Bank Booster Gets Bit by Bear, Stops Running with the Bulls

One of the biggest bulls among Wall Street banking analysts is pulling in his horns.

Michael E. Mayo's demotion of BankBoston Corp. shares to "buy" from "strong buy" last week is the Credit Suisse First Boston analyst's 26th downgrade in 10 months, with many coming in recent months.

"If you had to put me in a bullish or bearish camp, given only two camps, I'd prefer the latter," Mr. Mayo said.

Mr. Mayo had been one of the industry's biggest cheerleaders in recent years, saying banking stocks had plenty of room for gains. But in recent months "it's been getting more difficult to find compelling names to recommend," he says.

Mr. Mayo now rates none of the major banks he covers as "strong buys." A year ago he had 15 banking companies with that rating.

The value just isn't there over the medium term, Mr. Mayo said.

"We certainly have room for 'sell' ratings," Mr. Mayo said. "That's a possibility."

Several of the downgrades involved banks that were taken over, such as First Chicago NBD Corp. and Crestar Financial Corp. He has also lowered his rating on acquirers such as SunTrust and Fleet Financial Group.

But more and more downgrades have involved banking companies that have had difficulty making earnings targets. Union Planters Corp. falls into that category, Mr. Mayo said. Also, the margins went down at Wells Fargo and National City Corp. of Cleveland in the fourth quarter, Mr. Mayo said.

For the banking industry as a whole, "the efficiency ratio in the fourth quarter was worse than it has been in a couple of years," Mr. Mayo said.

"We're seeing some fraying on the edges in terms of the quality of the earnings. The economy is better than it's ever been and there are some banks that aren't getting it right," Mr. Mayo said. "We have to be more alert, especially with the potential for credit problems."

The year-2000 issue, though not expected to cause massive snafus at banking companies, is a preoccupation at some banks, Mr. Mayo said. "Year- 2000 projects have pushed off some efficiency initiatives. It has delayed other projects that could improve productivity."

At the same time, "you're seeing an increased incidence of commercial credit problems and more one-time items padding earnings," Mr. Mayo said.

Some of the smaller banking companies are not planning for their futures, Mr. Mayo said. "You start wondering about some of the mid-cap banks; if they are looking out over the five-year horizon."

Mr. Mayo may be one of a growing camp.

"It's getting tough to find value out there," said Thomas Brown, a former banking analyst with Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Inc.

Even Fleet's much-trumpeted deal to buy BankBoston fails to pass muster with Mr. Brown, who is now a principal with Tiger Asset Management.

Fleet will not achieve the numbers it presented to Wall Street, Mr. Brown said. The combined banking company will have to make more divestitures than it anticipates, especially among loans, and will see greater customer runoff, Mr. Brown said.

"We liked to characterize ourself for the last several years as the biggest bull," Mr. Mayo said. "We aren't going to say we're the biggest bear (now), but we'll let our downgrades speak for themselves."

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