NEW YORK, NY – Trepp has prepared a Look Ahead to CCAR 2014
that establishes a clear connection between earlier stress testing results and
bank stock performance.
Daniel K. Tarullo |
The report also predicts how the next wave of banks required
to undergo these stress test will perform. This report will go out to Trepp
customers late next week. A summary follows:
A statement from Federal Reserve Governor Daniel K.
Tarullo this summer reminded the markets that CCAR1 supervisory stress
testing will not be limited to the 18 large banks currently subject to the
tests.
In his testimony before the Senate, Tarullo maintained that
"this fall, we will extend the full set of stress testing requirements to
the dozen or so banking organizations with greater than $50 billion in assets
covered in the Dodd-Frank Act but not fully covered in our previous stress
tests."2
This remark set the wheels in motion for the press to begin
speculation on which banks that would include and what the results would look
like.
In this brief, Trepp looks at how past stress test results have
been a predictor of stock price performance, and offers thoughts on what the
next round of stress test results will look like for the new banks potentially
subject to CCAR.
A Look Back: What Stress Test Results Tell Us about Stock
Performance
In the nearly 18 months since the 2012 CCAR stress test
results were published, banks that experienced lower Tier 1 Common ratios under
the Severely Adverse Scenario saw their stock prices lag relative to banks that
posted higher Tier 1 Common ratios.
Equity investors may want to keep an eye on this trend as
longer periods of data are available and new results are posted for additional
banks.
There are several reasons for the banks’ strong relative
price performance.
First, the banks’ higher stressed capital ratios indicate a
better ability to weather adversity, so they have been rewarded more than their
peers that aren’t as well-capitalized.
Second, stronger CCAR stress test results mean that these
banks have greater flexibility in future capital planning, including potential
dividend increases and stock buybacks.
Changes in the CCAR banks’ capital plans must be approved by
regulators, and the results of stress testing are critical to getting those
approvals.
And third, higher results can indicate more balance sheet capacity
available for potential acquisitions or simply adding leverage, thereby
boosting earning assets.
For a complete
copy of the company’s news release, please contact:
Eric R. Gerard
Senior Vice President
Great Ink Communications
27 Union Square West, Suite 205
New York, NY 10001
(212) 741-2977
No comments:
Post a Comment