| Liquidity
Drought
by Kenneth Cline
As bank profitability
is squeezed, many institutions are rediscovering the importance
of core deposits.
It might be called the "hidden crisis"
of banking. Although a shrinking deposit base doesn't
grab headlines, like a rash of bad loans, it can significantly
deplete an institution's profitability over time. And
banks are definitely feeling the pinch right now as they're
forced to pay higher rates to recoup core funding.
Bankers and analysts interviewed by
Bank Administration Institute and First Manhattan Consulting
Group "unanimously confirmed that pricing pressure on
liability spreads and fees is the largest potential threat
to retail profitability over the next three to five years,"
says a forthcoming report, which focuses on the top 50
banks. Separately, an American Bankers Association survey
released earlier this year found that the gap between
deposit growth and loan demand poses a "full-fledged crisis"
for community banks.
The issue revolves around core deposits,
which consist of checking, savings and money market accounts.
These funds are supplied by an institution's core customer
base, as opposed to wholesale deposits that are acquired
in the commercial money markets from customers strictly
interested in high rates. The percentage of U.S. banks
able to fund at least two-thirds of total assets with
core deposits fell from 95% to 75% between 1992 and 2000,
according to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.
Why does this matter? Because the profitability
of most financial institutions rests mainly on the net
interest spread, or the difference between what banks
pay depositors for their funds and what they earn by loaning
that money back out. Wholesale deposits are generally
more expensive than core deposits, which pinches the spread
and they are more likely to flee an institution
that runs into trouble.
Most large banks were able to ignore
the erosion of core deposits during the '90s as they grew
fee income and achieved merger efficiencies. Now that
fee income has plateaued and much of the industry has
been consolidated, depositor neglect has come back to
haunt. Tightening net interest margins driven by deposit
pricing pressures will soon emerge as a "prevailing trend,"
warned Credit Suisse First Boston analyst Susan L. Roth
in a February report, reducing bank earning power by between
7% and 15%.
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The Federal Reserve Board's program
of easing interest rates is currently alleviating some
of that pressure, as is the flight of investor funds from
a plunging stock market. But the long-term problem remains:
eroding core deposits means eroding profitability. BAI/First
Manhattan estimates that nearly 90% of consumer profits
from a typical retail bank stems from the spread produced
by these funds and their associated fees. "If you give
up on deposit-gathering, you're out of the banking business,"
says Vernon W. Hill 2d, chairman and president of Commerce
Bancorp, Cherry Hill, N.J.
Some bankers take a defeatist attitude
and assume these funds will inevitably migrate to Wall
Street. They focus on streamlining the branch system and
building their in-house mutual funds/asset management
businesses. This model is often combined with an acquisition
strategy based on the premise that the best way to gain
new retail customers is to buy them. To boost noninterest
income, institutions also milk their retail base by imposing
a plethora of "nuisance" fees, such as account overdraft
penalties.
The flaw in this approach is that once
the string of acquisitions has run its course, an institution
ends up with no organic deposit growth. And if a bank
is not growing deposits, it's probably not growing customers,
which suggests that this business model is not likely
to endure.
Encouragingly, a few select banks have
proven that it's still possible to achieve healthy deposit
growth. These include Commerce Bancorp; TCF Financial
Corp., Minneapolis; Fifth Third Bancorp, Cincinnati, Ohio;
U.S. Bancorp (formerly Firstar Corp.), Minneapolis; and
Compass Bancshares, Birmingham, Ala. Commerce Bancorp,
for example, has seen deposits grow at a compound annual
rate of 22% over the past five years, compared with an
industry average of 4%.
The approaches vary. Some institutions
emphasize convenience (Commerce Bancorp and TCF); some
emphasize service (U.S. Bancorp); and some get by with
effective marketing and pricing promotions (Fifth Third
and Compass Bancshares).
Though tactics differ, these players
share one overriding strategic vision they believe
in the fundamental importance of core deposits and are
willing to devote significant resources to that side of
the business. When the formula works and it's admittedly
not a sure bet the expenses associated with depositor
outreach activities are less than the interest rate differential
incurred when a bank goes to the wholesale market for
funds. Plus, such activities help build valuable customer
relationships.
