As banks surge, will
shareholders get their cut?: James Saft
Send a link to a friend
[February 14, 2017]
By James Saft
(Reuters) -
That
the Trump agenda is good for banks is self-evident; that shareholders
will get their cut is a lot less likely.
Friday’s news of the resignation of Daniel Tarullo, the Federal Reserve
official who served as quarterback of the effort to tame systemic risk
in the banking system, touched off another leg in a sustained and
powerful rally of U.S. bank shares, which are up nearly 30 percent since
shortly before the election.
Coming just after Trump’s order to review and likely gut Dodd-Frank Act
legislation, Tarullo’s exit, planned for April, cements the view that
U.S. banks will be allowed to carry less capital. A move to delay
implementation of the application of the Fiduciary Rule to retirement
advisors is a good indicator that highly profitable but low-value (for
clients) products will continue to generate revenues.
To an investor from Mars more revenue spread across less equity would
seem to be a sure thing.
Those of us who’ve lived on Earth these past two decades should have our
doubts. There is a reason banks, especially the largest and those which
operate investment banks, trade at such low multiples of earnings, and
it is not because they have a proud track record of rewarding
shareholders.
Since February 1993 the KBW index of bank shares has returned only about
60 percent as much as the S&P 500 and done so while treating investors
to teeth-rattling sell-offs in 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008 and
2009.
The winners? Well, bank employees of course, who’ve trousered serial
fortunes at the expense of taxpayers and shareholders. A move to relax
oversight or put the capital bar lower will set taxpayers up to fund a
bailout once again, but probably not before we see a couple of explosive
rallies and some just as explosive sell-offs in banking shares over the
next three to five years.
Complexity will come back into vogue, creating more opportunities for
banks to sell clients, and bankers their banks, risks they don’t
understand. You can hardly blame them. Opportunities to take the upside
when others own the risks are few and far between in this life.
Expecting Trump and his appointees to govern otherwise ignores the
lessons his own business career teaches. Expecting bankers to police
themselves is just silly.
SHORT TERM VS LONG TERM
Two elements in the Trump agenda are fundamentally positive for banking
profitability: deregulation and reflation. While the former leaves
shareholders as likely fall guys for self-interested risk-taking by
insiders, the second is legitimately positive.
[to top of second column] |
A computer screen showing stock graphs is reflected on glasses in
this illustration photo taken in Bordeaux, France, March 30, 2016.
REUTERS/Regis Duvignau
Fiscal stimulus and tax cuts pose a problem down the road but over the
short term even their prospect has already driven interest rate
expectations higher and increased the gap between short- and long-term
interest rates. As the banking business model is predicated on borrowing
short and lending long, a flat yield curve is bad news and negative
interest rates, as seen in much of the world last year, are poison. A
bit of inflation, even more than a bit, is just what banks need; it
makes them more profitable and helps whet clients’ appetite for debt.
And don’t expect the Fed to spoil the party. With Tarullo’s exit Trump
will be able to fill three of the seven governor positions at the Fed.
If he does not offer Janet Yellen another term at chair next February he
may get another.
So why, if they will only get shafted in the end, do investors persist
in backing the banking sector follies? An insight from Paul Woolley, of
the London School of Economics, about how asset managers are punished
and rewarded helps to explain.
Most fund managers are asked to beat a stock market index, or one which
tracks other funds, without taking too many huge bets. Outperform, or at
least stay close to the pack, and you will probably continue to draw a
hefty pay packet. Trail the market badly and out the door you go.
That forces money managers to buy what is going up strongly, and as we
are seeing few sectors can rally as explosively as banks when the going
is good. Just as bankers have perverse incentives to make money while
times are good, so do fund managers, whose performance is judged quarter
to quarter or at best over three-year intervals.
We’ve seen this movie before, and though we may like the popcorn we
won’t enjoy the ending.
(Editing by James Dalgleish)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|