Soaring unemployment increases odds U.S. banks will cut
dividends
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[April 04, 2020] By
David Henry
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Questions are building
about whether big U.S. banks will have to cut dividends later this year
as the coronavirus crisis puts a record portion of Americans out of
work, making it difficult for borrowers to pay back loans.
Wall Street analysts were initially skeptical that U.S. lenders would
have to follow European counterparts and non-financial companies that
have already done so, but in recent days, some have started to take the
possibility more seriously.
Banks that have heavy exposure to credit cards are most at risk, they
said.
Those lenders, including Citigroup Inc <C.N>, JPMorgan Chase & Co <JPM.N>
and Capital One Financial Corp <COF.N>, may breach Federal Reserve
limits on using capital for dividends when loan losses escalate and
erode profits.
"One of the most important variables that will determine whether banks
have adequate capital to maintain dividends is the extent to which
consumers draw down on outstanding credit-card lines," Goldman Sachs
bank analyst Richard Ramsden said in a report on Thursday.
Credit cards have an "outsized impact," Ramsden said, because lenders
have extended some $2 trillion in those loans to consumers, and
performance is so closely tied to unemployment.
Card loan loss rates may double under severe economic stress, and be
more than three times the rate on commercial loans, he said.
On balance, however, "all of the banks should be in a position to
maintain dividends at, or close to, the current run rate," he said.
FINANCIAL HEALTH
Dividends are seen as evidence of good financial health and encourage
loyalty from investors who expect that income, which makes companies
leery of cutting them.
However, nearly 10 million Americans have filed jobless claims as the
coronavirus has shut down retail stores, restaurants and other
businesses deemed "non-essential" across the country.
Economists expect the unemployment rate may eventually spike as high as
20% and U.S. economic output fall as much as 34% before the country can
get back to normal.
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Signage is seen posted on the entrance of the New York State
Department of Labor offices, which closed to the public due to the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in the Brooklyn borough of
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The European Central Bank told their lenders on March 27 to skip dividends and
share buybacks until at least October, estimating they could save 30 billion
euros by doing so.
Although major U.S. banks already halted share repurchases through June to
conserve capital, they face political pressure from Democratic lawmakers,
prominent former regulators and some economic commentators to cut dividends as
well.
Banks have so far resisted those calls, arguing that they are financially
stronger than European banks.
"Our dividend is sound," Citigroup Chief Executive Mike Corbat told CNBC on
Wednesday. "We plan on continuing to pay it."
Goldman Sachs Group Inc <GS.N> CEO David Solomon and Morgan Stanley <MS.N> CEO
James Gorman made similar statements in television interviews this week.
Behind the scenes, however, dividends have increasingly become a top agenda
item, an industry lobbyist told Reuters, with bankers discussing what they
should do and whether they should coordinate any action.
A main concern is that suspending dividends will hurt share prices at a time
when stocks are already under intense stress, the person said, asking not to be
named because he is not authorized to speak to the media.
The industry may have no choice if banks get too close to the Fed's limits on
capital use for dividends, analysts said. That could happen as soon as the
second half of this year, particularly for major card lenders, as delinquencies
and loan-loss provisions increase, Ramsden said.
If unemployment reaches 10%, banks might report less in quarterly profits than
they planned to pay out in dividends, Oppenheimer & Co analyst Chris Kotowski
said.
(Reporting by David Henry in New York; Additional reporting by Michelle Price in
Washington.; Editing by Lauren Tara LaCapra and Sonya Hepinstall)
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