Unglamorous though it may be, the lowly
checking account is a vital link to other product relationships.
Based on consumer surveys conducted by BAI and Cambridge
Group last fall, there's a 94% probability that a consumer
will maintain at least one additional product relationship
with his or her checking provider. "You don't get a chance
to sell somebody a mutual fund or an annuity unless they're
in the bank. And the reason they're in the bank is the
deposit account," says TCF Financial CEO William Cooper.
The question, however, is whether a
strategy of what might be termed extreme depositor care
can be successfully extended to the industry at large.
Deposit
Exodus
The erosion of core deposits in banking
is nothing new, dating back at least to the deregulation
of interest rates in the 1970s. But the mutual funds boom
of the '90s certainly exacerbated the trend of disintermediation.
The lucrative returns provided by a soaring stock market
proved irresistible to many people who formerly kept a
greater proportion of their wealth in basic deposit instruments.
The damage: by 1999, core deposits made
up only 11% of the $23 trillion of consumer and small
business assets, compared with 21% of an $11 trillion
total in 1993, according to the BAI/First Manhattan study.
That's not to say the traditional deposit-gathering
business is dead or dying. Regulated financial institutions
have actually continued growing total deposits by about
4% annually, the study found, from $3.5 trillion in 1993
to $4.5 trillion in 1999. Checking and savings accounts
contributed half that growth; time deposits the rest.
Researchers found that most of the progress
was achieved by smaller banks, defined as those with less
than $15 billion in total deposits or fewer than 300 branches.
By contrast, the very largest institutions managed a paltry
annual growth rate of less than 1%, after adjusting for
the impact of mergers.
Community banks, despite their comparatively
better performance, are still apprehensive about eroding
deposits. They are more dependent upon the liability spread
and fees than the larger banks, which tend to be more
diversified.
According to the recent ABA study, 66%
of 1,034 community bank respondents in 49 states said
deposit growth failed to keep pace with loan demand last
year, compared with 48% in 1999 and only 39% in 1998.
Nearly 68% of respondents said they are lifting deposit
interest rates to attract more funds, up from 42% and
24% respectively in 1999 and 1998.
To be sure, small banks got a bit of
relief in the fourth quarter. The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp. reported a sudden surge in deposits, apparently
occurring as investors diverted funds from the stock market.
It's not clear whether this is a lasting trend, however.
Large banks, with their sophisticated
treasury functions, are better able to fund loan growth
from wholesale sources, such as commercial paper, brokered
deposits and Federal Home Loan Bank advances. According
to the FDIC, only 39% of the funding at banks with assets
of more than $10 billion comes from core deposits, compared
with 73% at banks with assets of less than $100 million.
Non-core deposits work well enough when
times are good. But what happens when recessionary conditions
put financial institutions under strain? During the nation's
last banking crisis, in the early '90s, a loss of liquidity
pushed several institutions into federal receivership,
and countless other institutions became paralyzed while
dealing with funding issues. The First Manhattan researchers
recently reported that "contingency liquidity," which
measures the backup funds available to banks in a crisis,
fell to a negative 2% from a positive 8% between 1992
and last year's third quarter.
Street
Corner Battle
Without question, banks will sorely
miss their core deposits if current economic troubles
lead to a recession or financial crisis. But even if such
a worst-case scenario doesn't materialize, the industry
still needs to focus on its deposit problem. The reason:
profitability is under strain.
During the '90s, banks relied heavily
on noninterest income to boost the bottom line, much of
that coming from fees tacked on to retail accounts. After
two decades of steady growth, noninterest income as a
percentage of industry assets fell to 2.55% last year,
down from 2.64% in 1999, according to the OCC. Meanwhile,
the slowing economy has sparked a surge in problem loans,
which forces banks to cut back on lending and drain earnings
to bolster loan-loss reserves.
