UPDATE: PNC Posts Gain As Core Revenue Fall And Bad Loans Slow
July 23 2009 - 10:13AM
Dow Jones News
The pace of loans going bad actually fell during the second
quarter at PNC Financial Services Group Inc. (PNC).
Unfortunately for the Pittsburgh regional bank, so too did core
revenues.
PNC's earnings fell 60% from a year earlier to $207 million due
to lower core revenues, higher losses from loans gone bad and a
one-time special assessment from the federal government to re-stock
the FDIC's deposit insurance fund.
At the same time, the pace of loans turning bad at PNC actually
slowed, a possible indication that the bank could soon see losses
from loans start to taper. PNC also posted positive earnings from
its recent acquisition of troubled rival National City Corp., which
vaulted PNC to the fifth largest U.S. bank by deposits.
Shares in PNC were recently down 6.6% to $34.92.
The bank's total revenues, which were $3.87 billion, actually
fell compared to the previous quarter, even as some of PNC's peers,
including JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) and Wells Fargo & Co.
(WFC), managed to grow their revenues at impressive rates.
Save for PNC's retail bank and its investment stake in asset
manager BlackRock Inc. (BLK), revenues at all the company's
business segments fell during the quarter. The company noted that
its ranks of customers is nonetheless growing.
PNC set aside $1.1 billion to cover current and future loan
losses, up 23.5% over last quarter. The company has now socked away
$4.6 billion for future losses from bad loans, equal to 2.77% of
its total loans.
And yet, the firm's level of loans turning bad actually slowed.
So-called nonperforming loans, or loans becoming uncollectable,
grew by $1 billion during the second quarter, down from the first
quarter's growth of $1.3 billion.
In many ways, PNC is a modestly smaller bank than it was just
six months ago; total assets and loans have fallen for the last two
quarters.
Deposits fell as well during the second quarter, in part because
the company chose to shed higher-cost certificates of deposits.
That shrinking game - which is likely only a temporary trend -
also hit PNC's net interest margin, which is the difference in
interest rates between funds that banks borrow and the funds they
lend out.
PNC said lower demand for loans pushed the bank to invest funds
in ultra-low-risk securities like Treasury bonds. As a result, the
company's net interest margin fell to 3.60%, down from 3.81% in the
quarter.
The regional bank bought troubled Cleveland-based National City
for nearly $2 billion on Dec. 31 as part of the federal
government's effort to pair struggling banks with stronger
rivals.
Unlike some of its other healthy peers, PNC hasn't rushed to
repay the $7.6 billion in taxpayer support it accepted last year
from the U.S. Treasury. The firm reiterated Thursday that it would
re-pay those funds "when appropriate" and "in a
shareholder-friendly manner."
The comments continue to suggest that PNC's shareholders are
unlikely to face the heavy dilution other bank investors have faced
recently, since many firms repaying TARP have raised the necessary
cash in part by issuing new shares.
-By Marshall Eckblad and Kerry Grace Benn, Dow Jones Newswires;
212-416-2156; marshall.eckblad@dowjones.com