Banks And Financials: Can They Get Much Cheaper?

 | Aug 19, 2019 05:40PM ET

The Financial sector has been an overweight for some time in client accounts and it has hurt performance since January 1, ’18.

Client’s biggest financial weighting has been Schwab (NYSE:SCHW), given its asset-gathering prowess (and it is our only third-party client custodian) and then JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM), Chicago Merc (NASDAQ:CME), the XLF (big bank ETF) and unfortunately the KRE (regional bank ETF).

Bill Nygren, the famed OakMark Fund Value manager, had this to say to Christine Benz in a Morningstar podcast where Bill and the OakMark Select Fund was seeing value today:

At the other extreme, the banks have rarely sold at less than half the S&P multiple where they’re at today. They sell, a lot of them, around tangible book value, single-digit P/Es, yet, are much better businesses than they have been for the past decade or so–better lending standards, higher capital ratios, more of a competitive advantage from technology. That ratio of bank stocks to electric utilities to pay half as much on a multiple basis for banks as you would for an electric utility I think is an incredible value.

It’s not like we think that loan growth is suddenly going to skyrocket to double-digit levels. A bank like Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) was just given approval to buy back 11% of their stock over the next year, and they’re not digging into capital to do that. That’s just the capital that they will be generating over the next year, and that’s in addition to a dividend yield of about 3%, which is about all you’re getting on electric utilities, anyway.

So, I think the opportunity for a long-term investor to create a portfolio today of dramatically undervalued names and to void some sectors that look pretty fully valued should create an opportunity to meaningfully outperform the rest of the stock market. We don’t think the rest of the stock market is overvalued.

Nick Colas and Jessica Rabe on their newly launched blog, “DataTrek Morning Briefing,” wrote last night that:

#2: While US banks have fared much better than their European counterparts over the years, recent worries over structurally low/declining interest rates have taken a real toll on their stocks:

The S&P Bank Index, an even-weight measure of 90 public equities, is down 17% over the last year in price terms (i.e. near bear market territory). Six points (35%) of that decline have happened in just the last month.

Valuations for the largest US banks are very low, at 9-12x expected earnings versus 17.5x on the S&P 500: JP Morgan (10.4x forward earnings, 3.0% dividend yield), Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) (9.0x, 2.7% yield), Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) (9.8X, 4.6% yield), Citigroup (NYSE:C) (7.5x, 3.2% yield), and US Bancorp (NYSE:USB) (11.8x, 2.8% yield).

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Nick was writing about the European bank stock chart, which many think does not look good. So will US banks be a safe haven for those looking for global financial exposure or will they get dragged down by Europe's bank mess. (Frankly, I have no opinion on that.)