In Q1, Wells Fargo's Cost Cutting Should Shine

International Business Times

Published Apr 10, 2014 05:43AM ET

Updated Apr 10, 2014 06:00AM ET

By Moran Zhang - Wells Fargo & Co. NYSE:WFC, a bellwether for the mortgage and housing sector, is expected to report a rise in profit in the first quarter of 2014, largely from strong expense control and less so from the release of reserves set aside for bad loans as higher rates have continued to eat into the bank's lucrative mortgage business.

“We anticipate there to be continued weakness in Wells Fargo’s mortgage banking results because refinancing activities are down and those were supporting a good percentage of the volume that they were running through that channel,” said Edward Jones financial services analyst Shannon Stemm.

“You will probably hear them [Wells Fargo management] talk more about the work to right-size that business and there have been headcount reductions trying to get the expense more in line with the new revenue level,” Stemm said.

Wells Fargo is slated to report its first quarter results on Friday before markets open. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters are projecting a 5 percent increase to 96 cents a share in first-quarter earnings. Revenue is forecast to decline by 3 percent to $20.60 billion. In the same period a year earlier, EPS was 92 cents on $21.26 billion in revenue.

“This could be the first time in years in which the company [Wells Fargo] does not post a sequential-quarter increase in EPS,” KBW’s Christopher Mutascio said. Wells Fargo reported EPS of $1.00 a share in the fourth quarter of 2013, which marked the 16th consecutive quarter of profit growth.

Weakness in trading results should impact Wells Fargo much less than some of its big-bank peers, given that Wells Fargo doesn’t do nearly as much business on the investment banking and trading side.

But when it comes to the more traditional banking side, Stemm said she wouldn’t be surprised if there is additional pressure on net interest margin -- the spread banks earn from borrowing and lending -- given the fact that interest rates are still sitting at a very low level.

Mortgage Slump

The mortgage-refinancing boom that helped Wells Fargo and others drum up business for years began to fizzle last summer. Interest rates started moving higher in May 2013, when the Federal Reserve first suggested it could gradually start to reduce its support for the U.S. economy.

The San Francisco-based lender, which originated nearly one in three U.S. mortgages in 2012, saw its home-lending originations drop to $50 billion in the last three months of 2013, compared with the $125 billion a year earlier and $80 billion in the third quarter of 2013.