Wells Fargo loses steam in commercial lending as rivals
pounce
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[April 17, 2018]
By David Henry
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wells Fargo & Co's two
biggest competitors have been nabbing market share in lending to
commercial and industrial customers in the American heartland, a sign of
how difficult it has become for the scandal-tarnished bank to defend its
position against rivals.
Earnings reports in recent days showed Wells Fargo's book of C&I loans
in the United States down 1 percent, on average, during the first
quarter compared with the year-earlier period. In contrast, JPMorgan
Chase & Co's gained 5 percent and Bank of America Corp's was 4 percent
higher.
Although the banks define C&I loans somewhat differently, their reports
track government data showing Wells falling behind over the past five
years from a near-tie with Bank of America and losing ground to JPMorgan.
(GRAPHIC: https://tmsnrt.rs/2qDp7Na)
Those two banks attributed gains to opening offices and adding bankers
in smaller cities around the country, a strategy Wells Fargo has
embraced for decades. But as Wells struggles to recover from a sales
scandal that has touched customers in businesses ranges from deposits,
credit cards, mortgages and auto lending to wealth management, it has
become harder for the bank to maintain its competitive edge.
Chief Financial Officer John Shrewsberry said as much on Friday when an
analyst asked whether Wells Fargo is losing any customers because of
negative headlines.
"We have to compete a little bit harder," he said, noting that rivals
have been trying harder to steal business during Wells Fargo's time of
vulnerability.
Asked by Reuters about the decline in C&I lending specifically,
Shrewsberry said that while Wells Fargo competes aggressively on
pricing, it has been stricter about loan structures than other banks.
For example, Wells might give a borrower a lower interest rate but would
not offer a bigger loan or extend the duration or relax loan terms.
Since 2010, JPMorgan has opened 52 new commercial lending offices,
including in San Francisco, where Wells is based, as well as in Silicon
Valley's Palo Alto, Omaha, Nebraska, and Memphis, Tennessee. It has also
hired as many as 100 commercial bankers each year, many of whom cater to
companies with annual revenue of just $20 million to $500 million.
Using a similar strategy, Bank of America has hired some 400 commercial
bankers in recent years.
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A Wells Fargo branch is seen in the Chicago suburb of Evanston,
Illinois, U.S., February 10, 2015. REUTERS/Jim Young/File Photo
Banks tend to forge long-lasting bonds with C&I borrowers that can lead to
additional work, such as managing cash, handling payments, issuing corporate
credit cards, raising money in capital markets and even advising on
acquisitions. That makes Wells Fargo's market share decline particularly
troubling, said Keefe, Bruyette & Woods analyst Brian Kleinhanzl.
"If you are winning the C&I piece, you are deepening the relationship, which is
good for revenue growth," he said.
The market share shift represents a change in fortune for Wells, which came
through the 2007-2009 financial crisis strong enough to acquire a failing rival
and avoid many of the embarrassing scandals that plagued other big banks.
That changed in September 2016, when Wells reached a $190 million regulatory
settlement over opening what turned out to be as many as 3.5 million phony
customer accounts to hit sales targets. Since then, the No. 3 U.S. bank by
assets has discovered several other problems and now faces another regulatory
penalty of $1 billion.
Executives have downplayed the scandal's impact on profitability or market
share, saying Wells is "open for business," and that few customers have left.
But analysts who spoke to Reuters said they believe the scandal is starting to
hurt Wells Fargo's competitive edge, either because customers are displeased or
because executives are too distracted by lawsuits, regulatory probes and
organizational changes to run the bank as well as they otherwise would.
"Obviously, management has been focused on the issues around the sales
practices," said Allen Tischler, an analyst at Moody's Investors Service who has
tracked the lost market share.
Nonetheless, Wells' CFO Shrewsberry was optimistic about the outlook for C&I
lending, which he expects to grow this year as commercial borrowers take on more
leverage for expansion plans.
Speaking about Wells Fargo's balance sheet more broadly, he said areas with
sharp declines, like auto and home equity loans, are where the bank has
purposefully pulled back because of credit concerns.
"Our loan portfolio is getting safer and safer," he said, "and it's smaller."
(Reporting by David Henry in New York; Editing by Lauren Tara LaCapra and Dan
Grebler)
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