With deposits steady and lending flat, focus shifts to credit quality

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Credit quality issues have been creeping up at banks with total net charge-offs reaching more than $15 billion last quarter, up 103% from the same period a year earlier, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. Given this, bankers are likely to face more questions about the soundness of their loan portfolios during the upcoming earnings season.
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Community bankers navigated the fallout of soaring interest rates and stubbornly high inflation in 2023 and continued to generate profits. They also weathered the deposit outflows that followed regional bank failures early in the year and steadily rebuilt funding bases. 

The scars of those battles linger: In the wake of the collapses last spring — spurred in part by the flight of nervous depositors — bankers had to pay up to retain or attract new customers and deposit costs jumped. Community banks' median cost of deposits climbed to 1.44% in the third quarter, up from 1.17% the prior quarter and 0.33% a year earlier, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence data.

By extension, net interest margins contracted as higher funding costs more than offset lending profitability. The median NIM among community banks declined 4 basis points in the third quarter to 3.37%.

But those pains have begun to ease, particularly as inflation finally cooled in the second half of 2023 and the Federal Reserve hit the brakes on hiking rates. Yet in the aftermath of inflation reaching a 40-year high and interest rates more than doubling since 2022, recession worries persist. Historically, the combination of high borrowing costs and elevated inflation has tilted the economy into a downturn, hurting borrowers' collective ability to service their debts.  

Against that backdrop, analysts say bankers will inevitably face a battery of questions during the fourth-quarter earnings season in January about their outlooks for the economy and the potential impact on credit quality in the year ahead.  

Daniel Goerlich, U.S. banking and capital markets deals leader at PwC, said high costs across the economy continue to stress consumers and businesses. This, in turn, pushes worries about the potential for loan losses to the front of investors' minds. 

"There's still plenty of uncertainty out there," Goerlich said.  

While coming off historically low levels, credit costs are already on the rise.  

Net loan charge-offs as a percentage of average loans and leases totaled 0.51% in the third quarter, up 25 basis points from a year earlier, according to S&P Global. Charge-off ratios worsened in the credit card, commercial and industrial, construction and auto lending portfolios. 

Total net charge-offs reached $15.65 billion last quarter, up 103% from the third quarter of 2022, the S&P Global data showed. 

The firm said early-stage delinquencies, or loans and leases past due between 30 days and 89 days, totaled $59.33 billion in the third quarter, 15% higher than a year earlier. Loans and leases past due 90 days or more were up 32%. 

"I don't think the odds of a deep recession are significant, but we could still definitely see a slowdown of some kind, and a slower economy does create reason to worry about credit losses," said Jacob Thompson, managing director at Samco Capital Markets. "We've obviously already seen some issues emerge. There is some weakness." 

With credit quality a potential issue, banks have pulled back on lending, adding another challenge for earnings, Thompson added.  

Total loans at U.S. banks with less than $10 billion of assets grew by 1.9% in the third quarter, according to S&P Global. That was a slowdown from 2.5% in the previous quarter and from 3.5% in the third quarter of 2022. 

Scott Siefers, a Piper Sandler analyst, said lending in the fourth quarter "remains pretty weak," with sluggishness across business lines. "The trends are all fairly rough all around," he added. 

Deposit levels are holding steady in the current quarter, though Piper Sandler expects banks to report higher funding costs again, continuing a yearlong trend. This, combined with lackluster loan growth, is likely to further compress margins, though less so than in prior quarters. 

Piper Sandler estimated that banks in its coverage universe, consisting largely of community lenders, would on average report fourth-quarter core earnings per share 7.6% lower than the prior quarter. For the full year, the firm modeled EPS to come in 9% lower than 2022. 

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