
The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Friday, March 25, 2005 ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: Chris Mayer meets up with his old banking buddies at an exclusive country club to discuss local business conditions and get up to date on all the gossip. A juicy short selling opportunity comes to light
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------------------------- BANKING ON TROUBLE By Chris Mayer Commercial bankers typically have a pretty good feel for the pulse of the local business scene. Collectively, lenders have access to the financial statements of hundreds of local business, allowing them to stitch together a rather accurate composite sketch on such items of interest as sales growth, profits and the health of corporate balance sheets. Moreover, they can develop a sense for the mood of business owners, since they are in frequent contact with them: are the owners optimistic and expanding or are they cautious and holding back? Local lenders can answer these questions intelligently; at least the good ones can. Unfortunately, this financial "sixth sense" does not necessarily improve their ability to forecast the future or even to competently manage their own affairs. Bankers still make mistakes - lots of them - and are subject to episodes of bad judgment. I should know, since I was a member of their tribe for more than a decade. Often, when I get together with my old banker friends and former colleagues, I ask them about what they are seeing. Sometimes, what happens locally is a microcosm of what is happening nationally. We met where bankers often seem to meet, in the elite confines of a local country club (the name of which I will withhold to protect the innocent party). Over toasted club sandwiches and lobster bisque, washed down with the club lager (brewed on the premises), I expected to get the skinny on the local scene. This time, however, the conversation was less about the business scene than it was about the business of banking itself. And my banker friend's mood was darkened by what he saw as gathering storms on the horizon. "Fee income is drying up," he said, "especially the punitive ones." Ah yes, those delightful overdraft fees and late fees. Consumers may not realize this, but bankers love it when consumers do dumb things with their money. Writing a $28 check only to be whacked with a $34 overdraft fee is the foundation of many a bankers' fortune. We once lent money to a fraternity house that was late every month, and every month we would whack them with a huge late fee. At the end of the first year, our return on that loan was over 30%. Zimbabwe could have borrowed money more cheaply. "It's not just us," my friend continued, "it's across the industry. We're all facing the same problems." There were a few theories as to why this might be, but none of them seemed convincing to me. From a banker's perspective, fee income is the most desirous sort of income. It is not interest-rate sensitive; the banker gets his fee whether rates are 2% or 6%. Lacking fee income, bankers must rely more on their traditional interest rate spreads
and that's much harder work. "Now that the yield curve is flattening [i.e. the difference between short-term and long-term interest rates is shrinking]," I observed, "profit margins must be feeling the pinch." He winced, as if I had just doused an open wound with salt water. Tighter margins and less fee income mean pressure on bank earnings, and more pressure to grow through acquisitions or by building new branches. Acquisitions are tricky by nature, and create new headaches of their own. Branch- building is expensive and the payoff does not usually occur until well into year two or three. Plus, banking is a competitive business. Branch expansion is no cinch for new profits, because your competitors don't stand still. "I've heard some banks have incredibly aggressive goals for opening new branches," I began, "in fact, I heard one bank
" "Commerce," my banker friend answered before I completed my sentence. "Commerce Bank is coming in here [meaning the Washington-area market] with over 100 new branches." I let out a skeptical laugh. "Where the heck are you going to find 100 suitable locations to open new branches in the already over-banked Washington area market?" I asked. "When I was in banking, we were lucky if we found a handful in any given year." "That's what we thought," he continued, "but then we found out that they already have the locations secured." His eyes were alight with fear it seemed to me. Every bank in the area can count a dozen competitors without blinking and they are surely not eager to have to grapple with an eager newcomer apparently willing to spend lots of money. We had an old saying in banking that the market was only as good as your stupidest competitor. In other words, it only takes one bank to start giving away money and then you have two choices, each of them ultimately painful. You can either match their deals, preserving your market share, but putting off the pain 'til later (when your profits are depressed) or you can take a hard-line stance, in which case the pain is immediate and you lose a bunch of customers. Pick your poison. Wow, I thought. This Commerce really is a machine. I've read about them before. In fact, Grant's Interest Rate Observe ran a bearish piece on