72% $65.61 $6.05 $4.55 24.8% 10.8 14.4
Provident Financial Services Inc. PFS, -2.10% $25.22 $1.59 $1.20 24.5% 15.9 21.0
 Sources: Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, FactSet

The much higher P/E ratios for many of these companies underline how dire the negative-interest-rate scenario could be. And these numbers don’t even reflect the possibility of a recession to go along with the negative rates.

Here’s the same data for the “big six” U.S. banks:

Company Ticker Closing price - Sept. 25 KBW's current 2021 EPS estimate KBW's 2021 EPS estimate under negative-interest-rate scenario KBW's 2021 EPS estimate decline under negative-interest-rate scenario P/E - current 2021 EPS estimate P/E - scenario 2021 EPS estimate
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. JPM, -0.80% $118.00 $10.70 $9.83 8.1% 11.0 12.0
Bank of America Corp. BAC, -0.41% $29.25 $3.08 $2.75 10.7% 9.5 10.6
Citigroup Inc. C, -0.39% $69.38 $8.40 $7.75 7.7% 8.3 9.0
Wells Fargo & Co. WFC, -0.81% $49.26 $4.40 $3.94 10.5% 11.2 12.5
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. GS, -0.84% $210.03 $25.75 $25.39 1.4% 8.2 8.3
Morgan Stanley MS, -0.98% $43.04 $5.35 $4.99 6.7% 8.0 8.6
Sources: Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, FactSet

It’s fascinating to see that even under the negative-interest-rate scenario, the largest banks’ P/E valuations wouldn’t be much higher.

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