Four big U.S. banks raise dividends after stress tests
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[June 28, 2022] By
Carolina Mandl and Michelle Price
NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Morgan
Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America and Wells Fargo hiked their
dividends on Monday after the U.S. banks cleared their annual stress
test exercise last week.
The U.S. Federal Reserve said on Thursday the country's largest lenders
could easily weather a severe economic downturn, giving them a clean
bill of health and paving the way for them to redistribute excess
capital to shareholders.
The results allowed banks to announce higher dividends despite the Fed's
test being tougher than in 2021, pushing up some lenders' required
capital buffers more than expected.
However, JPMorgan & Chase and Citigroup kept their payout flat, as a
challenging economic environment may require more capital. Citi will
likely give an update on its capital plans at its upcoming earnings on
July 15, a source familiar with the situation said.
This year's dividend hikes were more subdued than in 2021, a bumper year
for big bank capital payouts, after lenders amassed piles of excess cash
during the pandemic to cover loan losses that never materialized. Morgan
Stanley, for instance, doubled its dividend in June 2021.
Under the annual stress test exercise established following the
2007-2009 financial crisis, the Fed assesses how banks' balance sheets
would fare against a hypothetical severe economic downturn. The results
dictate how much capital banks need to be healthy and how much they can
return to shareholders.
Goldman Sachs said on Monday it would hike its dividend by 25%, to $2.50
per share, and Morgan Stanley said it plans an increase to 77.5 cents
per share and a share buyback program of $20 billion. Bank of America
raised its dividend by 5% to 22 cents per share and Wells Fargo said it
expects to hike its dividend to 30 cents from 25 cents a share.
Shares in Morgan Stanley jumped 3.5% after hours, while Goldman rose
1.4%.
JPMorgan maintained its dividend at $1.00 a share, citing "higher future
capital requirements." Citi also said it would be able to keep it flat
at 51 cents "in a range of stress scenarios."
The test sets each bank's "stress capital buffer," an extra capital
cushion on top of the regulatory minimum. The size is determined by each
bank's hypothetical losses under the test.
Banks announced their new stress capital buffers (SCB) on Monday, which
come into effect later this year, giving them time to rejig their
balance sheets.
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A combination file photo shows Wells Fargo, Citigbank, Morgan
Stanley, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, JPMorgan, and Goldman
Sachs from Reuters archive. REUTERS/File Photo
Citigroup, JPMorgan and Bank of America said their stress capital buffer
would increase, confirming analysts' expectations. At Bank of America
and JPMorgan, that increase would be driven by higher credit provisions,
whereas Citi would be hit by higher trading losses, lower fee income and
higher expenses, analysts said based on the tests' results.
"Each of these banks saw estimated SCBs up by 80-100 bps, relative to
limited excess capital, which is greater than what we or the market
anticipated," Goldman Sachs analysts wrote on Friday, after the stress
test results were announced.
As a result, analysts were expecting those three banks would keep
dividends flat and eliminate or reduce share buybacks to boost their
capital.
Gerard Cassidy, head of U.S. Bank Equity Strategy at RBC Capital
Markets, said on Monday, ahead of the banks' announcements, that rising
loan growth and accounting losses banks have taken on banks bond
portfolios due to interest rate hikes, have put pressure on banks'
capital.
"It's clearly going to be different this than last year for those
reasons," he added.
See below the announced changes in dividends.
Bank Previous New
$1.00 $1.00
JPMorgan & Chase
$2.00 $2.50
Goldman Sachs
$0.51 $0.51
Citigroup
$0.70 $0.775
Morgan Stanley
$0.21 $0.22
Bank of America
$0.25 $0.30
Wells Fargo
(Reporting by Carolina Mandl in New York and Michelle Price in
Washington; Additional reporting by Manya Saini and Bhanvi Satija in
Bangaluru; Editing by Megan Davies, Deepa Babington and Richard Chang)
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