By Justin Baer
Bank of New York Mellon Corp. posted a higher fourth-quarter
profit, helped in part by a long-running cost-cutting push hatched
in 2014 amid pressure from an activist investor.
The profit increase came despite a hit to earnings from a
stronger U.S. dollar and disappointing results from its
money-management arm.
The trust bank's shares fell $1.39, or 3%, to $44.84, Thursday,
as per-share profit matched analysts' average estimate and revenue
was just under Wall Street's forecasts.
"The results were decidedly goldilocks -- not too hot, not too
cold," UBS analyst Brennan Hawken said. "There was a
foreign-exchange factor, which came into play and is going to
subdue revenue."
BNY Mellon's shares have climbed 11% since Dec. 2, 2014, when
the bank added Trian Fund Management LP's Edward Garden to its
board. Trian, the activist investor, had taken a stake in the
company that June and sought cost cuts. In October 2014, BNY Mellon
executives unveiled plans to shed $500 million in expenses through
2017.
Trian's influence has been positive, Mr. Hawken said. "Investors
used to love to deride BNY, calling them '50 cents,' " he said.
"Earnings every quarter was 50 cents. Since then, we've seen steady
growth in earnings per share."
BNY Mellon's revenue growth has outpaced increases in expenses,
leading to better margins and operating leverage for three
consecutive years, Mr. Hawken said. "They have definitely delivered
on the promises they made several years ago," he said.
For the fourth quarter, BNY Mellon reported profit of $870
million, up from $693 million the year before. Per-share earnings
rose to 77 cents from 57 cents. Total revenue rose 1.7%, to $3.79
billion. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters predicted profit of 77
cents a share on $3.85 billion in revenue.
The bank's assets under management fell during the period due to
outflows, unfavorable exchange rates and market performance. Assets
under management fell to $1.65 trillion at the end of the quarter,
from $1.72 trillion at the end of the prior quarter. The company
reported $11 billion in net long-term outflows during the quarter,
primarily from actively managed strategies.
More broadly, actively managed funds -- or those run by human
stock pickers -- had net withdrawals of $340.1 billion last year,
topping the $230.5 billion investors pulled from those funds in
2015, according to Morningstar. Investors have pulled money out of
actively managed U.S. stock funds for 33 consecutive months, and
U.S. equity funds run by human stock pickers haven't seen a full
calendar year of inflows since 2005, according to Morningstar.
The company was also hurt by a mix of businesses outside the
U.S., where the stronger dollar crimped results, and by a large
client's decision to pull money from BNY Mellon to manage its
liability-driven investments internally, finance chief Thomas
Gibbons said. Some of the firm's money managers also missed out on
the rally in riskier assets following the U.S. presidential
election, leaving them short of the returns needed to pull in
performance fees, Mr. Gibbons said.
As a custody bank, BNY Mellon derives much of its business from
serving trillions of dollars in assets for money managers and other
clients, in addition to managing clients' investments. While the
shares of many financial firms have rallied for much of the past
few months, helped by expectations of higher interest rates from
the Federal Reserve, BNY Mellon has been relatively flat. Its
results are aided by higher rates, and the pickup in trading
activity that often accompanies changing expectations for economic
growth, but BNY Mellon's set of steadier businesses aren't expected
to see the same surge as investment banks'.
Expenses fell 2%, to $2.56 billion, as BNY Mellon continued to
chip away at its cost-cutting initiatives.
Mr. Gibbons said Thursday that BNY Mellon had stopped sharing
its targets for additional cost cuts. But, he added, "we've well
exceeded anything we've targeted."
BNY Mellon, the nation's oldest bank, benefited this past year
from its plans to automate certain tasks, moving to more digital
platforms, and by shrinking the amount of rented real estate, Mr.
Gibbons said. He said the bank's asset-management arm is poised to
generate more performance fees this year and expects revenue growth
to outpace expenses again in 2017.
He also said he enjoyed working with Mr. Garden and the Trian
team, calling them "fact-based" and "engaged." "Management is
managing the business, and we certainly share ideas with Ed and the
other directors," he said.
Fee revenue, which makes up nearly 80% of the bank's total
revenue, grew 0.1% in the fourth quarter from a year before as
investment-services fees increased on higher money-market fees.
Investment-management and performance fees decreased due to the
stronger dollar and lower performance fees.
Net interest revenue grew 8.9% on the increase in interest rates
and interest-rate hedging.
In December, the Federal Reserve approved its second rate
increase in a decade and signaled that interest rates would rise at
a faster pace than previously projected.
The bank's net interest margin, a key measure of lending
profitability, rose to 1.17%, from 1.06% in the third quarter and
0.99% in the prior year.
Late last year, the bank was unable to process client-payment
instructions sent over the Swift network for several hours in a
rare outage that caused some payments to fail.
--Austen Hufford contributed to this article.
Corrections & Amplifications: Edward Garden is a founding
partner of Trian Fund Management. An earlier version of this
article misspelled his last name as Garten. (Jan. 19, 2016)
Write to Justin Baer at justin.baer@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 20, 2017 02:48 ET (07:48 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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