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    1

    Digging Deeper

    Into Key Areas

    Strictly Financials

    Jan. 3 , 2013

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    Strictly Financials 2

    Donald W. Reynolds National Center

    for Business Journalism

    at Arizona State University

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    Strictly Financials 3

    n James K. Gentry, Ph.D.n Clyde M. Reed Teaching Professorn School of Journalism and Mass Communicationsn University of Kansasn [email protected]

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    n Gary Trennepohl, Ph.D.n ONEOK Chair and Presidents Council Professor of Financen Oklahoma State Universityn Trustee, Oklahoma Teachers Retirement Systemn Member, OSU Foundation Investment Committeen

    [email protected]

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    Strictly Financials 5

    Topics

    n Goodwill, impairmentn

    Pro forman Bank financialsn Comparing companies: A Changing

    Industry

    n The concepts and your companies

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    Goodwill, Impairment

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    Goodwilln Difference between what a firm pays to buy

    another company and the book value (total

    assets minus total liabilities) of that company.n Has been written off over time, typically 40

    years

    n No longer amortizen Other intangible assets will continue to be

    amortized over useful lives.

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    Impairment

    n Instead of writing off over time, now useimpairment testing

    n The impairment is expensed on theincome statement.

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    Examples

    n Crocsn

    McClatchyn Gannettn New York Timesn

    HP

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    Pro Forma

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    Pro Forma Results

    n Critics: Selectively defined earningsn

    Expenses against earnings are notstandardized across an industry.

    n SECs Regulation G (1/03) states thatnon-GAAP numbers used in an

    earnings release must be accompaniedby, and reconciled with, the mostdirectly comparable GAAP number.

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    Pro Forma Results

    n Recommendation: GAAP results shouldprecede pro forma results in earningsreleases.

    n Headlines should show GAAP earnings.n Many firms say pro forma has value.n Common form: EBITDA. Also, OIBDA.n As a matter of form

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    Examples

    n Down

    Sprintn HP

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    Bank Financial Statements

    1. The business of a bank2. The balance sheet3.

    The income statement

    4. Some key financial ratios5. Sources of bank data

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    The Business of a Bank

    n Banks are a financial intermediary,

    taking in money from

    savers

    andloaning it out to investors - they buyand sell money.

    n For most banks, the majority of theirearnings come from interest income onloans, and interest earned on securities.

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    The Business of a Bank

    n Banks also earn fee income forservices.

    n Banks two main risks are:n Interest-rate riskn credit risk

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    The Income StatementNet interest Income

    - Provision for loan losses

    = Net Income after PLL

    +/- Net non-interest income

    = Net Income Before Taxes

    - Taxes (many small banks are S corps)= Net Income

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    Assets =n Cash +

    n Fed Funds loaned

    n Securitiesn U.S. Governments

    n Loansn Real Estaten Commercialn Consumer

    n Premises- FixedAsset

    n Misc. Assets

    Strictly Financials

    Liabilities + Capital

    Primary Reserve

    Secondary Res.

    n Depositsn Demand Depositsn Savings Depositsn Now/Money Market Accts.n CDs, Time Deposits

    n Non-deposit Borrowingsn Fed Funds purchasedn Repo agreements

    n Long term debtn Equity Capital

    The Bank Balance Sheet

    18

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    Three Key Ratiosn Return on Assets = Net Income/(Avg. Total Assets)

    n Typically runs around 1.0% to 1.5%n Averages 4 quarters of total assets for the

    denominator to smooth effect of asset swings

    n Return on Equity = (Net Income)/(Equity capital)n Will be different for publicly traded banks versus

    private banksn Capitalization Ratio = Equity/(Total Avg. Assets)

    n Tier 1 Capital should be 10%

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    The Texas Ration Texas Ratio = (non-performing loans+OREO)

    n Think of it as the ratio of troubled loans to capitaln OREO is Other Real Estate Ownedn Early-warning system to measure a banks potential for

    failure.

    n Banks tend to fail as TR approaches 100% (troubled bank)n Dont get a mortgage loan from a troubled bank.n Data to calculate at http://www2.fdic.gov/sdi/main.asp. Use

    non-performing assets and bank real estate owned/equityand loss reserves

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    Equity + Loan loss Reserves

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    Key Issues for Banks in 2013n True form and impact of Dodd/Frank Bill

    n CFPB begins life January 2013, and most rules still beingwritten.

    n CFPB answers only to Fed.n Banks are either OCC; Fed or State/FDIC regulated. How

    will these regulators interact with CFPB?

    n TAG =Transaction Account Guaranty expires in2012.

    n FDIC-insurance limits revert to $250,000 maximum.n Will consumers withdraw funds from local banks now?

    n Basel III - More new and complicated rules for calculatingrisk-based capital

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    Sources of Banking Datan The Uniform Bank Performance Report

    (UBPR) is provided by federalregulators so analysts can comparebank performance against peer groups.

    n Web link:n www.ffiec.gov

    nAnother source for large banks is:n www.BankRegData.com

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    Doing Comparisonsn Common-size analysis is an excellent

    tool for comparing companies,regardless of size.

    n Companies in the same industry mighthave similar or widely differing

    statements. Common size brings outthose similarities and differences.

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    Comparing Companies:

    A Changing Industry

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    The Traditional Companiesn CVS Caremarkn

    Walgreenn Rite Aidn Theyve been evolving.

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    Model Is Changingn Business models are changing

    everywhere.

    n Pharmacies have been quietly changingfor the past several years. Now, asomewhat new entrant poses a big

    threat.

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    ADisruptive Technology

    ?

    n Express Scriptsn How will it change, and how will its

    model change the business?

    n Is this an example of a disruptivetechnology in the Clayton Christensen

    sense?

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    The Concepts and

    Your Companies

    n What issues do you want to discuss?

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