WRAPUP 3-Loan losses drag on Wells Fargo, other big banks

Wed Jul 22, 2009 4:29pm EDT

 * Loan deterioration expands into commercial real estate
 * Bank shares mixed
 (Adds financial details, closing share prices, other
background)
 By Jonathan Stempel
 NEW YORK, July 22 (Reuters) - Wells Fargo & Co (WFC.N) and
other major U.S. banks said the troubled economy drove big
increases in loan losses, reducing second-quarter earnings.
 Wednesday's results provided fresh evidence the nation's
banks still face a rough road as loan losses once concentrated
in home mortgages migrate to commercial loans, commercial real
estate loans and credit cards.
 While Wells Fargo joined Bank of America Corp (BAC.N),
Citigroup Inc (C.N) and JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) in posting
multibillion-dollar profits, all boosted reserves for bad
loans. Analysts question how well the sector can weather credit
conditions that are expected to worsen at least into 2010.
 "Some banks show early signs of slowing deterioration, but
there is growing weakness in commercial real estate, which will
worsen," said Gerard Cassidy, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets
in Portland, Maine. "This is no longer just a residential
housing and home equity problem."
 Rising loan losses also reduced earnings at U.S. Bancorp
(USB.N), SunTrust Banks Inc (STI.N) and KeyCorp (KEY.N), which
like Wells Fargo took billions of dollars of federal bailout
money from the Troubled Asset Relief Program. U.S. Bancorp is
the only one of these allowed so far to repay its infusion.
 WELLS FARGO
 Wells Fargo, the nation's fourth-largest bank and largest
mortgage lender, said quarterly profit after preferred
dividends increased 47 percent to $2.58 billion, or 57 cents
per share, from $1.75 billion, or 53 cents. [ID:nN22255536]
 Analysts expected profit of 34 cents per share, according
to Reuters Estimates. Revenue nearly doubled to $22.51 billion,
topping forecasts. The San Francisco-based bank doubled in size
when it bought Wachovia Corp at year end. Wells Fargo made $129
billion of mortgages, the second-most since 2003.
 But nonperforming assets, where borrowers are not making
payments, soared 45 percent from the end of March to $18.34
billion, and swelled 69 percent in commercial and commercial
real estate loans.
 Net charge-offs over that period rose 35 percent to $4.39
billion. The bank nevertheless added just $700 million to
reserves, giving it $23.53 billion. Fitch Ratings cut Wells
Fargo's credit rating.
 "Credit costs continue to increase at an alarming rate,"
said Paul Miller, an analyst at FBR Capital Markets in
Arlington, Virginia.
 Howard Atkins, Wells Fargo's chief financial officer, said
the bank is "properly reserved" for bad loans and that "there
are signs here and there" that the economy has bottomed.
 US BANCORP, SUNTRUST, KEYCORP, BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON
 U.S. Bancorp, based in Minneapolis, said profit fell 76
percent to $221 million, or 12 cents per share, from $926
million, or 53 cents. Net revenue rose 9 percent to $4.16
billion. Analysts expected profit of 10 cents per share on
revenue of $4.02 billion. [ID:nN22255235]
 The bank's set-aside for loan losses and net charge-offs
both more than doubled. Chief Financial Officer Andrew Cecere
said in an interview that net charge-offs and nonperforming
assets will keep rising, but at a lower rate of growth.
 Atlanta-based SunTrust lost $164.4 million, or 41 cents per
share, compared with a year-earlier profit of $530 million, or
$1.52. [ID:nN22255125]
 SunTrust more than doubled the amount it reserved for loan
losses and said borrowers were not making payments on about
$5.5 billion of loans, or 4.48 percent of all SunTrust loans.
 KeyCorp, based in Cleveland, posted a loss of $390 million,
or 68 cents per share, as the bank set aside 31 percent more
for bad loans. [ID:nN22292475]
 It lost $1.13 billion a year earlier, although that figure
was inflated by an unrelated $1.01 billion accounting charge.
 Bank of New York Mellon Corp (BK.N), which focuses on
securities services for institutional clients as well as asset
management, said profit fell 43 percent to $176 million, or 15
cents per share, from $309 million, or 27 cents.
 It attributed the drop in part to the cost of repaying its
own TARP money, and to writedowns of some investments.
[ID:nN21248887].
 In Wednesday trading, Wells Fargo shares fell 90 cents, or
3.6 percent, to $24.45; U.S. Bancorp rose 69 cents, or 3.8
percent, to $18.96; SunTrust rose $1.01, or 6.7 percent, to
$16.19; KeyCorp rose 34 cents, or 7.1 percent, to $5.16, and
Bank of New York Mellon fell $1.79, or 6.1 percent, to $27.32.
 (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel; additional reporting by Svea
Herbst-Bayliss in Boston, Juan Lagorio in New York and Karey
Wutkowski in Washington; editing by John Wallace, Andre Grenon
and Matthew Lewis)

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