I used to think reading a regional bank's financial statements would eventually become exciting. I told myself that enough experience would unlock some hidden appreciation for balance sheets the way wine enthusiasts suddenly begin tasting hints of blackberry, oak, and "a light breeze off the Mediterranean." It never happened. A loan portfolio still looks like a loan portfolio. An allowance for credit losses still sounds like something accountants whisper to each other after midnight. And every quarterly filing still arrives with roughly the same emotional impact as opening a refrigerator and discovering someone replaced all the food with tax forms. Yet somehow, here I am. Reading them voluntarily. Apparently this is what adulthood does to people. At some point you stop getting excited by sports cars and start wondering whether a bank's deposit mix has improved year over year. If you're reading this, congratulations. You're either an investor... A banker... Or ...
When I first started investing, I thought analyzing a bank would be similar to analyzing any other company. I assumed I could pull up the income statement, glance at revenue growth, check earnings per share, look at a few valuation metrics, and arrive at an intelligent conclusion. I was wrong. Banks are different animals entirely. A manufacturing company produces products. A retailer sells merchandise. A software company sells subscriptions. Banks, however, essentially sell money. They borrow it from one group of people, lend it to another group of people, collect the spread, manage risk, and hopefully avoid making catastrophic mistakes along the way. That sounds simple enough until you open a bank's annual report and discover two hundred pages of terminology that appears specifically designed to intimidate ordinary investors. Suddenly you're reading about net interest margins, allowance for credit losses, Tier 1 capital ratios, commercial real estate exposure, unrealized losse...