Overall credit buffers turn down
SNL Report: Loan loss reserves continue decline in Q2, with exceptions
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- Written by SNL Financial
By Robin Majumdar and Zach Fox, SNL Financial staff writers
Net charge-offs continued to decline in the second quarter, allowing continued declines in loan loss reserves, though absolute levels remain modestly higher than the pre-crisis environment.
For a headline figure, aggregate loan loss reserves as a percentage of average total loans at U.S. commercial banks fell to 1.59% in the second quarter, down from 1.68% in the first quarter and 1.97% in the 2013 second quarter. The figure peaked at more than 3.5% in 2010 and has been steadily declining since, though it has some room to go before reaching pre-crisis levels of roughly 1.20%.
(Reserving for commercial lending saw increasing share of the overall pie. For more on that trend, read SNL Financial’s “Reserves for commercial loans rise.”)
"Whether it's net problem assets, charge-offs, loan-loss reserves, they're all still 'yes, but' kinds of measures, which is that they're improving, but they're still not at where they were in 2007," Steven Reider, president of bank consulting firm Bancography, told SNL.
Net charge-offs are a bit closer to pre-crisis levels than aggregate loan loss reserves. As a portion of average loans over the course of the quarter, net charge-offs totaled 0.48% of loans in the second quarter, down from 0.52% in the first quarter and 0.73% in the 2013 second quarter.
Net charge-offs of roughly 0.50% of total average loans match 2007 levels, though that remains slightly elevated from the 0.38% rate reported in the 2006 second quarter.
Loan loss provisioning continued to decline, with the figure for all commercial banks falling to $5.65 billion in the second quarter, down from $6.55 billion in the first quarter and $7.54 billion in the 2013 second quarter.
Breaking down reserves and provisioning by banks, overall total loan loss reserves declined by more than $500 million for each of the four money-center banks: JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc., and Wells Fargo & Co., with Citigroup's reserve tumbling by more than $1 billion in the second quarter. Relative to the prior-year period, total reserves at all four banks shrank by more than 15%.
Among the top 20 largest banks and thrifts, all but two reported year-over-year declines in the loan loss reserves in the second quarter. The only two to post yearly increases both saw reserves increase by more than 20%—to $181.3 million at First Republic Bank, and to $223.5 million at First Niagara Financial Group Inc.
What big banks have been telling analysts
During First Niagara's July 25 conference call to discuss second-quarter earnings, CFO Gregory Norwood said the bank's loan loss provisioning in the second quarter increased by $2.5 million due to stronger-than-expected loan growth. Still, the loan loss provision item declined quarter over quarter to $22.4 million in the second quarter, compared to $24.4 in the first quarter and $24.8 million in the 2013 second quarter.
The situation was different for First Republic, which provisioned $21.8 million for loan losses in the second quarter, up from $7.1 million in the first quarter and $12.65 million in the 2013 second quarter. During the bank's July 16 conference call on second-quarter results, Michael Roffler, deputy CFO, said the provision was due to growth in loans outstanding, particularly business loans. He said the bank expects total loan loss reserve to range from 55 basis points to 60 basis points, with home loans carrying lower reserves and commercial loans requiring higher reserves.
Among the top 20 banks, only Zions Bancorp. posted a negative provision item in the second quarter, reducing its loan loss reserves by $54.4 million. It represented the eighth straight quarter of a negative loan loss provision for the bank. The second-quarter reserve release was the bank's largest yet and towered over the first quarter's negative provision of $610,000. In the year-ago quarter, the bank's negative provision was $21.99 million.
During Zions' July 21 conference call on its second-quarter results, CFO Doyle Arnold said the bank expects loan loss provisioning to remain negative in the near-term and guided analysts to think of the first-quarter and second-quarter releases to represent the lower and upper limits, respectively, for future negative provisioning.
Tagged under Management, Financial Trends, Risk Management, Credit Risk,
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