Warren Sees ‘A Lot of Problems’ in U.S. Banking System

June 23, 2010

Elizabeth Warren, chairwoman of the Congressional Oversight Panel for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, talks about the U.S. banking industry and the outlook for Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner’s testimony before the panel today. Warren talks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.”


(Source: Bloomberg)

Highlights:

  • 101 small banks have not paid their TARP dividend which is sign that’s there’s still a “great deal of instability in the banking system”.
  • Three thousand out of eight thousand banks have serious concentration in commercial real estate. 6 out of 19 stress tested banks have commercial real estate that exceeds tier 1 capital.
  • Does not look like a problem that’s going to get smaller over the next couple of quarters. It looks like a problem that is going to increase.

More Bank Failures, Exceeds Pace of 2009

By Rom Badilla, CFA – Bondsquawk.com

 

May 16, 2010 

Midwest Bank located in Illinois is the latest victim on the FDIC’s Failed Bank List, which brings the total to 72 institutions for this year alone. In the past two weeks, the FDIC shut the doors on Midwest Bank, which had about $3.2 billion in assets, along with seven others in various parts of the US. Year-to-date bank failures are more than double the pace of early May 2009, when there were only 33 bank closures.

The decline in commercial real estate continues to haunt small to mid-sized banks as the troubled sector represents a sizable portion of small bank loan portfolios.

According to Moody’s Commercial Real Estate Index, prices have declined 30.3 percent since the end of 2008 to February 2010.

Moody's Commercial Real Estate Price Index

Midwest bank, which received $85 million last year in federal help via TARP, said it continued to see loan defaults in commercial real estate as well as pressure on small to mid-sized business due to the prolonged recession, according to a Chicago Tribune report. The bank failure will cost the FDIC and taxpayers $216.4 million.

Federal Reserve data suggests that Commercial Real Estate Delinquencies were at 8.8 percent, up 5.5 times from delinquency levels in mid 2007, which marks the onset of the recession. Hence, more defaults and loan losses are in the pipeline for commercials and ultimately, banks.

Federal Reserve Commercial Real Estate Delinquency Percentage

As mentioned several weeks ago on Bondsquawk, exposure to the commercial real estate sector could be a problem with the risk that it could get worse if left unchecked.

According to the List, banks to see their operations close recently were Southwest Community Bank (Springfield, MO), New Liberty Bank (Plymouth, MI), Satilla Community Bank (Saint Marys, GA), 1st Pacific Bank of California (San Diego, CA), Towne Bank of Arizona (Mesa, AZ), Access Bank (Champlin , MN), and The Bank of Bonifay (Bonifay, FL).

FDIC Barking Up the Wrong Tree

by Rom Badilla, CFA – Bondsquawk.com

May 12, 2010

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (FDIC) in an effort to revamp the securitization model for banks, proposed that issuers retain 5 percent of the deal for residential mortgage backed securities (RMBS) in the event of any earlier-than-expected losses in the collateral as reported by Stuctured Finance News. The proposal does not include loans that are sold to the GSEs aka Fannie and Freddie as well as loans sold into the government’s Ginnie Mae program.

“We want the securitization to come back the right way, not the wrong way,” said FDIC chairman Sheila Bair.

Originally, the proposal would require banks to hold mortgage loans for 12 months after origination, before they can be packaged up and sold as a securitization. With backlash from the securitized products community, this proposal was dropped and revised to its current form.

Despite good intentions, the proposal could be a huge negative for breathing life into a dead securitization market, which is essential to re-igniting the depressed housing market. While transparency is key for investors as well as making sure that banks have some “skin in the game” to ensure their interests are aligned with investors, this proposal fails to acknowledge other problems in the securitization process that led to its collapse.

S&P/Case-Schiller Home Price Index for 20 Metropolitan Markets

If the essence of change is to ensure an alignment of interests along the entire process from origination, securitization, and investment, this proposal does not attack the problem at the source and attempt to increase regulation on minimum loan underwriting standards. Nor does this address the issue of the flaws inherent in the securitization rating models used by the credit agencies, like Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s, and Fitch.

If the FDIC wants securitization to come back the right way, change needs to be preceded by acknowledging the problems and by pointing the finger in the right direction. Right now, banks are assuming too much of the burden, which could encumber them by tying up capital. This would in turn, keep credit standards too stringent and credit creation too low. As a result, this proposal in its current form could prolong the housing downturn.

