Subscribe

Charles Schwab beats the Street

Charles Schwab Corp., the largest independent brokerage by client assets, reported third-quarter profit that beat the average analyst estimate as sales from earned interest offset a decline in trading revenue.

Charles Schwab Corp., the largest independent brokerage by client assets, reported third-quarter profit that beat the average analyst estimate as sales from earned interest offset a decline in trading revenue.

Net income fell to $124 million, or 10 cents a share, from $200 million, or 17 cents, a year earlier, the San Francisco- based company said in a statement today. Analysts estimated profit of 9 cents, according to the average in a Bloomberg survey.

The brokerage has been weathering a near-zero interest rate environment since December 2008. About one third of last year’s revenue came from interest earned on cash in its bank and money market funds, while about 45 percent was from fees for managing and administering assets. Third quarter results included a charge of about $132 million to cover losses related to 2008 investments in mortgage-backed securities in its money market fund, as the company had disclosed last month.

“Operating earnings at Schwab should continue to grow as the company builds its client asset base and balance sheet, lowers its cost of funds, and reinvests lower-yielding cash into longer-dated securities,” Matt Snowling, an analyst with Arlington, Virginia-based FBR Capital Markets, wrote in a Sept. 15 note.

Schwab said it also took a pretax charge of about $20 million for ending a credit-card sponsorship, according to a Sept. 15 statement. Schwab trades at 16.3 times 2011 estimated earnings, the cheapest since July 2009, according to Bloomberg data.

The shares rose 0.8 percent to $14.20 at 9:10 a.m. New York time. Before today, they had lost 25 percent year-to-date. That compares with a 5.3 percent gain in the S&P 500 and a 7.2 percent decline for the NYSE Arca Securities Broker/Dealer Index.

Competitors E*Trade Financial Corp. and TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. are scheduled to report quarterly results next week. Analysts expect E*Trade to post a profit of 4 cents a share, while TD Ameritrade should return a gain of 23 cents, according to the average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

Bloomberg

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

The largest variable annuity providers

VA sales have been in a slump the last several years. In 2014, the last full year for…

Insurance vehicles can be powerful way for advisers to reach younger investors

For advisers who want to expand their firms by reaching out to the next generation of investors – those in their 20s, 30s or 40s – long-term and cross-generational financial vehicles such as fee-only life insurance and no-load annuities offered to clients of RIAs through Ameritas Advisor Services should be considered as a central part of the effort.

The next great opportunity for investment advisers

As baby boomers retire, advisers must engage `Generation Now'

Market swings can lead to emotional decision-making

A managed volatility approach can help

How ‘competitive collaboration’ is shaping the future of the advice business

More than a dozen top advisor technology companies compare notes, share their vision for RIAs at TD Ameritrade Institutional's 5th annual Veo Open AccessTechnology Summit.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print