Daniel T. Poston
Analyst · Credit Suisse
Thanks, Kevin. I'll start with Slide 4 of the presentation. For the quarter, we reported net income of $363 million and recorded preferred dividends of $9 million. Net income to common was $354 million, and diluted earnings per share were $0.38. Third quarter results were reduced by $26 million of costs that are associated with our TruPS redemption or about $0.02 per share after tax and $16 million in losses on Vantiv warrants or $0.01 per share after tax. Those detriments totaled $42 million or $0.03 per share and were partially offset by $11 million of net benefit from the sale of certain Fifth Third mutual funds or $0.01 per share after tax. Quarterly results also included an additional $24 million of pretax charges related to the increase in our mortgage repurchase reserve. I'll touch on each of these items later in my discussion. Taking a look at the details of the quarter and turning to Slide 5. Tax equivalent net interest income increased $8 million sequentially to $907 million, and the net interest margin remained stable at 3.56%. Net interest income benefited from several items, including hedging effectiveness from the redeemed TruPS and income related to an auto securitization cleanup call. These items in total contributed $10 million to NII during the quarter and 4 basis points to the net interest margin. Otherwise, net interest income declined about $3 million versus the second quarter results and the margin declined 4 basis points, both about what we expected for the quarter. As expected, net interest income benefited by $6 million due to an additional day in the quarter, as well as from lower interest expense due to the redemption of $1.4 billion of Trust Preferred Securities that occurred in August. The TruPS redemption increased third quarter NII by about $4 million. These benefits, coupled with loan growth and lower deposit costs, were offset by yield compression in the loan and securities portfolios, as well as lower purchase accounting accretion. The 4 basis point core decline in margin reflected 2 basis points in benefit from the August TruPS redemption offset by lower loan and securities yields, lower purchase accounting accretion and the negative effect of day count. From a balance sheet perspective, investment securities yields declined 7 basis points due to portfolio repricing of higher-yielding investments. The impact of QE3 increased prepayment speeds, and we'll see a full quarter effect of that in the fourth quarter. On the loan side, we continue to have slow compression in yields primarily driven by loan repricing, particularly in C&I and auto portfolios. On the C&I side, portfolio average yield was down 5 basis points compared with last quarter, which is due to repricing and mix shift toward higher quality loans, as well as some pressure on new origination yields. In the indirect auto portfolio, average yield also continued to decline, largely reflecting the portfolio effect of replacing older higher-yielding loans with new lower-yielding ones. Looking forward, we expect NII in the fourth quarter to be in the $890 million range. Those results will reflect an additional $4 million of benefit from the full quarter effect of the TruPS redemption. Otherwise, we expect NII to be reduced by about $10 million due to the higher prepayment speeds, reflecting the full quarter effect of QE3, as well as lower LIBOR rates and portfolio repricing, partially offset by loan growth. In terms of the margin, we currently expect NIM to decline about 10 basis points in the fourth quarter. This reflects 6 basis points of core NIM contraction, given the fact that we had 4 basis points of benefit that I described earlier in the third quarter. We also have a full quarter effect of QE3 on prepayment rates and the repricing in the securities loan portfolios. We'll also continue to look for opportunities to mitigate the effects of this, including liability management. Turning to the balance sheet in Slide 6. Average earning assets declined $259 million sequentially, driven by a $580 million decrease in securities balances, partially offset by an increase in the average portfolio loans. The decline in securities reflected our pre-investment in the second quarter of anticipated third quarter portfolio cash flows. Looking forward, we'd expect average securities to remain fairly stable in light of the current rate environment. Average portfolio loans and leases increased $302 million sequentially, driven by higher C&I and residential mortgage balances and partially offset by declines in commercial real estate and home equity balances. Looking at each portfolio, average commercial loans held for investment were flat compared to the prior quarter and increased $3 billion or 7% on a year-over-year basis. C&I loans increased to $33.1 billion, up 1% from last quarter and 15% from a year ago. C&I production has been broad based across industries and sectors with particular strength in the manufacturing and healthcare sectors. We've seen large corporate borrowers continue to refinance into the capital markets, which has impacted growth in that portfolio. Growth moderated somewhat in the third quarter, but we expect solid C&I growth in the fourth quarter given our current pipelines. Commercial line utilization remained at 32% this quarter. Commercial mortgage and commercial construction balances declined in the aggregate by $374 million sequentially or 4%. While our originations continue to increase modestly in this area, we're also seeing increased payoffs driven by market activity. We expect to see similar levels of run-off in the fourth quarter. Average consumer loans in the portfolio increased $287 million sequentially and $1.2 billion compared with a year ago. Residential mortgage loans held for investment were up 3% sequentially. This sequential growth reflected strong originations during the quarter due to the rate environment and continued