Fed’s banking support adds confidence around Charles Schwab’s outlook
Silicon Valley Bank's collapse hit Schwab amid broader concerns about losses on bond holdings.
Mentioned: Charles Schwab Corp (SCHW)
Charles Schwab’s SCHW stock price has plunged since the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, as concerns rippled across a large swath of the financial sector.
Many banks and companies with related banking entities, such as Charles Schwab, also have a material amount of fixed income securities on their balance sheet with unrealised losses, as recently rising interest rates have decreased the value of fixed income securities.
Charles Schwab at a Glance
- Current Morningstar Fair Value Estimate: $87
- Charles Schwab Stock Star Rating: 4 stars
- Economic Moat Rating: Wide
- Moat Trend Rating: Stable
Charles Schwab Stock Update
Charles Schwab has always had multiple levers to increase its liquidity, and the Federal Reserve’s newly announced Bank Term Funding Program, or BTFP, should provide additional confidence in Charles Schwab and US banking institutions.
The BTFP will offer loans of up to one year to eligible depository institutions that pledge US Treasuries, agency debt and mortgage-backed securities, and other qualifying assets as collateral.
At the end of 2022, Schwab had about $300 billion of close to credit-risk-free US Treasuries and agency mortgage-backed securities at amortized cost (around $275 billion at fair value). This $300 billion of assets that can be used as collateral plus the $40 billion that the company has on its balance sheet compares with $367 billion of deposits, so wide-moat Charles Schwab should be fine from a liquidity perspective.
While we believe Charles Schwab’s liquidity and capital are fine, funding costs are moving up and that will pressure revenue growth and operating margin expansion.
Charles Schwab has been taking steps to increase its cash levels, such as borrowing from the Federal Home Loan Bank and issuing retail brokered certificates of deposits. The rates on these sources of funding have recently been around 4.5% to upward of 5%.
It’s possible that these funding sources could increase funding costs by over $2 billion in 2023. Under this scenario, we would still expect revenue to grow a mid- to upper-single-digit percentage and adjusted earnings per share to grow over 10%.
We don’t anticipate making a significant change to our $87 fair value estimate for Charles Schwab and assess shares are undervalued.