The Borneo Post

BofA has more to trim to reach its RM212 billion cost target

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BANK of America Corp. once excited investors by pledging steep cost cuts by the end of this year. It still has a ways to go.

The lender showed promise on revenue growth, as net interest income jumped to the highest in more than five years and revenue from trading and investment banking both topped estimates. Now, analysts question whether it can leverage that by further cost cuts or if tax overhaul will reduce pressure on executives to stay lean.

Chief Executive Officer Brian Moynihan reiterated last Wednesday that the bank can hit the US$ 53 billion ( RM212 billin) goal for annual expenses he set in 2016, even as it continues spending on technology and boosts shareholde­r payouts. Fullyear costs fell less than one per cent in 2017 to US$ 54.7 billion.

“The basic principle is to run a company relatively flat through continued investment and cost effectiven­ess,” Moynihan said on a call with analysts after reporting fourth- quarter results. “We’ve still got a lot of room ahead of us.”

BofA shares fell 2.6 per cent to US$ 30.43 at 10.41am in New York, the most intraday since November. The stock has gained 34 per cent in the past year, outpacing the 24 per cent advance of the KBW Bank Index. BofA shares were at US$ 30.92 at 11.45am.

Bank of America, which spent more than any US rival to clean up operations after the financial crisis, will have to eliminate about US$ 1.7 billion in expenses this year to meet its annual goal. Already, it’s cut employees in 23 of the past 25 quarters, including 463 in the most recent period. But quarterly results posted Wednesday show it still has to find more savings – somewhere.

Last month’s Republican-led tax overhaul will cut BofA’s effective tax rate to 20 per cent in 2018, Chief Financial Officer Paul Donofrio said on a call with reporters, which should help boost this year’s earnings and potentiall­y reduce shareholde­r pressure on costs. The Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank has paid roughly 29 per cent in recent years.

The lender is still evaluating what it will do with benefits from the tax overhaul, Donofrio said.

Moynihan said the bank might seek to modestly increase some investment­s, including in technology, while funnelling most of the gains to its shareholde­rs. The company last month announced a US$ 1,000 bonus for about 145,000 employees. “We will continue to have the same rigour around the way we run the company,” Moynihan said. “Just because the tax rates are lower doesn’t change how we’re going to do it.”

In the short term, though, the tax overhaul resulted in a US$ 2.9 billion fourth- quarter charge, the company said in a statement. The expense, roughly in line with what Moynihan forecast in December, included about US$ 1.9 billion in changes to deferredta­x assets, which essentiall­y function as IOUs that reduce tax bills.

Fourth- quarter earnings were also crimped by a US$ 292 million charge for a loan tied to Steinhoff Internatio­nal Holdings.

BofA got stung providing a margin loan that used Steinhoff’s stock as collateral, according to a person briefed on the matter who asked not to be identified discussing client business. The bank joined other big US lenders, including JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and Citigroup, that got burned lending to

The basic principle is to run a company relatively flat through continued investment and cost effectiven­ess. Brian Moynihan, Chief Executive Officer

the embattled South African retailer.

“There’s no change in risk appetite in the company,” Moynihan said. “Once in a while, something doesn’t turn out the way we want because that’s what the definition of taking risk is.”

Moynihan announced his cost- cutting goal in mid-2016. At the time, the bank had been spending more than US$ 57 billion annually. But that already was down from roughly US$ 70 billion in the early part of Moynihan’s tenure, when the firm was shelling out billions of dollars to resolve financial crisis- era messes.

Total expenses for the quarter declined one per cent to US$ 13.3 billion from a year earlier.

That compares with the US$ 13.1 billion average estimate of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

Here’s a summary of Bank of America’s fourth- quarter results: • Net income fell 47 per cent to US$ 2.37 billion, or 20 cents a share, from US$ 4.54 billion, or 39 cents, a year earlier. Adjusted profit, which excludes the impact from the tax overhaul, was 47 cents a share, the bank said, exceeding analysts’ 45- cent estimate. • Total trading revenue dropped 8.8 per cent to US$ 2.66 billion. Fixed-income declined 13 per cent to US$ 1.71 billion, while equities was unchanged at US$ 948 million. Analysts had expected bond and equity revenue of US$ 1.65 billion and US$ 869 million, respective­ly. • Net interest income rose 11 percent to US$ 11.5 billion from a year earlier. Net interest margin, the difference between what the bank pays depositors and charges borrowers, rose three basis points from the previous quarter to 2.39 per cent.

 ?? — WP-Bloomberg photo ?? A customer uses an automatic teller machine (ATM) inside a Bank of America Corp. branch in New York on Jan 1.
— WP-Bloomberg photo A customer uses an automatic teller machine (ATM) inside a Bank of America Corp. branch in New York on Jan 1.

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