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A spike in stock prices and lingering capital concerns should make bankers wary of buying back shares in the near term.
April 9 -
Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke rejected claims by big banks Monday that they should be able to see the equations the central bank uses when it calculates their stress test scores.
April 8 -
Banks are going to have to work harder next year if they want to continue to pass the Federal Reserve Board's annual stress test exercise.
March 19
Banks are caught in a tug of war over dividends and share repurchases. They are being pulled in one direction by some regulators and industry critics who argue
The latter team gained ground after
Among bank holding companies with at least $50 billion of assets at yearend that have shares listed on major exchanges (excluding several securities firms and trust and custody banks) — a group of 18 — net repurchases of common stock totaled just $550 million in 2012, or 0.7% of net income. Net repurchases reflect buybacks, less amounts issued to raise capital and make compensation awards.
Dividends on common stock totaled $15 billion in 2012 for the group, or 19% of net income.
In 2006, net repurchases accounted for 25% of net income and dividends 42%. (Dollar amounts were also higher in 2006 — $21 billion in net repurchases and $36 billion in dividends — even though the companies were much smaller before a wave of crisis-era acquisitions and the historical figures do not include American Express (AXP) or Discover (DFS) since regulatory data is not available for them prior to their conversion to bank holding companies in 2008 and 2009.)
During the recession, the group raised hundreds of billions of dollars to shore up capital, and slashed dividends after their dividend-to-net income ratios surged because of a collapse in earnings.
Now, banks are set to rev up payouts. JPMorgan Chase (JPM) is positioned to undo a retreat from buybacks this year after receiving
U.S. Bancorp (USB), which had already achieved a combined payout ratio (net repurchases and dividends to net income) of about 50% in 2012, said it was aiming to
“You can approve buybacks and you can stop them” quickly thereafter, CEO Richard Davis has said. But “nobody wants to be embarrassed and have to go cut the dividend again.”
American Express is poised to keep its foot on the gas with
Several banks that posted negative or breakeven combined payout ratios in 2012 according to regulatory data would break solidly above water according to estimates from KBW based on capital plan announcements for the year beginning April 1: about 35% for Bank of America and Regions Financial, for instance.
The debate over bank capital is