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...
One of the strangest things I have learned as an investor is that bank stocks rarely recover when the numbers improve. They recover when people stop feeling terrified. That distinction sounds subtle until you realize it explains nearly every major cycle in banking over the last several decades. If I had a dollar for every time I heard someone declare that banks were finished, I could probably buy shares in the very institutions they were convinced were heading toward extinction. Investors have an interesting habit of treating every banking crisis as if it represents the permanent collapse of modern finance. It doesn't matter whether the issue is rising interest rates, falling interest rates, commercial real estate exposure, mortgage defaults, liquidity concerns, deposit flight, regulatory changes, recessions, or whatever new financial apocalypse is currently trending on financial television. The story is always the same. This time is different. The banks are doomed. The system is b...