Kearny Financial in Fairfield, New Jersey, announced a partial restructuring of its balance sheet Thursday, selling $121.4 million of lower-yielding debt securities and reinvesting the proceeds in higher-yielding instruments.
The $7.9 billion-asset bank bought debt securities that yield, on average, 440 basis points more than those that it sold.
The transaction will result in a one-time after-tax loss of $11 million, but it will have virtually no impact on Kearny's tangible book value, since the loss was already reflected in capital through accumulated other comprehensive income, which is known as AOCI.
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Kearny also tapped the wholesale borrowing market to purchase $100 million of debt securities, a transaction good for an average spread of 216 basis points.
In addition to the changes in its investment portfolio, Kearny said that it intends to embark on a cost-cutting campaign with the goal of shaving 5% to 10% off its annual noninterest expense spending. The company's noninterest expenses totaled $30.6 million for the quarter ending Sept. 30, up 3% year over year.
The securities that Kearny sold amount to less than 10% of its $1.38 billion portfolio, too small a proportion to qualify as a wholesale restructuring, Janney Montgomery Scott Research Director Chris Marinac wrote in a research note.
Laurie Havener Hunsicker, who covers Kearny for Compass Point Research & Trading, predicted that the balance-sheet moves, along with the efficiency campaign, will drive annual earnings per share to $1 in the company's 2024 fiscal year, up from her previous estimate of 87 cents.
Hunsicker gives Kearny a "buy" rating based on the strength of its balance-sheet maneuvering and conservative credit culture. "Kearny has strong underwriting standards and should outperform through the cycle," Hunsicker wrote Friday in a research note.
Banks across the spectrum have suffered hits to tangible book value as the sharp rise in interest rates has led to a corresponding decline in the value of the securities they added to their books in 2020 and 2021.
Marinac estimated the industry-wide, year-to-date hit to tangible common equity at 16%, though he added that virtually none of that loss is the result of credit risk, given banks' generally conservative approach to investing.
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Banks' securities losses are reflected in AOCI, which is charged to their capital accounts. Though the changes don't impact regulatory capital, they have created operational difficulties for a number of banks. Share buybacks have become less frequent, and merger-and-acquisition activity has slowed dramatically.
Investors expressed approval of Kearny's moves Thursday, pushing shares up 11% to $10.09. The stock gave back some of those gains on Friday, but the share price was still up nearly 9% over its Wednesday closing price in midday trading.
Kearny is the holding company for the 138-year-old Kearny Bank, which operates 45 branches in Northern New Jersey and the New York City boroughs of Brooklyn and Staten Island. Kearny converted to stock ownership in 2015.