U.S. Banking Profits Plunge To Lowest Levels In 16 Years
Banks just aren't making the same profits they used to says the Federal Deposit Insurance Commission.
"The rising trend in noncurrent loans indicates that write-offs and loss provisions will likely remain high for the near future," FDIC Chairman Sheila C. Bair said in the FDIC's Quarterly Banking Profile. She added, "We'll also need to keep a close eye as we've been doing for a number of months on loan portfolios other than housing, including commercial real estate, credit cards, and small business. All of these are showing signs of stress as housing market weakness continues."In case you were wondering, this is why your credit card interest rate suddenly jumped and you just paid $3 at an ATM.
Q4 2007 U.S. banking profits lowest in 16 years [MarketWatch]
(Photo:Library of Congress)
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For those that don't want to RTFA, let me put things in perspective:
Commercial banks and savings institutions insured by the FDIC reported net income of $105.5 billion in 2007, a decline of $39.8 billion, or 27.4% from the record $145.2 billion that the industry earned in 2006.
Cry me a river. Poor poor banks indeed...
@chrisbacke: Banks have ALWAYS been a "for profit" business. Credit Unions are the "not for profit" version, putting the service of their customers first.
Banks will bend you over whenever they can.
"In case you were wondering, this is why your credit card interest rate suddenly jumped and you just paid $3 at an ATM."
See....now it's this kind of stupid crap that perpetuates the notion that somehow it's consumer behavior that results in higher fees - like "my insurance rates are higher because of all the fraud" or something. Pure crap. Banks charge what they can get away with, period.
@kenblakely: i completely agree....the other post about people who return an item as renting it...saying thats why companies "have to" charge more...bullshit its all worked into the overhead and they aim to make as much as they can before you go somewhere else...capitalism...maximize profits
@taka2k7: But if we do that, those who do not leave the banks will be further penalized for not just socking all of their cash and bullion under their mattresses. And then what will we tell the children!?!?!?
@aaron8301: But if they follow your advice over a 10-year period, then those same CEOs will be down to annual salaries of less than $35MM. And then their trophy wives will have to think about finding employment over at the Galleria!
Banks profit by providing liquidity to capital markets.
In other words, they make cash and investment property available to clients that would be unable to access it normally. Credit revolutionized this country's infrastructure when, for example, the payment plan on the Model T was introduced. And in case you're the total Internet Obama fans I think you are, credit is the only feasible way to continue to subsidize social welfare spending for health care or social security that doesn't involve privatization. Or just simply denying service.
Lower bank profits - and the consequent lower capitalization at banks - is, largely, bad for consumers who love credit. Virtually all consumers lover credit, so this is bad for virtually all consumers.
Zero % for a year on that flatscreen? Good luck.
Good rate on that mortgage? Not likely.
Cheap bond float on that school system or infrastructure project? Nuh-uh.
Profitable banks mean a lubricated economy, which is good for everyone.
Since the first day they were started? Hate to break it to you, but Citibank doesn't exist because they love you.
I have no idea what my credit card rates are. Don't care, really, as I never pay interest. I also pay no ATM fees (bank doesn't charge any, and they reimburse any "3rd party" fees). And they pay me 3% interest on my checking acc't balance. Credit union? Nope. Fidelity.
@kenblakely: Maybe banks will get on the "government regulatory compliance fee" train like phone companies. Extra little charges for what they should be taking out of their cost of doing business...
@ADismalScience: Profits are down because risk premiums weren't large enough to offset potential losses from bad loans, because investors believed that buying small pieces of lots of crappy loans somehow made those loans less crappy. If anything, recent losses will force banks to follow better underwriting standards and, hopefully, make loans to borrowers who actually deserve it. They'll keep lending, just perhaps not as promiscuously as before.
@chrisbacke: Banks have always been a for profit business, this is the reason jews have been hated for centuries.
Another perhaps missed quote:
"The industry as a whole is coming off a golden period of record profits. Because of this financial strength, the overwhelming majority of banks and thrifts remain well-capitalized and profitable," Bair said.
This is notable because they're not saying that they're losing money, just that they aren't making the kind of record profits to which they've grown accustomed.
@disavow:
The last sentence is my point
Let me reiterate: banks profit by providing liquidity to capital markets. Lower profits are a strong indicator that lending is contracting, which means fewer can access capital.
What's curious is the fact that this is occurring in a period of cheaper money for banks, who borrow much of the money they lend to consumers/industry from the Fed or capitalize it from investors. Capital writedowns have more than offset the liquidity gained from capital created by the Fed's drastic action to provide cash to the markets, which resulted in less money to lend and consequently fewer profits.
That's the paradox in the market right now.
Banks have a capital base - proprietary liquid assets that they provide to consumers at profitable rates. The Fed, to an extent, controls the "supply of money" in a variety of ways.
Right now, spiking default rates have led to a sharp diminishing of bank capital bases. At the same time, the Fed is racing this evaporation of liquidity - and losing. More capital is being put under mattresses than to work.

















Aww, poor banks.
*rolls eyes*