In this harsher environment, deposits
take on a renewed importance. "There will be an aggressive
fight for deposit market share," predicts consultant Donald
B. Taylor, president of FISI-Madison Financial in Nashville.
Already, leaders in deposit growth are getting a lot more
press and analytical attention.
What traits distinguish these over-achievers?
The BAI/First Manhattan study identifies five statistically
significant factors. They are: high service levels; net
growth in physical branch locations; dense ATM networks;
"customer-friendly" pricing, i.e., relatively higher rates
and lower fees; and economic growth within the institution's
geographic territory.
Economic growth is obviously outside
an institution's control. But the other factors point
to a customer value proposition that includes some combination
of service, convenience (large numbers of branches and
ATMs), and marketing (attractive products).
More subjectively, there's a strategic
mindset in these institutions that elevates deposit-gathering
to a priority, as opposed to an afterthought. "Some people
view deposits as a mundane business," says Fifth Third
executive vice president and retail chief Robert P. Niehaus.
That attitude must change.
Small institutions such as Commerce
Bancorp ($8 billion of assets) and TCF ($11 billion) have
the luxury of focusing top management's attention directly
on deposit-gathering. Hill, for example, gets involved
in every detail of Commerce Bancorp's retail operation,
from branch design and furnishings to the installation
of coin-counting machines. Hill's strategy is expensive
and critically depends on additional factors, such as
high equity leverage and low credit quality problems,
for strong profitability.
But even larger institutions can take
the necessary care. Fifth Third saw deposits surge after
it hired an executive (Wil Daly, currently chief marketing
officer) expressly for that purpose in 1995. The $46 billion-asset
company sustains the momentum by launching new sales campaigns
on a quarterly basis. Branch employees are incented to
sell products such as the Totally Free checking account,
which is linked to overdraft protection and a debit card,
and managers closely monitor the results.
"It's fighting the banking wars street
corner by street corner," Niehaus says.
Branch
Reappraisal
One byproduct of banking's reappraisal
of deposits may be a renewed appreciation for branches.
During the consolidation/cost-cutting whirlwind of the
'90s, large banks particularly tended to view their brick-and-mortar
networks as expensive encumbrances. At the extreme, outlets
were "rationalized" to the clear detriment of service.
So how have Commerce Bancorp and TCF
sustained aggressive de novo branching programs in an
America widely perceived to be over-branched? Commerce
Bancorp builds about 30 full-service branches a year.
TCF, a thrift that mostly expands through supermarkets,
has opened more than 150 in-store facilities in the past
three years. "You get a lot of new customers when you
open new stores," Cooper says. "It's the classic retailers'
strategy."
So voluminous is the stream of new checking
and savings accounts that deposit growth has far outstripped
loan growth at the two institutions. They end up putting
a lot of securities on their balance sheets, but with
a low cost-of-funds they can still make money on bond
investments and low-risk loans.
Of course, one can legitimately question
whether any top-50 bank would be able to emulate this
strategy. Most of them are under such intense pressure
to boost earnings by cutting expenses that an expensive
de novo branching program might be out of the question.
It's also unclear whether multiple banks in a given market
could attempt this strategy without ruining the economics
for everybody.
There are other ways to regain retail
depositors, however. First Manhattan vice president Gordon
Goetzmann suggests that larger banks "redouble their efforts
on service," for example. He points to U.S. Bancorp (actually
Firstar, its predecessor organization) as an institution
that has enshrined high-quality service as a way of life
and attracted core deposits as a result.
The key is to restore basic deposit-gathering
as a core competency and accord it the necessary attention
and resources. As the BAI/First Manhattan study points
out, the liability spread and the fees associated with
transaction and savings accounts provide the banking industry
with 51% of its revenues and two-thirds of its profits.
Customers must also be viewed in a new
light as sales opportunities to be cultivated rather
than as service "abusers" who deserve to be loaded down
with fees. One way or another, these customers must be
offered a differentiated value proposition. That value
can be based on convenience, service or rate, but people
must have a clear reason to pick your bank over the others.
As Commerce Bancorp's Hill says, "You have to stand for
something."
Mr. Cline is
senior editor of Banking
Strategies.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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