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Tuesday, August 31, 2010

US Banks: What a Difference a Year Makes

Although recent financial news has a decidedly cataclysmic tone, evidence continues to mount that things are improving frustratingly slowly and steadily, exactly as expected.



Today, the FDIC announced that US banks earned, in aggregate, 21.6 billion dollars in the second quarter of this year (FDIC). Though this is still well below historical standards, what is striking is that most banks (80% of them) have returned to profitability.

Back in May, when I first publicly recommended bank stocks (US Banks), headlines warned that the government might force banks to be broken up and sold, that financial regulation could destroy them, and that a new debt crisis (ex. Greece) might soon cripple them. None of these things has materialized.

Since May the US financials index (XLF) has nonetheless dropped from $15.36 to $13.44, despite quantitative improvements in all areas of banking: decreased leverage, reduced loan loss provisions, increased profitability, improved credit market stability, and more.

The new worries for banks include a flattened yield curve (making credit spreads less profitable), a potential double-dip in housing, and that Barack Obama is secretly a communist Muslim and/or Biblical Anti-Christ whose intention is to destroy the US financial system.

If you truly believe that the US economy will never improve, and that US families will never again buy cars or houses, use credit cards or keep bank accounts, you should definitely stay away from bank stocks.

If you believe that banking has a future in America (and that America has a future at all), this year’s prices may well mark the single greatest buying opportunity we will see in our lifetimes.
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"After 1929, so many people had been traumatized by the stock market crash that there was a lost generation."

Ron Chernow
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Disclosure and Disclaimer

Do not buy stocks, or take this or any other financial advice without doing your own analysis; including, but not limited to: reviewing business models, financial statements, management style and philosophy, recent developments, market macroeconomic analysis, and chart analysis. If you do not know how to do these things, you shouldn't be buying stocks in the first place. Seek the advice of professionals, as appropriate.
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