Banks That Are Not Wells Fargo (WFC) or US Bancorp (USB) Guilty Until Proven Innocent
James Cullen
Back in mid-January, at the height of the first real sell-off we’ve seen in this bear market, I offered that there were only three big financial companies worth buying: American Express (AXP), Wells Fargo (WFC), and US Bancorp (USB). I liked those two banks because they have great, conservative management teams that promote good underwriting practices, and weren’t booking short-term profits during the boom years with alphabet soup assets and NINJA loans that were set to implode. You can’t say that much about a lot of other banks, which is why I think it’s irresponsible to speculate in the lower quality financial names.
What was unusual about the last several months is that short interest in banks has soared across the board (the new SEC proposal to limit the shorting of financials is of questionable design at best, but that’s another article). I can understand Washington Mutual (WM) seeing short interest triple since the start of the year, but both Wells Fargo and US Bank saw their short interest double over that period, as well.

I’m sure short covering has a lot to do with the big rally we’ve seen since Wells’ earnings; WFC is up 35% and USB is up 21% since on exceptionally high volume. Given how oversold everything has been - something I’ve pointed out at various times - the quickness of the snapback rally is to be expected. Still, the lesser financial institutions - your Wachovias (WB) and WaMus - haven’t proven they know what they’re doing in this environment.
It’s been a rocky 2008, but Wells Fargo and US Bank established that they are the two best-managed banks out there. Wachovia and WaMu have shown they are particularly effective at destroying shareholder value. How so?
The biggest differences between the wheat and the chaff are loan quality, loss provisioning, and capital positioning.
Looking at the delinquent loan ratios from US Bank, one can easily back-out that 59 bps of their loans are nonperforming, and including delinquencies this rises to a flat 1%. The rates at Wells Fargo are higher at 1% nonperforming and 1.46% including delinquencies. From the spring, Wachovia’s nonperforming assets including delinquencies was 1.91%, and if current trends hold that rate should rise to about 2.4% for the quarter they are waiting to report.
Despite being a hole already because their assets are doing roughly twice as bad as the better banks, Wachovia is in no hurry to increase its loss provisions - while investors might favor conservatism in general, but especially in times like these, Wells and US Bank continue to take much higher loss provisions (and still turn a profit). So as US Bank has allowances for 1.6% of total loans and 270% of nonperforming loans, Wells Fargo has allowances for 1.88% of total loans and 184% of nonperforming loans, Wachovia takes relatively small allowances of 1.37% of total loans and just 84% of nonperforming loans. Truing up, by my count, would require another $1.25 billion against an already strained capital base. Wachovia was very slow to cut their dividend, a painful but necessary step because they entered a poor lending environment with less Tier One capital than, to pick two random companies, Wells Fargo and US Bancorp. It also doesn’t help that Wachovia’s net interest margin is highly inferior to that of either of those companies; in fact, Wells Fargo does well enough from their core banking business that they can raise their dividend 10% in times like this because of a Tier One capital build - not that Wachovia happened to raise (and subsequentially chew through) a $3.5 billion capital offering earlier in the year. And, although I think Wells’ dividend raise is a fairly aggressive move for a bank that got where it is through conservative management, I’ll submit that part of the logic behind distributing capital to shareholders now is to give Wells more flexibility should they be called on by the government to take over a failing bank. This is counterintuitive at first - wouldn’t more capital be better? - but having less excess capital will let Wells be choosy as to what offers they go after, and it will help them get a better price should they decide to make an acquisition.
Mercifully, we’re still a few days away from hearing just how bad things are at Wachovia and WaMu, such that this financial-led rally might go on a bit longer. But when the gruesome financial twosome of Wachovia and Washington Mutual report on Tuesday, July 22nd, it will be a roulette spin as to the reaction. I don’t think it’s speculating to place my chips on Wachovia needing to take another huge loss provision because their existing ones are too low, and loan quality will continue to deteriorate, but the reaction is what counts, and I think that is simply too difficult to game. The winners are being telegraphed here; no purpose in trying to pick the fifth horse to finish the race.
