We recently compiled a list of the 10 Best Local Bank Stocks To Invest In Now. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Citizens Financial Group, Inc. (NYSE:CFG) stands against the other local bank stocks.

As investors shift their focus from artificial intelligence to the labor market and its impact on potential interest rate cuts, the banking industry of 2024 is quite different from the one in 2021. Interest rates are at a 24 year high in America as of early September, which means that not only do the costs of borrowing money increase for consumers but banks also have to carefully monitor their loan portfolios to ensure liquidity and manage insolvency risks.

One consequence of this has been a growth in private capital, which covers loans made to firms by non banking entities. According to data from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the private credit market crossed a whipping $2.1 trillion in 2023 through its assets and capital commitments. 75% of this was in the US as investors such as pension funds and others drove to funds that offered higher returns while corporate borrowers flocked to private lenders due to the relatively simpler process of acquiring capital and relaxed risk requirements when compared to banks.

In fact, private credit is one of the best performing investment vehicles when it comes to returns according to the IMF. The fund uses December 2000 as a base value of 100 to show that as of June 2023, private credit was up to almost 800 points. In comparison, the flagship S&P index, which was also assigned an index value of 100 for December 2000, was up to roughly 460 points by June 2023, while global stocks delivered the least returns as they sat at 400 points.

The IMF believes that while the risks from this shift from local banks to private capital are not immediate, they are still important particularly due to the opacity of private capital. Private borrowers are riskier than those who borrow from banks. For instance, while the debt to operating income ratio of private borrowers is roughly 4.75, the median firm size is roughly $500 million. On the other hand, firms that rely on investment grade bonds have a median value of $16 billion and a debt to operating income ratio ranging between 2.8 to 3.6.

Shifting gears, the growth in private capital isn’t the only disruption that banks are facing. While high interest rates create the opportunity for banks to earn more through interest income, they also increase interest expenses. In fact, according to research from S&P Global, the banking sector will see some benefits from the higher rates this year as the aggregate efficiency ratio (non interest expenses/revenue) can sit at 60.30 this year for a three point gain over 2023’s 57.25. However, this might be the only good news in store. This is because the sector’s net interest margin, return on average assets (ROAA), and return on average equity (ROAE) are all expected to drop in 2024. In 2023, the three respective metrics were 3.22, 1.09, and 11.52, while in 2024, they are expected to sit at 3.18, 0.97, and 11.52.

Additionally, two other ways in which the banking industry has evolved in today’s era of high interest rates are through growth in competition for deposits and the corresponding high deposit costs. Not only did the high rates start to fully make their mark in Q4 2023 as deposits grew by 1.4% after six consecutive quarterly declines, but the difference between the Fed funds rate and the rate paid to depositors also dropped in Q4. This was because banks enticed customers by increasing their deposit costs, and the difference between the two rates had sat at roughly 3.2% in Q2 2023 and dropped to roughly 2.9% in the fourth quarter. The S&P believes that by 2026, this should sit at roughly 1% as the Fed funds rate drops to a little above 2%.

The increasing competition for deposits in banks that spurred the smaller gap has also caused large drops in the banking industry’s non interest deposits. As of 2023 end, non interest deposits accounted for 21.8% of the US banking industry’s total deposits a sizeable drop over the 28.9% figure for 2021. This fall came when non interest bearing deposits dropped by 28% over the past two years while interest bearing deposits grew by 5%. Keep in mind that the growth figure for the interest bearing deposits is lower due to their larger volume. Looking at the future, the banking industry’s net interest margin is expected to grow to 3.26 and 3.35 in 2025 and 2026 when the deposit beta falls to at least 27%.

Finally, the boon in internet usage and the accompanying growth in consumer electronics and personal computing is also impacting the banking industry. As per McKinsey, 60% of US banking consumers under the age of 70 are using digital channels for their wealth management. At the same time, some of the richest banking consumers, i.e. those aged above 70 are also increasing their use of digital banking products. This usage has grown by 5% within this age group, with the broader trend allowing banks the ability to bring their cost to income ratios below 25% and cost to asset ratios below 50%. In short, digital banking is offering banks the ability to become quite light operationally.

Our Methodology

To make our list of the best local bank stocks to buy according to hedge funds, we ranked the 40 most valuable regional US banks in America in terms of market capitalization by the number of hedge funds that had bought their shares in Q2 2024 and picked out the top stocks.

For these stocks, we have also mentioned the number of hedge fund investors. Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter’s strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 275% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 150 percentage points. (see more details here).

A financial advisor examining a client’s portfolio at a modern office workspace.

Citizens Financial Group, Inc. (NYSE:CFG)

Number of Hedge Fund Holders In Q2 2024: 47

Citizens Financial Group, Inc. (NYSE:CFG) is a Rhode Island based consumer and commercial banking firm. Additionally, the firm also has a private banking division which allows it diversification for its deposit base and income. Citizens Financial Group, Inc. (NYSE:CFG) has a diversified loan portfolio as well, with exposure to commercial real estate limited to 20% as of Q2. An additional 31% of its loans are to non real estate commercial entities and industrial firms, which are more likely to make timely payments than consumer borrowers. However, Citizens Financial Group, Inc. (NYSE:CFG) also holds $11 billion in education loans, and these might see trouble depending on their type if the US government’s student borrower forgiveness programs are expanded. Unlike some other banks though, Citizens Financial Group, Inc. (NYSE:CFG) enjoys the advantage of having 21% of its deposits being non interest paying demand deposits which expands its ability to earn revenue at a time when the US banking industry is expected to face higher costs and dropping interest income. Additionally, its CET1 ratio of 10.7% allows Citizens Financial Group, Inc. (NYSE:CFG) the ability to boost its shares by having room to make buybacks.

Citizens Financial Group, Inc. (NYSE:CFG)’s management shared key details for its private bank during the Q2 2024 earnings call:

“Finally, we’re building a premier private bank, and that is going very well and gaining momentum.

We’re growing our client base and now have about $4 billion of attractive deposits, a $1.6 billion increase from the prior quarter, with roughly 30% non-interest bearing. Also, we are now at $1.4 billion of loans and continuing to grow. We recently opened private banking offices in Mill Valley, California and Palm Beach, Florida, and we are opportunistically adding talent to bolster our banking and wealth capabilities with our Citizens Wealth Management business as the center piece of that effort. We added two exceptional asset management teams in the second quarter, one from San Francisco and the other from Boston, bringing the total private bank AUM to $3.6 billion, well on our way to hit our $10 billion target by the end of 2025. Importantly, our private bank revenue increased 68% to about $30 million in the second quarter, and we are on track to break even on the bottom line later this year.”

Overall CFG ranks 2nd on our list of the best local bank stocks to invest in. While we acknowledge the potential of CFG as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and doing so within a shorter timeframe. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than CFG but that trades at less than 5 times its earnings, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock.

 

READ NEXT: $30 Trillion Opportunity: 15 Best Humanoid Robot Stocks to Buy According to Morgan Stanley and Jim Cramer Says NVIDIA ‘Has Become A Wasteland’.

 

Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.

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