
NYSE:BAC
He likes it. The whole financial group hasn’t done much in 2018. Rising rates are a positive for the banks. Each 100 basis points increase in the level of interest rates will make Bank of America 2.8 billion dollars in net interest income. That translates in 3 dollars a share for this stock. It is a cyclical though. Needs to be monitored.
Owns a couple of other comparable banks. American banks went down today even as the Dow rose to a record high. Global financial stocks are suffering as the yield curve gets flatter. The Fed indicated that a number of rate increases are coming in the next 12 to 18 months, but if those increases have their main effect on the short end of the yield curve, the result will be the dreaded inverted yield curve, which is almost always a precursor to a slowdown in economic activity. The current spread between the 2-year bond yield and the 10-year yield is only 25 basis points. Banks do best when the yield curve is rising, because banks borrow short and lend long. He would not sell a large bank at this point, but he wouldn’t be surprised to see their prices drop further because of the Fed rate cycle.
Trading at 1x book value, and in past bull markets has traded at 3-4x that. Not expensive and he sees a lot of upside in the US market. The US economy is growing and there's a little inflation in the system--tthese are great conditions for BAC. (The US banks underperformed, because they had a great run from Sept. 2017 to Feb. 2018.)
Well-run. All banks are sensitive to interest rates. BAC has a big investment banking operation. Its CEO has done well to maintain cost discipline. Boasts decent international exposure. All US banks have been stuck for the past year. As long as the US market holds, BAC will do well. He expects more investment to flow into the US banks.
Generally, he likes the US large cap banks. Trading above the 200-day moving average. At some point, interest rates will start picking up and net interest margins will move higher. Fairly cheap. As long as the global and US economies continue to do well, the stock will do fine. Lower tax rate and less regulation are positives. Yield is just under 2%. (Analysts’ price target is just above $34.)
(Past Top Pick, Sept. 11, 2017, Up 34%) Many expected rising interest rates would push up US bank earnings, but people are holding record debt. Investors got ahead of the trade, but this is a good long-term story. Regulation rollbacks in banks will be a major tailwind. This is one of his major holdings.
Own it for a long time. Very cheap. Have great growth prospects. Well capitalized. Trades at 1.1 times book and 10 times next year earnings. Regulation is coming down. Yield of 1.9%. They have a great global franchise. He likes that they are returning a lot of capital to shareholders via buybacks and they are increasing their dividends. (Analysts’ price target is $34.39)
Comparing this to Citigroup: he owns both stocks. Both came out of the 2008 crisis in worse shape than the other large money center banks; both have recovered substantially and are trading at a narrower discount to them now. He expects the gap to close further. Citi trades at a greater discount and has more upside potential.
A key holding for him. They have good technology behind their business to assist in the growth of online banking. A great asset to have in your portfolio. As the 10 year rates go higher, it will bode well for their business. He still thinks it is cheap.