15 Years After Lehman - Why I Wouldn't Buy Bank of America

Leo Nelissen
2023-09-19

Scott Olson/Getty Images News

Introduction

Depending on when you're reading this, it's exactly 15 years after Lehman Brothers went bankrupt, triggering a recession that is still shaping the current investment landscape.

The Guardian

As Bloomberg's John Authers wrote:

As for the global fallout, it’s

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FINVIZ

What To Make Of Bank Of America

Wells Fargo

Bank of America

Bank of America

Bloomberg

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

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Right now, real estate only offers a 1.3 percentage point premium. For the relationship to return to normal and make property attractive again, U.S. real-estate prices need to fall a further 10% to 15%.

Wall Street Journal

Bank of America

[...] NII of $14.3 billion is down $289 million or 2% from the first quarter, and that's driven primarily by the continued impact of lower deposit balances and mix shift into interest bearing, partially offset by one additional day of interest in the period. Global markets NII increased during the quarter.

[...] We still believe NII for the full year will be a little above $57 billion, which would be up more than 8% from full year 2022, and this could include third quarter at approximately the same level as second quarter, so think $14.2 billion, $14.3 billion.

[...] First, it assumes that interest rates in the forward curve materialized, and an expectation of modest loan growth driven by credit card. On deposits, we are expecting modestly lower balances led by consumer, and we expect continued modest deposit mix shifts from global banking deposits into interest bearing. The past few months have provided us a little more positive outlook around NII, given the apparent stabilization of some elements of deposits as well as better pricing, and now we'll see how the rest of the year plays out.

Bank of America

If you took our Q2 RWAs and just close to up by 20%, you're going to get to a number like $1.95 trillion. I would imply we're going to need $195 billion of CET1. And we ended Q2 at $190 billion. So it gives you an idea of our gap. And we've been -- we've been adding pretty significant clip of CET1 each quarter. So we should be able to get there in a quarter or two. At that point, then the rest of the challenge is just growing to build the buffer. Everyone overtime and just support the growth over-time and just support the growth and dividend buy-back the shares. We got five years to do that. So, I think we'll have plenty of flexibility once we get through the course of the next quarter or two just build the capital we want, then we get to the point where we've got a lot of flexibility and we didn't just go through our usual priorities for how we think about setting up the balance sheet.

Bank of America

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Bank of America

Valuation

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Bloomberg

CME Group

Takeaway

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