7 More Bank Failures Added to List

by Rom Badilla, CFA – Bond Trader and BondSquawker

May 2, 2010

The Federal Depository Insurance Company shut the doors on 7 more banks, 3 in Puerto Rico on Friday bringing the total closings to 64 in 2010.  According to FDIC’s Failed Bank List, the banks were Frontier Bank (Everett, Wash.), National Banks (Butler, Mo.), Champion Bank, (Creve Coeur, Mo.), CF Bancorp (Port Huron, Mich.), Westernbank Puerto Rico (Mayaquez, Puerto Rico), R-G Premier Bank of Puerto Rico (Hato Rey, Puerto Rico), and Eurobank (San Juan, Puerto Rico).

Bank assets for the latest round add up to approximately $25.8 billion while deposits total to around $19.6 billion.  The 7 closures will cost the government agency and ultimately, U.S. taxpayers about $7 billion.

As mentioned last week on Bondsquawk, with looming problems in the commercial real estate market and 702 banks on FDIC’s troubled list more bank failures are in store for the FDIC and the U.S. for the rest of 2010.

Failure Sacks Da Banks

by Rom Badilla, CFA – Bond Trader and BondSquawker

April 29

Illinois is known for the Windy City (my home town) and of course, football’s Chicago Bears.  Unfortunately a different kind of bear, as in the bull market’s arch-nemesis, has a reason to sing in the Mid-Western state.  Illinois was hit hard as the Federal Deposit Insurance Company (FDIC) updated their Failed Bank List several of days ago with the addition of 7 more banks, all in the Land of Lincoln.  The List stands at 57 failures for 2010, which total to $35.2 billion in bank assets.

FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair stated in a Financial Times report, “The projected number of bank failures will still be higher than last year, but less than we originally thought.”  In 2009, the FDIC shut the doors on 140 banks, which was the highest number since the height of the Savings and Loans Crisis in 1992.  2009′s bank failures cost the FDIC and U.S. taxpayers about $30 billion.  Comparatively, there were 3 and 25 bank failures in 2007 and 2008, respectively.

While the report appears upbeat, there is still cause for concern that would give any Superfan indigestion.  Specifically, there are over 702 institutions on the troubled bank list as of December, which is up from 552 in September of last year (historically only a percentage of the total fail).

Small banks typically have greater exposure to commercial real estate loans as a percentage of their total assets, than their much larger peers.  This exposure is definitely a problem with the risk that it could get worse if left unchecked.

Last month, Treasury President, Timothy Geithner said in a CNBC interview, “Commercial real estate’s still going to be a problem for the country. But we can manage through this process.”

Management of this process will be difficult for the trillion dollar market as delinquencies remain elevated. Credit ratings agency, Realpoint said that March’s delinquency rate for the securitized commercial universe is at 6.4 percent, an increase from the 6.0 percent reported in February. To put that in perspective, March’s reading is four times the amount reported from a year ago.  Furthermore, Realpoint said that delinquencies could potentially reach 12 percent by the end of this year.

Former Federal Reserve President, Alan Greenspan said earlier this month that commercial prices are already down and less of an issue going forward.  Move along.  There is nothing to see here.  Granted, commercial property prices declined 41.8 percent from the highs in October 2007 to February 2010.  However, the bigger issue going forward is the large amount of loans that will be coming due in the next four years.  These loans, which many of them are underwater due to the massive decline in prices, will need to be rerolled into new debt.  Commercial property owners are hoping that the loan origination machine will thaw out by then so maturing debt can be refinanced (If this sounds familiar, it should. See Greece).  If a mechanism such as a robust securitizations market which helps facilitate the extension of credit is not in place, defaults could pick up even further.  This would negatively affect banks to a large degree.

Given these hurdles, banks especially smaller ones, should continue to feel the pressure.  Sure, larger banks have scored a few touchdowns by posting stellar earnings recently.  However, most of those revenues come from proprietary trading, which isn’t the bread and butter of a bank.  This should point to continued accommodative monetary policy, which should keep the yield curve steep.

The upward sloping nature of the curve allows banks to do what they do best, which is borrow short at one rate and lend/invest farther out the maturity spectrum at a higher rate.  This secret recipe is why banks love a steep yield curve as this spread usually spells profit.

This construct when given enough time, has historically allowed the economy to exit a recession by extending credit and investment which in turn, leads to growth and jobs.  As the world of finance and Wall Street goes, so does the rest of the economy.

Because of their excessive risk-taking, which arguably is a result of the Fed generated flat to inverted yield curve in 2006, banks are still on the defensive by repairing balance sheet and shoring up reserves.  Once that is done, banks can go on the offensive and start playing to win on a much larger scale.  Until then, expect additions to FDIC’s list and economic activity that is both natural and sustainable, to remain in hibernation.