Spotting Banks In Danger
The SEC is looking to expand investigations into the spread of false rumors that may affect the financial system. Articles at Reuters and Bloomberg mention the recent slide in Freddie Mac (FRE) and Fannie Mae (FNM), as well as Lehman Brothers (LEH), for the increased SEC attention. No word in either article whether a member of Congress will be investigated after the recent collapse of IndyMac, although an LA Times article does mentioned that some federal regulators are looking into the issue.
This all comes just as the International Herald Tribune is reporting how banking analysts are predicting that as many as 150 of the 7,500 banks nationwide (mainly small and mid-size) could fail over the next 12 to 18 months. Others disagree and state that while there will be liquidity issues, many lenders are likely to first either shut branches or seek mergers with stronger banks. The article also notes that the nation's banks are in less danger now than in the late 1980s and early 1990s when over 1,000 institutions failed during the savings-and-loan crisis. Unfortunately, even with fewer bank failures, the $125 billion government bailout that resulted at the time may seem like a good deal if things were to get as messy this time around. Hopefully we can avoid reaching the same levels, but some analysts are not optimistic.
Some perspective is in order. In 1994, the FDIC listed 575 banks that it considered to be troubled, while earlier this year only around 90 banks were listed - but the list is probably growing. Yet given recently developments, more failures are likely beyond the six already reported given that bank failures are a lagging indicator. Of interest is that IndyMac was not on the troubled bank list earlier this year, highlighting the fluidity of the problem. Also, of the $53 billion the FDIC has to reimburse consumers of failed banks, IndyMac is estimated to need between $4-8 billion, putting more pressure on existing banks, and possibly forcing the government to get more involved as it has recently with Freddie and Fannie.
Not unexpectedly, short sellers are jumping into the waters as various regional banks, such as BankUnited Financial Corporation (BKUNA), now trading under a dollar, and the Downey Financial Corporation (DSL), trading between $1-2 after reaching a 52 week high of $65.67, have been highlighted as having potential problems.
In order to spot banks in danger, two popular ratios are used. First, when you divide non-performing assets by all outstanding loans, you find that a ratio over 5% signals danger (see CNBC article). Using this ratio you find that other banks, in addition to BankUnited and Downey (BankUnited's ratio is 5.36%, while Downey is at 13.86%) are suspect, including Corus Bankshares (CORS) at a 13.18% ratio, Doral Financial (DRL) at 12.82%, and FirstFed Financial (FED) at 6.73%. A second commonly used ratio that compares non-performing assets divided by reserves plus common equity causes Washington Mutual (WM), with a ratio of 40.6%, to also become suspect. Any value around 40% is thought to be in the danger zone.
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This article has 17 comments:
Disclosure: I have a long position in CORS stock.
investor
investor
ter
Up here in the garret we have tv and often especially at yuletide they show this really great old movie with James Stewart and Donna Reed.
Course everyone's seen it dozens of times - old time savings and loan threatened with a run, saved by Stewart and the bell. Bad guy Lionel Barrymore wants to buy it out and close it so ordinary people can't afford to buy their own home but have to rent from him.
Then a 'credit crunch' - 'solvency crisis' or is it fraud - the money has disappeared (lost) (taken away by the bad guy). Stewart is bereft and jumps in the river - he nearly sells out!!
In the end though an angel steps (jumps) in and... well you know the rest - everybody digs deep in their pockets to find the money to bail out the bank!
It's set 60 years ago and nothing like it could happen today. But as we sit here, dreaming up art stuff like paintings and video wheezes, me and Opkins (the mouse) and Spider (the spider) don't feel as secure as we used to . No sirree not quite as secure as we used to.
gorilla
Why quote "# of banks" as though that's significant? After nearly 20 years of bank consolidations, "# of banks" is a misleading comparison.
I read elsewhere that Texas banks in the 80's were often independent from one county to the next. Many small banks went under. Rather than quote "# of banks", maybe it's better to quote total cap in absolute terms or perhaps as a % of GDP.
investor
biz.yahoo.com/bw/08041...
www4.fdic.gov/IDASP/ma...
Non-accrual assets for banks include loans which for whatever reason have stopped earning interest. There are myriad reasons for loans to cease being earning assets, not just delinquency (though that's a primary cause). Sometimes the borrower files bankruptcy prior to the 90+ day delinquency, and the bank must place the loan on nonaccrual until the bankruptcy is settled; sometimes a borrower disappears (remember the phantom developers during the S & L crisis?). Other things can happen as well--natural disasters, etc., which can cause a loan to cease to perform even if it wasn't past due.
Conversely, some loans will have terms that on face may look risky, but are structured for a specific reason. Classically, construction loans fall into that category. Typical construction loans have maturities longer than one year and no specific repayment schedule except possibly a permanent mortgage at the completion of construction. In this case, the loan structure appears risky, but properly managed, a bank can reduce the risk with effective underwriting techniques.
The non-accrual designation provides a consistent method of determining the relative health of a loan portfolio. Generally speaking, the lower the non-accrual asset percentage, the better managed the portfolio.
If one assumes that these statistics may be somewhat correct, then it should not require much diligence to spot the 98% "safe" banks. Even using a dart board to separate the loosers from the pack, I would be correct 98% of the time.
Also, if some data is incorrect it brings into question the source of the data and if any other data in the article is incorrect too.
er