Banks
Use $1.77 Trillion to Double Treasury Purchases
The
gap between U.S. bank deposits and loans is growing at the fastest
pace in two years, providing lenders with more funds to buy bonds and
temper the biggest sell-off in Treasuries since 2010.
21
August, 2012
As
deposits increased 3.3 percent to $8.88 trillion in the two months
ended July 31, business lending rose 0.7 percent to $7.11 trillion,
Federal Reserve data show. The record gap of $1.77 trillion has
expanded 15 percent since May, the biggest similar-period gain since
July, 2010. Banks have already bought $136.4 billion in Treasury and
government agency debt this year, more than double the $62.6 billion
in all of 2011, pushing their holdings to an all-time high of $1.84
trillion.
Faced
with a slowing U.S. economy, unemployment above 8 percent for more
than three years and regulations forcing them to hold more and
higher-quality assets, banks are lending at below pre-recession
levels. The bond purchases help explain why even after rising this
month, Treasury 10-year note rates are about half the 3.5 percent
median forecast of 43 economists in a Bloomberg survey a year ago.
“Bank
deposits continue to explode and in turn they continue to buy
Treasuries as the economy loses momentum, inflation is trending down,
Europe continues to hang over our heads and political uncertainty
reigns” said Michael Mata, a money manager in Atlanta at ING
Investment Management Americas, which oversees about $160 billion.
“There is no reason for interest rates to climb in any meaningful
way any time soon.”
Borrowing
Rises
While
the gap has narrowed to $1.75 trillion as of Aug. 8 as lending of
$7.12 trillion trailed $8.87 trillion in deposits, the gap is more
than 17 times the $100 billion average in the decade before credit
markets seized up, Fed data show.
Commercial
and industrial lending reached a peak of $1.61 trillion in October
2008, a month after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.
As the credit crisis deepened, loans tumbled to $1.2 trillion two
years later, before recovering to $1.46 trillion Aug. 1.
The
recent rise isn’t keeping up with record bank deposits as savings
of U.S. households have risen to 4.4 percent of incomes as of June
from 1.7 percent in 2007, the data show.
“Every
bank is looking for a way to increase their yield,” said Mike
Pearce, president of Bank of The West in Grapevine, Texas, whose
company has been purchasing government securities after deposits grew
faster than loans in 2010 and 2011. Instead of earning the Federal
Funds rate of zero to 0.25 percent on the deposits, its bond holdings
are yielding about 3.25 percent, he said.
Seeking
Safety
Bank
Treasury holdings reached $500 billion, the highest since June 2011,
even with interest rates minus inflation for benchmark 10-year notes
of 0.38 percent, compared to the average of 1.26 percent over the
past decade.
Yields
on 10-year Treasury notes rose 15 basis points, or 0.15 percentage
point, last week to 1.81 percent. The price of the 1.625 percent
security maturing in August 2022 declined 1 12/32, or $13.75 per
$1,000 face value, or 98 9/32. The yield was little changed to 1.81
percent today.
They
increased from a record low 1.379 percent on July 25 as investors
became more optimistic about the economy. The U.S. added 163,000 jobs
last month, a government report showed Aug. 3, more than the 100,000
projected by analysts. Sales at U.S. retailers increased 0.8 percent,
more than the 0.3 percent forecast and following a 0.5 percent slide
in June, Commerce Department data released Aug. 14 showed.
Rate
Forecast
The
benchmark notes will yield 1.60 percent by the end of September,
below June’s projection of 1.90 percent, median estimates in
separate Bloomberg surveys show. The year-end forecast fell to 1.65
percent from 2.1 percent.
Banks
may be forced into more risky assets and lending practices if yields
continue to hover about record low levels, said David Hendler, an
analyst at financial research firm CreditSights Inc. in New York.
Their net interest margin, a measure of lending profitability, has
declined to 3.52 percent, the lowest since 2009, according to FDIC
data.
“It
doesn’t pay to be aggressive right now if you are a bank, but
continuing to buy bonds near these levels is not sustainable in the
long run,” Hendler said in an Aug. 14 telephone interview.