See more AXP, Banks, Financials, James Cullen, Large Caps, USB, WB, WFC, WM |

July 18th, 2008 at 9:17 am
Tell me, do you still like Wells Fargo after this article?
http://mrmortgage.ml-implode.com/2008/07/17/mystery-surrounds-wells-fargos-earnings/
Wells Fargo was one of the first to use heavy Level-3 placement of toxic paper early in 2007. Last quarter there was a debate on how they valued their mortgage servicing rights - if you remember Wells beat last quarter from “mortgage banking.†Yeah, right. It seems like every quarter, questions arise on the quality of their earnings. Yesterday was no different.
This story concerns their massive $84 BILLION Home Equity Line/Loan portfolio, of which much is now underwater due to massive house price depreciation. Technically (and realistically) these have become unsecured. This is a real problem for banks. By my estimates, Wells Fargo wildly under-reserved on their home equity exposure.
Not only did Wells change the time line for placing a loan into technical “default†by extending the term out 60-days, essentially hiding 60-days of defaults, but they are also using AVMs to determine value from March of 2008, though the median home price has fallen 5.4% since then.
July 21st, 2008 at 9:51 am
[...] Analysts presents Banks That Are Not Wells Fargo (WFC) or US Bancorp (USB) Guilty Until Proven Innocent.  ”Bank stocks rallied last week after Wells Fargo and US Bancorp reported their earnings. [...]
July 21st, 2008 at 9:53 pm
Financedude,
The way I’m reading their disclosures is that they’ve modified how they account for delinquincies, which officially saved them about $250 million in marks this quarter, but they took the marks anyways - meaning net/net, there is 0 difference.
And for the record, I think the article you link to smells of a hack job. Will the underlying point - that Wells’ reserves are too low - be correct? Possible. But I’m going out on a limb and saying the author of that piece has an axe to grind with Wells, or is short some or all of the banks.
August 12th, 2008 at 10:43 pm
[...] Wells and US Bank Are the Only Ownable Bank Stocks [...]
November 11th, 2008 at 9:40 am
The fact that someone has a position in a security should not cloud your judgment of their analysis.
Wells Fargo is playing the earnings game like a champ. Their WB acquisition will be the biggest bath taken in the past decade. The CEO himself admitted that they’d take a $40b writedown (this is relative to $36b in tangible equity), which would allow them to demonstrate increasing EPS moving forward.
Does this mean they have money to loan out? No. Their assets are still tied to overvalued collateral. All Wells is doing is treading water and hoping that people start paying for houses at 2-3% cap rates again. This is unlikely to happen, unless your college decides to mismanage their endowment and start spraying funds into mortgage lenders again.
Your writing often feels like a hack job. You’d fit in well at most sell side shops.
November 11th, 2008 at 10:11 am
S,
I’m interested to hear more on your thoughts here. Please drop me an email - jcullen at collegeanalysts.com
November 14th, 2008 at 9:32 pm
thanks for an interesting article. To the poster “S,” since when is your last comment appropriate?
December 2nd, 2008 at 9:04 am
Ever heard of Branch Bank and Trust?
Why don’t you ask them how many times their equity is covered by second liens in California?
I can assure you it’s not twice!
February 3rd, 2009 at 9:29 pm
Apologies. Your writing’s generally better than most sell-side hack jobs. The main problem is that you guys focus on what management is telling you, without questioning the message (or the messenger, for that matter).
Check out Mish’s latest post on Wells. That touches on some of the issues with their latest report. What Mish leaves out is commentary on why Wells hid their numbers till they could do a “big bath” with the Wachovia acquisition. Citi and Wells were fighting for the right to hide their numbers - no one really wants to deal with Wachovia assets or staff.
The only “ownable” financials happen to be well-capitalized banks that don’t have hidden liabilities - think PBCT, TFSL.
February 5th, 2009 at 12:22 am
S,
I really do understand what you’re saying - that is number one or two on my list of things I’ve learned. I’ll have to find that post to see what you’re talking about, and add those two to my list of stocks to look at.
Again - and taking your lesson to heart- I’d like a chance to question the messenger. If you’d drop me an email (jcullen@collegeanalysts.com) I’d be most appreciative.