retention of jumbo loans and shorter-term, higher-quality residential mortgages that we originate through our retail branch system. Average auto loan balances were flat compared to the second quarter, but we still like the business in this asset class. We continue to see competition in this space, and we're very focused on managing volume and pricing. We currently expect modest auto loan growth in the fourth quarter. Home equity loan balances were down 1% sequentially, and average credit card balances were up 3% sequentially. As we look ahead to the fourth quarter, we expect loan growth to be driven by solid growth in C&I, auto loan growth, as well as the mortgage portfolio, with that growth somewhat mitigated by the impact of the run-off in the commercial real estate and the home equity portfolios. Moving on to deposits. We continue to manage our deposit book by focusing on higher-value transaction deposits while managing non-relationship deposit accounts down. In total, average core deposits decreased $258 million from the second quarter. Average transaction deposits, which exclude consumer CDs, decreased $123 million sequentially but were up 7% or $5.3 billion from a year ago. The sequential decrease in transaction deposits was driven by declines in consumer savings and commercial interest checking balances as a result of lower public funds balances. Demand deposits increased $776 million or 3% sequentially. Consumer CDs declined $135 million in the quarter, driven by our continued disciplined approach to CD pricing. For the fourth quarter, we currently expect transaction deposits to be up modestly compared to the third quarter and for consumer CD balances to continue to decline. Now let's turn to fees, which are outlined on Slide 7. Third quarter noninterest income was $671 million, a decrease of $7 million from last quarter. Now there were a few unusual items that impacted each quarter. Third quarter results included $16 million in negative valuation adjustments on the Vantiv warrant and $13 million in gains on the sale of mutual funds, which closed in September. And you'll recall that the prior-quarter results included $56 million in positive valuation adjustments on the Vantiv warrant, which was partially offset by $17 million in negative valuation adjustments on property held-for-sale and $11 million in charges related to the Visa total return swap. If you exclude those items from both quarters, fee income of $674 million was up $24 million from the second quarter, driven primarily by strong mortgage banking results. Looking at each line item in detail. Deposit service charges decreased 2% sequentially and 5% from the prior year. The decline was driven by consumer deposit fees, which were down 9% sequentially and 19% year-over-year, and included the full quarter effect of our elimination of daily overdraft fees on continuing customer overdraft positions. Commercial deposit fees increased 3% sequentially and 6% over the prior year, due to account growth and increased treasury management sales. For the fourth quarter, we expect to see mid-single-digit increases in deposit fees, driven by higher account fees and positive seasonality. We think that the third quarter represented the low point, and we will be able to grow deposit fees from there. Investment advisory revenue decreased 2% from last quarter and was flat compared to the prior year, largely due to lower mutual fund fee revenue resulting from the sale of mutual funds that closed in September. Otherwise, revenues reflected overall market valuation trends and improvement in the equity and bond markets. We currently expect IA revenue to increase modestly in the fourth quarter. Corporate banking revenue of $101 million decreased slightly from very strong second quarter levels and increased 16% from last year. The sequential decline was driven by seasonality and lower foreign exchange. The year-over-year increase was largely due to higher syndication fees, higher lease remarketing fees and higher institutional sales revenue. We expect fourth quarter corporate banking revenue to be relatively consistent with the strong third quarter levels or perhaps up modestly. Card and processing revenue was $65 million, up $1 million from the second quarter but down $13 million from a year ago. That year-over-year decline was driven by the impact of debit interchange legislation but was partially offset by increased transaction volumes, as well as mitigation activity in that line item. The sequential increase reflects higher transaction volumes and levels of consumer spending. We currently expect transaction volumes to drive mid-single-digit growth in the card and processing revenue line for the fourth quarter. Mortgage banking net revenue of $200 million increased 9% from strong second quarter levels and increased 13% from a year ago. Originations were $5.8 billion this quarter versus $5.9 billion in the second quarter. Gain on sale margins were wider in the third quarter, reflecting wider secondary market spreads and a higher proportion of retail channel and HARP originations. As a result, gains on deliveries were a record $226 million, up $43 million from the prior quarter. MSR valuation adjustments, including the impact of hedges, were negative $40 million this quarter versus a negative $22 million in the second quarter. Currently, we expect mortgage banking revenue to be up $30 million to $35 million in the fourth quarter, due to lower MSR valuation adjustments, higher volumes and relatively stable margins. Turning next to other income within fees. Other income was $78 million this quarter versus $103 million last quarter. Third quarter results included the $16 million Vantiv warrant loss and the $13 million in gains on the sale of mutual funds. Second quarter results included $56 million in Vantiv warrant gains, the $17 million negative valuation adjustment on bank premises held-for-sale and the $11 million negative valuation