For most investors, regional banks are about as exciting as reading the owner's manual for a water heater. Nobody brags at a dinner party about discovering a well-capitalized regional bank trading at 1.1 times tangible book value. Nobody rushes home to tell their spouse that net interest margins are stabilizing. Nobody gets a tattoo celebrating prudent loan-loss reserves. Instead, investors chase whatever happens to be generating headlines. Artificial intelligence. Electric vehicles. Quantum computing. Space tourism. Companies promising to reinvent civilization before next Tuesday. Meanwhile, regional banks quietly do something profoundly unfashionable. They make money. Not always spectacular amounts. Not always rapidly. Not always in a way that creates viral social media posts. But often in a way that compounds wealth over very long periods of time. And that's why I've become increasingly fascinated by the regional bank playbook. Because beneath the surfac...
For most of my investing life, I made the same mistake many investors make when looking at banks. I focused on earnings headlines, dividend yields, analyst ratings, and stock charts while paying far less attention to the one thing that actually determines whether a financial institution thrives or struggles: the balance sheet. It took me years to appreciate that banks are fundamentally different from most businesses. If I'm evaluating a technology company, I can spend a significant amount of time studying products, market share, innovation pipelines, and customer growth. If I'm looking at a manufacturing company, I can analyze production capacity, margins, supply chains, and demand trends. Banks are different. A bank's product is money. Its inventory is money. Its raw material is money. Its balance sheet isn't merely a financial statement—it is the business itself. That's why I've increasingly adopted a balance-sheet-first approach whenever I evaluate region...