Credit rating firm says U.S. banking industry won't recover until 2010

Published: 2 April 2009 y., Thursday

Pinigai
The fourth quarter of 2008 was not so good for the banking industry, and the financial conditions of commercial banks and savings and loans is expected to further deteriorate for the rest of 2009 and the first part of 2010, according to LACE Financial Corp., which provides credit rating services on approximately 19,000 domestic and international financial and related institutions.
 
According to LACE, the second quarter 2009 gross-national-product growth will be close to the negative 6.2 percent reported during the first quarter of the year, with a likely overall negative 3 percent growth for the year.
 
"Unemployment is likely to approach and possibly exceed 10 percent this year," said Barron H. Putnam, Ph.D. and president of LACE. "The devastating decline in U.S. household wealth ($11 trillion), increasing non-performing assets in the world's banking systems, rising unemployment, deterioration in U.S. corporate wealth, as well as a deteriorating economic condition in our nation's largest trading partners, will prolong the U.S. recession."
 
So far this year 20 banks have failed, and Putnam says he expects between 100 to 150 failures by the end of 2009.
 
According to LACE's "Trends in U.S. Banking Institutions — Fourth Quarter 2008" report, commercial banks reported a net loss of $32.1 billion, resulting in a negative 0.94 percent return on assets. Although four banks accounted for half of the loss, 33 percent of all banks reported a loss for the quarter. 
 
"The losses were driven primarily by very high provisions to loan loss reserves, substantial losses in trading accounts and large write-downs in goodwill," Putnam said.  
 
For 2008, net income was $10.2 billion, down 90 percent from 2007. The FDIC reported that the industry ROA was .08 percent, the lowest since 1987. 
 
"Losses could have been worse," Putnam said, "because the effects of failures and purchase accounting were excluded from the income figures."
 
Assets for the banking industry grew 2 percent from the third to the fourth quarter and a total of 6.3 percent for 2008, according to the LACE report.
 
"We expect little or no asset growth for 2009," Putnam said. 
 
Growth declined 2.8 percent for the fourth quarter and .04 percent for the year despite the government's infusion of capital into the banking system. 
 
"We also expect little or no loan growth for this year, and without loan growth there will be little or no economic growth," Putnam said.
 
Meanwhile, LACE reported that banks are flush with deposits, which grew 3.5 percent in the fourth quarter. Domestic interest-bearing deposits grew 4.2 percent, brokered deposits grew 15.3 percent and deposits in foreign offices grew by 2.2 percent. This is the highest quarterly deposit growth in 10 years.
 
Increases in non-performing assets expected
 
For the fourth quarter of 2008, provisions for loan loss reserves increased $69 billion, more than twice the amount reported in the same period a year ago. Charge-offs against the loan loss reserve account were $37.9 billion, a 132 percent increase over the same period a year ago. Net reserves for commercial banks increased $16.5 billion, but the higher increase in non-performing assets resulted in a coverage ratio (non-performing assets to reserves) decline from 84 percent to 75 percent, a 16-year low.
 
"We expect the coverage ratio to decline further over the next 12 months, putting a significant strain on bank earnings," Putnam said. 
 
The FDIC reported that in the fourth quarter of 2008 more than two-thirds of the increase in non-performing loans came from loans secured by real estate, with construction and development loans having the highest non-performing rate at 8.51 percent.
 
Total equity capital for the banking industry declined .8 percent ($52.1 billion) in the fourth quarter because of write-downs in goodwill and other comprehensive income. Tier One leverage capital increased 2.3 percent ($22.8 billion) and total regulatory capital increased by 2.2 percent ($28 billion). Banks are trying to protect their capital base by reducing dividends; more than half of the commercial banks reduced dividends in 2008.

 

Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Volcanic ash cloud crisis: Commission outlines response to tackle the impact on air transport

European Commission Vice-President Siim Kallas, responsible for transport, today presented to the College a preliminary assessment of the economic consequences for the air transport industry of the volcanic ash crisis. more »

EU draft budget 2011: The future beyond the crisis

Boosting economic recovery, investing in Europe's youth and in tomorrow's infrastructures are the priorities of the 2011 draft budget adopted by the Commission on 27 April 2010. more »

Vice President Almunia welcomes Visa Europe's proposal to cut interbank fees for debit cards

European Competition Commissioner Joaquín Almunia welcomes proposed commitments by Visa Europe to significantly cut its multilateral interchange fees (MIFs) for debit card payments. more »

Volcano impacts flower business

Because of the Icelandic volcano, flower growers in Colombia couldn't get their stems to markets in Europe. more »

Salgado expresses conviction that all EU countries will support aid for Greece

The Second Vice President of the Spanish government and Minister of Economy and Finance, Elena Salgado, on Sunday played down the importance of apparent fissures within the EU concerning the Greek financial crisis, expressing her confidence that all countries would support the aid package for this country, which will be accompanied by a tough budget-tightening plan. more »

The European conformity mark

Commission launches an information campaign on the CE conformity mark - designed to ease the free movement of goods around Europe and protect consumers. more »

Airport security - who will foot the bill?

If Europe's airports ever open again the introduction of new security measures like body scanners will be expensive. more »

Learning the lessons from Greece

After Eurozone Finance Ministers agreed measures to address Greece’s financial woes last Sunday, MEPs quizzed leading economic figures, including the chairman of Goldman Sachs - former financial advisors to the Greek government - on how to strengthen EU economic governance and improve reporting of national statistics. more »

A new strategic vision for the EU's Tourism Policy

The European Tourism Stakeholders Conference, being held in Madrid today and tomorrow, will explore ways and means to strengthen the visibility of tourism at a European level and to verify how the actions to promote a competitive EU tourism industry. more »

EBRD, IFC, FMO, and ADM Capital Launch Fund to Help Companies in CEE, Central Asia, and Turkey Recover from Crisis

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), World Bank Group member IFC, and The Netherlands Development Finance Company (FMO) have joined up with the Asia Debt Management Hong Kong (ADM Capital) to establish a regional fund to invest in midsize companies facing financing difficulties as a result of the financial crisis. more »