Hitting the heights: Bank stocks reached milestones Tuesday as their share prices continued to rise. Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase both hit all-time highs, with Goldman recouping all it had lost since the 2007 financial crisis. Bank of America traded in line with its book value for the first time since late 2008; it had traded as low as 15% of book value back in March 2009.
Ambitious move: Japan's SoftBank, which despite its name isn't a bank but a technology and communications conglomerate, made a big step into becoming a serious player in the financial services business Tuesday when it agreed to buy asset manager Fortress Investment Group for $3.3 billion. The acquisition of Fortress, which manages about $70 billion in assets in real estate, credit and private equity, fits Softbank chief Masayoshi Son's "ambitious long-term plans to become one of the world's biggest asset managers, focusing on technology but with a broader platform to raise money and shepherd companies across different sectors," the Wall Street Journal said.
The asset management business "is a radical departure from the technology and telecommunications holdings for which the Japanese company is known," the New York Times noted. "But the acquisition is intended to bolster SoftBank's other enormous new endeavor: a $100 billion technology investment fund that threatens to roil the private equity world."
Wall Street Journal
PayPal deals: PayPal agreed to acquire Canadian bill-payment company TIO Networks for about $233 million. The deal is "designed to broaden the digital-payments company's reach among consumers who lack traditional financial accounts," the Journal reported. TIO customers make regular payments in cash to utility companies and other service providers through a network of retail locations and kiosks across the U.S.
Be careful what you ask for: While big banks mostly favor the Trump administration's plans to dismantle Dodd-Frank, they would like to retain a small part of it, namely the "orderly liquidation authority," the Journal reports. OLA, as it's more commonly known, empowers the federal government to take over and wind down a failing bank. Conservatives want to get rid of it. But big banks "fear an OLA replacement would be more draconian regulation, both in the U.S. and in other countries where officials view OLA as an important backstop."
Financial Times
Bad news, good news: First the bad news. Lending Club lost money for a third year in a row last year, reporting a $146 million loss for 2016, well above projections, which sent the stock down sharply in after-hours trading Tuesday.
But the good news: the online marketplace lender did report an increase in loan originations in the fourth quarter, to almost $2 billion, "surviving a key test of investor demand despite rising losses and lingering fears over its business model," the paper commented. "Last quarter we accomplished the foundational work required to prepare Lending Club for the growth to come," said Scott Sanborn, the company's CEO. "With a diverse, stable and scalable mix of investors, and an enhanced control environment, we are entering 2017 in a stronger position than ever to serve the needs of our customers."
Quick loans: Royal Bank of Scotland is planning to offer loans online to small businesses in the U.K. "within hours" of application. The loans will be offered through a digital site called "Esme" – for small and medium-sized enterprises – under RBS's NatWest brand. "The last thing SMEs want is to spend hours filling in paper work, so this allows them to quickly complete a digital process," said Alison Rose, head of the bank's commercial and private banking unit.
Quotable ...
"They've come out of this thing lean and mean." – Bank investor Ed Wachenheim of Greenhaven Associates commenting on bank stock prices
At a time of mild or nonexistent loan growth, middle-market borrowers in the Lone Star State are providing a boost to Fifth Third Bancorp and Huntington Bancshares.
New details have emerged about the negotiations that culminated in Capital One's blockbuster $35 billion agreement to acquire Discover. At one point last December, the two parties broke off discussions, according to a securities filing.
According to the Federal Reserve Board's latest financial stability report, persistent inflation and policy uncertainty are the primary worries for banks. Survey respondents expressed heightened anxiety over murky policy outlooks due to geopolitical turmoil and rapidly approaching domestic elections.
The Alabama regional lender says it expects expenses to taper off this year and anticipates challenged loans will gradually rise to historically average levels.
Truist Financial's top executive leadership team announces departures; First Horizon's chief credit officer is retiring; Ferry teams with Highnote to roll out a new Visa-branded payroll card; and more in the weekly banking news roundup.
The Dallas-based regional bank tapped a client for its co-pilot capabilities, where employees can message a bot instead of a human to get tech assistance.