The
Federal Reserve said in its quarterly survey of senior loan officers,
released Aug. 6, that “domestic banks, on balance, continued to
report having eased their lending standards across most loan types
over the past three months.” Lending standards for large and
medium-sized firms loosened, while those for small business were
little changed for the fourth consecutive period.
Recession
Legacy
Wall
Street’s five biggest banks are off to their worst start in four
years. JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), Bank of America Corp.,
Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley had
combined first-half revenue of $161 billion, down 4.5 percent from
2011 and the lowest since $135 billion in 2008. The firms blamed the
decline on low interest rates and a drop in trading and deal-making.
Low
government bond yields are a legacy of the credit crisis that caused
more than $2 trillion in write downs and losses at global financial
institutions, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
After
cutting its target rate for overnight loans between banks in 2008 to
a range of zero to 0.25 percent, the Fed under Chairman Ben S.
Bernanke bought $2.3 trillion of Treasury and mortgage-related debt
to reduce market interest rates and stimulate the economy.
The
central bank owned $1.66 trillion of Treasuries as of August, ahead
of China’s $1.16 trillion.
Extra
Deposits
Investors
are more willing to accept low yields “when you have large demand
from the Fed as well as natural demand from banks,” said Matthew
Duch, a fixed-income money manager at Calvert Investments, which
oversees more than $12 billion in assets. “Are bonds where banks
want to be right now? No, but given the uncertainty over regulation,
the economy and still weak loan demand in the market it’s the best
of lots of bad options,” he said.
Banks
have “very conservative” balance sheets, JPMorgan Chief Executive
Officer Jamie Dimon said in a July 13 conference call with analysts.
The bank lent out $700 billion of its $1.1 trillion in deposits in
the second quarter. “That would generally be considered totally
conservative,” Dimon said.
JPMorgan
increased the Treasury and government agencies portion of their
available-for-sale credit portfolio to $11.743 billion as of June 30,
from $8.351 billion at the start of the year, according to a filing
with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Aug. 9.
Added
Incentive
“We
get a lot of deposits in,” he said. “The extra deposits of $423
billion, plus equity, plus some other net liabilities, give us $522
billion that’s not being lent out that we have to invest.”
The
global supply of the highest-quality securities, as measured by
ratings companies, is poised to fall by as much as $4 trillion.
Reforms such as the Dodd-Frank financial-overhaul law and global
regulations set by the Bank for International Settlements require
institutions to hold more top-graded debt.
Lenders
have an added incentive to buy Treasuries after the Basel Committee
on Banking Supervision proposed rules in 2011 that banks increase
available capital to bolster the cushion against potential losses and
better measure and control their risk. Treasuries’ safety and
liquidity makes them suitable capital under regulations designed to
prevent a repeat of the global financial crisis.
Wrong
Direction
Loans
are being damped by the slow recovery. Gross domestic product
expanded at a 1.5 percent annual rate in the second quarter after a
revised 2 percent gain in the prior three months, below the average
of 2.6 percent since 1982, the Commerce Department said on July 27.
The
share of U.S. households viewing the economy as heading in the wrong
direction rose to 45 percent in August, the highest since November,
from 36 percent in July, the Bloomberg Consumer Comfort survey showed
today. The monthly expectations gauge dropped to minus 22 from minus
11. The weekly Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index fell to minus 44.4 in
the period ended Aug. 12, the lowest since January, from minus 41.9.
Household
purchases, which account for about 70 percent of GDP, grew at the
slowest pace in a year, according to the commerce department’s
report on GDP.
Stimulus
Pledge
Fed
policy makers said Aug 1 they would provide more monetary stimulus
“as needed.”
“There’s
all sorts of good long-term developments that are occurring on
household balance sheets, but you sense the Fed would like them to be
not quite as thrifty and instead put a little more money to work,”
said Jim Vogel, head of agency-debt research at FTN Financial in
Memphis, Tennessee. “But that’s not going to happen without
salary incomes rising.”
That
explains the gap between deposits and lending, said Jeffrey Caughron,
a partner at Baker Group LP in Oklahoma City who advises community
banks on more than $30 billion of investments.
“It’s
a function of inherently weak demand for loans and that relates to
inherently weak demand in the economy,” he said. “Consumers,
households, businesses: they’re paying down debt, they’re saving
money, they’re not borrowing. They don’t have an appetite.”

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