E-Trade Financial loss narrows, helped by lower provisions for loan losses
By Ieva M. Augstums, APWednesday, January 27, 2010
E-Trade Financial’s loss narrows in fourth quarter
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — E-Trade Financial Corp. reported a narrower fourth quarter loss late Wednesday as the online broker reduced its provision for loan losses.
For the final three months of the year, E-Trade reported a loss of $67.1 million, or 4 cents per share. That compares with a loss of $275.6 million, or 50 cents per share, a year earlier.
Results were in line with the forecasts of analysts polled by Thomson Reuters.
Shares of E-Trade rose 2.4 percent in after-hours trading Wednesday after closing the regular session at $1.65, up 3 cents.
While the company’s provision for loan losses remain high, they were 43 percent lower from the prior year quarter.
E-Trade set aside $292.4 million during the fourth quarter to cover potential loan losses. That’s down from the third-quarter provision of $347.2 million and significantly lower than the $512.9 million the company set aside in the year-ago period. Total allowance for loan losses now stand at $1.2 billion.
The New York-based company has been restructuring throughout the past year to cope with the credit crisis and recession. It was hit especially hard by loan losses in its mortgage and home lending portfolios.
During a conference call with investors, chairman and interim CEO Robert Druskin said that while E-Trade’s core franchise — the online brokerage business — was strong, “we continued to be weighed down by unsettled markets, by a very weak global economy and our own asset quality issues.”
In the most recent quarter, income from commission, fees and other service charges fell 8 percent to $205.2 million from $223.7 million, due to a decline in trading activity and a 19-cent decline in the average commission rate per trade, the company said.
Net operating interest income, or the difference between how much it costs to borrow money and how much the company receives from lending money to customers, rose 17 percent to $321 million from $274.1 million in the prior-year quarter.
Total daily average revenue trades fell 20 percent year-over-year to 173,778.
During the most recent quarter, E-Trade continued to shrink its bank loan portfolio. Its total loan portfolio has been reduced by $1.1 billion from last quarter, of which $800 million was related to prepayment or scheduled principal reductions, the company said.
Total delinquent loans in quarter rose 16 percent to $2.29 billion from $1.98 billion a year ago. Total net charge-offs, or loans written off as unpaid, were $324.1 million, up from $306.5 million in the 2008 quarter.
For the year, E-Trade lost $1.3 billion, or $1.18 per share.
In December, E-Trade named Druskin to succeed Don Layton, who announced his retirement late last year. A the time, the company said it is continuing its search for a permanent CEO to replace Layton, and noted that Druskin is not a candidate.
In November, the company withdrew its application to obtain $800 million from the government’s $700 billion financial bailout program.
The company has been the target of takeover speculation for months. Some analysts have pointed to competitors such as TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. or Charles Schwab Corp. as possible suitors.
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