(FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 1/24/15) 
   By Daniel Huang and Saabira Chaudhuri 

Two trust banks turned in fourth-quarter earnings reports Friday that disappointed investors.

State Street Corp. offered a lackluster view for 2015, while Bank of New York Mellon Corp. reported lighter-than-expected fee revenue, largely because of weakness at a unit that services stock and debt issuers. In explaining its 2015 outlook, State Street officials noted that net-interest revenue is likely to decline on an operating basis in 2015.

"State Street's management seemed more comfortable with the lower end of their range" of prospective earnings in 2015, said Jim Shanahan, a senior equity analyst at Edward Jones. Two of the main culprits: a low-interest rate environment and regulatory requirements that will continue to pressure margins. Mr. Shanahan added that while the Boston-based bank was more explicit in stating its challenges than BNY Mellon, both banks faced many of the same issues.

Shares of State Street closed down 6.1% at $72.40, while BNY Mellon fell 4.7% to $36.90.

State Street reported earnings of $525 million, down from $545 million a year ago. On a per-share basis, however, earnings rose to $1.24 from $1.22 a year earlier. Revenue improved 7.8% to $2.72 billion. On an operating basis, profit rose to $1.37 a share from $1.15 a share a year earlier. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters estimated an operating profit of $1.26 a share and revenue of $2.67 billion.

"It was a pretty mixed quarter" for State Street, wrote Evercore ISI analyst Glenn Schorr, who also noted that a strong dollar hurt the firm's fees.

The stronger U.S. currency negatively impacted servicing fees, but was offset by net new business and more transactions, according to Chief Financial Officer Michael Bell. Management fees also took a roughly $5 million hit due to factors including currency moves and lower performance fees, Mr. Bell said.

The bank also recorded after-tax charges totaling $67 million, or 16 cents a share, in the fourth quarter for legal accrual related to indirect foreign exchange matters and the completion of an operations and technology transformation.

BNY Mellon posted a profit of $807 million, up from $513 million in the prior-year period. On a per-share basis, earnings rose to 70 cents from 44 cents.

Excluding one-time items like a tax benefit and restructuring charges, the bank posted earnings of 58 cents a share, missing the 59 cents expected by analysts polled by Thomson Reuters.

Revenue improved about 2% to $3.69 billion, while analysts had expected $3.81 billion in revenue.

Revenue from issuer services, which services stock and debt issuers around the world, was down 19% from a year earlier and 39% from the third quarter to $193 million, the lowest level since 2007, said CLSA analyst Mike Mayo on the bank's analyst call.

Still, the bank said fees from its corporate-trust unit -- a component of issuer services that processes payments for companies, municipal governments and debt issuers -- had climbed a bit from the third quarter.

"We are near the inflection point for improved revenue growth in corporate trust," said Chief Executive Gerald Hassell

The company partly offset weaker revenue by showing stronger expense controls in the fourth quarter, as a slew of measures it has taken through 2014, such as reducing staffing, bringing application development in-house and selling its Wall Street headquarters, bore fruit.

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