If there's one thing I've learned from years of looking at bank stocks, it's that most investors spend far too much time staring at earnings per share and not nearly enough time asking where those earnings actually came from. Banking is one of the few industries where a company can report impressive profits while quietly accumulating risks that won't become obvious until months or even years later. A bank can appear healthy on the surface, reward shareholders with dividend increases, authorize stock buybacks, and receive glowing analyst reports, all while the quality of its loan portfolio slowly deteriorates beneath the headlines. By the time those problems become impossible to ignore, the market usually isn't surprised because it has already begun adjusting valuations long before the average investor notices anything unusual. That's why I rarely begin evaluating a bank by looking at revenue growth or quarterly earnings. Those numbers matter, but they don't ...
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 ...