adjustment on the Visa total return swap. If you exclude those items, other income was $81 million, which was up about $6 million from the second quarter. Credit costs recorded in other noninterest income were $14 million in the third quarter compared with $17 million last quarter and $25 million a year ago. We expect fourth quarter credit costs and revenue to be in a similar range to the past couple quarters. Looking at overall fee income expectations for the fourth quarter. We expect growth across most fee categories with fee income up about $40 million from the $671 million we reported this quarter, and that assumes no change in the value of the Vantiv warrant. Turning to expenses now on Slide 8. Noninterest expense of $1.0 billion increased $69 million sequentially or 7%. Current quarter expenses included $26 million in costs associated with the TruPS redemption in August, $22 million in additional expense resulting from the increase in mortgage repurchase reserves and $2 million of costs related to the sale of mutual funds and $5 million benefit from the sale of affordable housing investments. In total, these increased third quarter expenses by $45 million. Expenses in the prior quarter included a $9 million reduction to the FDIC insurance expense and an $8 million benefit from the sale of affordable housing investments. Excluding these items from both quarters, noninterest expense of $961 million was up about $7 million from the prior quarter. If you'll recall, the expenses over the past 2 quarters also reflect elevated levels of marketing costs associated with our new branding campaign, which should return to more normalized levels in the fourth quarter. Credit-related costs within operating expense were $59 million, up $19 million from last quarter and driven by the increase in mortgage repurchase reserves. The mortgage repurchase expense was $36 million this quarter compared with $18 million last quarter and included $22 million related to the increase in the reserve. Realized losses were $15 million this quarter versus $16 million last quarter and $31 million last year. As we indicated last quarter, Freddie Mac informed us that they were planning to request files, beginning in the fourth quarter and on an ongoing basis, for any loan that was nonperforming. During this quarter, we received more detailed information from Freddie Mac, as well as the FHFA, regarding the selection criteria and the timeframes covered. And as a result, we are now in a position to better estimate the probable losses on loans to Freddie Mac. We don't currently have the same type of information from Fannie Mae, however. Fannie Mae represents approximately 20% of our servicing portfolio and about 30% of the loans sold to GSEs over the past 6 years. In terms of the fourth quarter, we currently expect mortgage repurchase expense of $10 million to $15 million and total credit-related costs recognized in expense to be about $40 million. Overall, for the fourth quarter, we currently expect total noninterest expenses to be down about $30 million from this quarter's elevated level. We expect that to be driven by a decline in mortgage repurchase expense and the absence of TruPS redemption charges that we had this quarter. In the fourth quarter, we expect to recognize about $7 million in seasonal pension curtailment expenses, which previously we had expected to occur in the third quarter, as well as an offset to that from lower remarketing costs of about the same amount. Otherwise, we expect modest growth in expenses, primarily driven by higher mortgage fulfillment costs. The efficiency ratio was 64% in the third quarter and would have been 61%, excluding the items noted on the next slide, compared with 62% on the same basis in the second quarter. We expect fourth quarter to be similar to that 61% level that we reported here for the third. Moving on to Slide 9 and PPNR. Pre-provision net revenue was $568 million in the third quarter compared with $636 million in the second quarter. Excluding the items noted on this slide, PPNR in the third quarter was $617 million, up about 5% from the results in the second quarter when you adjust those similarly. We expect fourth quarter PPNR to be consistent with that core third quarter result or perhaps a little better. The effective tax rate for the quarter was 27.7% compared with 31.8% last quarter. You'll recall that the prior quarter tax rate was elevated due to tax expense associated with the expiration of employee stock options. We currently expect the fourth quarter effective tax rate to be about 28.5%. Turning to capital, which is reflected on Slide 10. Capital levels continue to be very strong, including the initiation of common share repurchases and the redemption of TruPS this quarter. The Tier 1 common ratio was 9.7%, a decrease of about 10 basis points from last quarter. Tier 1 capital was 10.9% compared with 12.3% last quarter, and the total capital ratio was 14.8% compared with 16.2% in the prior quarter. Tangible common equity was 9.5%, including unrealized gains of $460 million -- $468 million after tax and 9.1% if you exclude those. Our capital position would also be strong from a Basel III perspective with Tier 1 common equity of about 9% based on our current estimates and assuming no changes to the proposed rules and before any mitigation activity on our part. That reflects about 45 basis points of benefit on the numerator side and about 115 basis points detriment from an increase in risk-weighted assets. As you know, these proposals are currently in the comment period. As Kevin previously mentioned, we entered into a share repurchase transaction in August to repurchase approximately $350 million of common shares. Our capital plan included an additional $250 million of possible repurchases through the first quarter of 2013, depending on market conditions. That wraps up my remarks, and I'll turn it over to Bruce to discuss credit results and trends. Bruce?