Commerce in January. Since Grant's commentary, Commerce's shares have only become more expensive. So let's end this note with some of the bearish points on Commerce, an idea you can short, buy puts on, or just watch with a sense of schadenfreude, as your speculative temperament permits. Despite all the pressures weighing on bankers' earnings and the fierce competition that will inevitably result, Commerce Bancorp (CBH:nyse) trades for about 18 times earnings and almost 3 times book value. Analysts expect earnings growth of 17% next year. Remember, this is a bank we're talking about here. Commerce's management team, led by the autocratic founder Vernon Hill, has laid out some big goals - he intends to grow from 319 branches to about 700 by 2009. These branches are not cheap; Commerce spends an average of $3.24 million on a new branch office. A more normal number would be closer to $2 million, sometimes much less, especially with so-called in-store branches nestled in grocery stores. "I heard they hire greeters," my banking friend said in amazement, "you know, people to shake your hand as you walk in the door." Safe to say, Commerce's operations spare no expense. Commerce's formula for success has been, in the words of its founder, "low cost of money, high cost to operate, high growth." The "high cost to operate" part of the formula is the only constant. "Low cost of money" is already vanishing and "high growth" will be more difficult going forward. Here's betting that Commerce's shareholders will be disappointed and that the shares will be marked down accordingly. Commerce, though it has delivered remarkable results so far, is still a bank at the end of the day and it will not be immune to the forces that are already buffeting its peers. The long bull market in banking stocks is showing signs of wear. [Ed. Note: Maybe Chris Mayer has just launched an options trading service, incorporating Dow Theory. As a former commercial banker and loan officer, he understands business fundamentals perfectly. Dow Theory just helps him with the timing. The results are explosive
Crisis Point Trader http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/CPT/WCPTF338 --- Advertisement --- ------------------------- Did You Notice
? By Eric J. Fry "The dollar's crash is now over," Steve Sjuggerud confidently declared last Tuesday. "The cover story off this week's Newsweek magazine - 'The Incredible Shrinking Dollar' - virtually seals the deal
Everyone believes the dollar is doomed but me
" Steve, as the editor of True Wealth, has been made a number timely contrarian calls. So we have learned to respect his instincts. While we remain dubious that the dollar will muster a sustained rally against either the euro or gold, we have no trouble imagining a counter-trend rally that lasts for a few weeks. But if we are to trust Steve's contrarian instincts, we should not hesitate to up our exposure to the greenback, while trimming back on our gold holdings. Or maybe there's a middle road
As the chart below illustrates, ASA, the closed-end fund on the NYSE that holds South African gold stocks, has been trailing well behind the XAU Index of North American gold stocks. Since the end of 2004, ASA has managed a return of less than zero, while the XAU Index has advanced about 25%.
The strong South African rand is to blame for this disparity. Because the rand has been rising sharply against the dollar, the gold price in rand terms has actually been FALLING, even though gold has been appreciating in terms of the U.S. dollar. If, however, the dollar has turned the corner against world currencies, as Steve boldly predicts, the gold price in rand terms might also begin to appreciate. As a result, South African gold shares should begin to perform better than the North American variety. Buyer beware, however. A gold stock that performs better than a North American gold stock might still be a stock that falls. When all else fails, the far-sighted, dollar-bearish investors might simply stash some ingots in the backyard and forget about them for a while. [Ed. Note: Every quarter, legendary resource investor Doug Casey updates his remarkably profitable recommendations on more than 50 gold, silver, uranium and base metals companies he is currently following, with a special focus on those he thinks are poised to gain at least 100% in the coming year. Click on this link for more information on Doug's service
http://www.caseyresearch.com/crpmkt/crpSolo.php?id=9&ppref=RAK012EA032105 ------------------------- And the Markets
| Thursday | Wednesday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,443 | 10,456 | -187 | -3.2% | S&P | 1,171 | 1,173 | -18 | -3.3% | NASDAQ | 1,991 | 1,990 | -17 | -8.5% | 10-year Treasury | 4.60% | 4.60% | 0.09 | 0.38 | 30-year Treasury | 4.85% | 4.86% | 0.04 | 0.02 | Russell 2000 | 615 | 612 | -7 | -5.6% | Gold | $424.95 | $424.75 | -$14.35 | -2.9% | Silver | $6.92 | $6.93 | -$0.45 | 1.6% | CRB | 306.88 | 306.51 | -12.32 | 8.1% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $54.84 | $53.81 | -$1.88 | 26.2% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 106.37 | JPY 106.07 | -1.69 | -3.7% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2940 | $1.2981 | 378 | 4.5% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.8693 | $1.8687 | 530 | 2.5% |
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