U.S. bank gains from tax law start with red ink
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[January 08, 2018]
By David Henry and Catherine Ngai
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. bank executives
and investors expect a long-term boost from the new federal tax code,
but the biggest lenders will first need to book multi-billion-dollar
charges that will muddle fourth-quarter results.
Banks will adjust deferred tax assets and liabilities to account for a
lower corporate rate, and also take charges related to other tax
changes. But analysts said the overall benefit from lower taxes will
make up for any short-term hit.
Citigroup Inc <C.N> could report a quarterly loss of more than $15
billion and Goldman Sachs Group Inc <GS.N> will likely have lost about
$3 billion, based on analyst estimates and recent profit warnings.
JPMorgan Chase & Co, <JPM.N> which reports first on Friday morning,
could show a 35 percent plunge in net income from a year earlier. Bank
of America Corp <BAC.N>, which reports the following Wednesday, could
show a 50 percent drop.
"It is no doubt going to be a messy quarter," said Jason Goldberg, bank
stock analyst at Barclays.
Citigroup is expected to take a $20 billion charge, largely because its
losses during the 2007-2009 financial crisis will offset future taxes
less now that the corporate tax rate has been cut to 21 percent from 35
percent.
Goldman is expected to take a $5 billion charge, mostly due to a new
repatriation tax on income kept outside of the United States.
Meanwhile, banks with deferred tax liabilities will be able to write
those down thanks to the lower tax rates.
In an extreme case, Wells Fargo & Co <WFC.N> is expected to report a
$2.5 billion boost to its bottom line largely because it will owe less
tax in the future on income from a set of businesses including mortgage
servicing.
But most analysts and institutional investors brush aside big one-time
items, viewing them as accounting charges that reveal little about
underlying financial performance or future profits.
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Lower Manhattan including the financial district is pictured from
the Manhattan borough of New York, U.S. June 1, 2016. REUTERS/Carlo
Allegri/File Photo
Instead, they are confident that big banks will be largely better off from
paying a lower tax rate. Still, just how much each bank will benefit will vary
based on where they earn their income.
Bank of America could earn $4.5 billion, or 19 percent, more in 2019 than it
would have without the lower rates, said Keefe, Bruyette & Woods analyst Brian
Kleinhanzl. That would more than cover an expected $3 billion fourth-quarter
charge.
But Citigroup might get a profit pickup in 2019 of only $1.7 billion, or 11
percent, Kleinhanzl said. That would be far less than the $19.7 billion he
expects in total fourth-quarter charges.
Bank of America earns about 90 percent of its income in the United States,
according to estimates by analyst Richard Ramsden of Goldman Sachs. Citigroup,
meanwhile, has been getting only about 50 percent of its earnings at home, so
will not benefit as much from lower U.S. tax rates.
Analysts plan to push executives in conference calls for clues about whether
investors will benefit as much as they hope.
Banks could provide a boon by putting more money toward stock buybacks and
dividends. But there is worry they will be too quick to shift those dollars
towards trying to beat competitors with lower prices on loans and better
services for customers.
"Banks benefit from a lower corporate tax rate," said Barclays' Goldberg, "but
what will they do (with the extra money)?"
(Reporting by David Henry and Catherine Ngai in New York; Editing by Lauren Tara
LaCapra and Meredith Mazzilli)
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