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More than costs drive M&A thinking

SNL Report: Talk of M&A signals small-bank scramble to be bigger

 
 
SNL Financial, part of S&P Global Market Intelligence, is the premier provider of breaking news, financial data, and expert analysis on business sectors critical to the global economy. This article originally appeared on the subscriber side of SNL Financial's website. SNL Financial, part of S&P Global Market Intelligence, is the premier provider of breaking news, financial data, and expert analysis on business sectors critical to the global economy. This article originally appeared on the subscriber side of SNL Financial's website.

By Nicole De Dios, Zain Tariq, and Kate Garber, SNL Financial staff writers

Among community banks, having more assets seems to be associated with outsized growth.

S&P Global Market Intelligence analyzed those with less than $10 billion in assets that had reported earnings as of July 22. For the quarter ended June 30, those within the $5 billion-to-$10 billion range grew operating revenue year over year by a median of 8.94%. The median EPS increase was at 4.35%.

Over the same period, the $1 billion-to-$5 billion asset bucket saw median operating revenue improve by 8.11%; for EPS, it was by 6.82%. Meanwhile, the smallest banks increased operating revenue by a median of 5.53%—and EPS by 4.95%.

An early look at earnings results showed plenty of noise from recent M&A, mostly of whole banks, plus some insurance agencies. The broader community bank space continues to seek relief from regulatory burdens as the nation's smallest banks bear the highest costs.

"There's no question that some of the larger community banks seem to be doing better," Chris Cole, Independent Community Bankers of America's executive vice-president and senior regulatory counsel, said in an interview. He estimated the "sweet spot" in asset size to be around $300 million to $500 million, above which "there [are] still regulatory pressures, but … banks can deal with [them] without merging."

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Of course, deals abound even well above that half-billion mark. Tupelo, Miss.-based Renasant Corp.; Nashville, Tenn.-based Pinnacle Financial Partners Inc.; and Wyomissing, Pa.-based Customers Bancorp Inc. have all recently completed acquisitions. For Customers, it was a disbursements business, as it prepares BankMobile's spin-off in order to delay crossing the $10 billion threshold.

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Acquisitions also appealed to Green Bay, Wis.-based Nicolet Bankshares Inc. and Canfield, Ohio-based Farmers National Banc Corp., both revenue growth leaders among banks in the $1 billion-to-$5 billion asset group. Nicolet's results were largely driven by the acquisition of Baylake Corp., and Farmers' acquisition of Bowers Insurance Agency was touted as being immediately accretive to earnings.

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At Oakdale, Calif.-based Oak Valley Bancorp, the quarter's results were a combination of a December 2015 acquisition and loan growth, CFO Jeffrey Gall said in an interview. An uptick in regional loan demand and its effort to hire more lenders also helped the $926 million-asset bank, said the finance chief.

And while lobbying for regulatory relief has made some progress, the difference has yet to be felt. Chris Marinac, FIG Partners' director of research, pointed out that the easing in certain areas, such as reporting requirements, are offset by the higher compliance demanded in others, such as cybersecurity. Leaner call reports are "nice," Marinac said, but certainly not enough.

In the meantime, lower-for-longer rates and emerging credit headwinds are also expected to dent small banks' near-term profitability. S&P Global Market Intelligence now projects a net interest margin of 3.61% for small banks in 2016.

This article originally appeared on SNL Financial’s website under the title, "Talk of M&A signals small-bank scramble to be bigger"

Download reprint of SNL article

SNL Financial

SNL Financial, now part of S&P Global Market Intelligence, is the premier provider of breaking news, financial data, and expert analysis on business sectors critical to the global economy: Banking, Insurance, Financial Services, Real Estate, Energy, Media & Communications and Metals & Mining. SNL's business intelligence service provides investment professionals, from leading Wall Street institutions to top corporate management, with access to an in-depth electronic database, available online and updated 24/7. This article originally appeared on the subscriber side of SNL Financial's website in slightly different form and appears on www.bankingexchange.com as part of a cooperative venture. Each week a selected SNL article will be brought to our readers. Click here to learn more about SNL Financial and to obtain a free trial subscription. 

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