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The financial statements of banks differ from most companies when analyzing revenue. Banks have no accounts receivable or inventory to gauge whether sales are rising or falling. Instead, several unique characteristics are included in a bank's balance sheet and income statement that help investors decipher how banks make money.
Banks accept deposits from consumers and businesses and pay interest in return. Banks invest those funds in securities or extend loans to companies and consumers. When the interest a bank earns from loans exceeds the interest paid on deposits, it generates income from the interest rate spread. The size of this spread is a determinant of a bank's profit.
Banks also earn interest from investing cash in short-term securities like U.S. Treasuries and from fees charged for their products and services such as wealth management advice, checking account fees, overdraft fees, ATM fees, interest, and credit cards.
The table below combines a Bank of America balance sheet and income statement to display the yield generated from earning assets and interest paid to customers on interest-bearing deposits. Most banks provide a similar table in their annual reports.
The balance sheet items are average balances for each line item rather than the balance at the end of the period. Average balances provide a framework for the bank's financial performance. There is a corresponding interest-related income, or expense item, and the yield for the period. Bank of America earned $58.5 billion in interest income from loans and investments while paying out $12.9 billion for deposits.
An example of Bank of America's income statement is shown below with the following highlights:
A bank's revenue is the total of the net interest income and non-interest income.
Bank of America's balance sheet example includes the following:
Although a liability on a bank's balance sheet, deposits are critical to the bank's lending ability.
Banking is a highly leveraged business requiring regulators to dictate minimal capital levels to help ensure the solvency of each bank and the banking system. In the U.S., banks are regulated by:
Interest rate risk is the spread between interest paid on deposits and received on loans over time. Deposits are typically short-term investments and adjust to current interest rates faster than the rates on fixed-rate loans.
If interest rates rise, banks can charge a higher rate on their variable-rate loans and a higher rate on their new fixed-rate loans. If interest rates rise, banks tend to earn more interest income, but when rates fall, banks are at risk as interest income declines.
Credit risk reflects the potential that a borrower will default on a loan or lease, causing the bank to lose potential interest earned and the principal loaned to the borrower.
Changes in interest rates may affect the volume of certain types of banking activities that generate fee-related income. The volume of residential mortgage loan originations typically declines as interest rates rise, resulting in lower originating fees. Banks tend to earn more interest income on variable-rate loans since they can increase the rate they charge borrowers, as in the case of credit cards.
Investors can monitor loan growth to determine whether a bank is increasing its loans and using bank deposits to earn a favorable yield.
Banks maintain an allowance for loan and lease losses. This allowance is a pool of capital specifically set aside to absorb estimated loan losses and should be adequate to absorb the estimated amount of probable losses in the institution's loan portfolio. The loan loss provision is located on a bank's income statement.
The financial statements of banks will differ from those of non-financial companies. Analysts look at net interest margin income and other fundamentals to value bank shares. Banks accept deposits from consumers and businesses and pay interest in return. They use deposits to issue loans and earn interest.
A bank generates income when the interest it earns from loans exceeds the interest paid on deposits. In the U.S., banks are regulated by multiple agencies, including the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
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