
By Rolfe Winkler
Bank of New York Mellon is growing – at a price. The giant trust bank on Tuesday agreed to buy PNC Financial Services’ back-office operations for $2.3 billion. That works out to 23 times annualized fourth-quarter 2009 earnings. That is a heady multiple for only a marginal boost in market share.
PNC’s shareholders seem to be getting the better end of the transaction. The sale of the PNC Global Investment Servicing (GIS) unit boosts its capital and should help it repay $7.6 billion of bailout money received from the government.
Thanks to the deal, PNC’s Tier 1 capital ratio rises to 6.7 percent from 6 percent. PNC probably needs to raise yet more equity to pay back its Troubled Asset Relief Program funds, but this is a good start.
The advantages for BNY Mellon shareholders look less certain. The bank says the acquisition complements multiple business lines. But Robert Kelly, the chief executive, seems to be coughing up too much cash for just a 4 percent gain in assets under administration. The GIS business has been lumpy. And even using last quarter’s earnings as the basis for analysis – the unit’s strongest quarter of 2009 – BNY Mellon is paying a chunky multiple.
The purchaser reckons it can squeeze out $120 million a year of cost cuts. Taxed and capitalized, those savings are worth around $720 million today. Take that off the purchase price, and BNY Mellon is still paying $1.6 billion for the GIS business – a price-to-earnings ratio of 16 times, which still looks a full price. It’s the same multiple that leading rival Northern Trust trades on, while BNY Mellon’s own shares trade at just 12 times this year’s estimated earnings.
So to sell the deal to shareholders, management is talking about between $200 million and $300 million of extra revenue based on integrating GIS into BNY Mellon. But such cross-selling opportunities often turn out to be elusive, and even BNY Mellon acknowledges they could take three to four years to transpire.
If Mr. Kelly and his crew can find a way to produce such revenue benefits, both sides eventually may be able to call the deal a success. But for now, PNC holders have more to cheer.
The head of BNY Mellon says no bank should be too big to fail. Can we elect him to go to Washington? I like him better than Bernanke.
ReplyDeleteI'm a tax specialist at BNY Mellon. Horrible right now due to tax season, but overall it's not a bad gig.
ReplyDeleteNot to miss: Robin Kalota of BNY Mellon Wealth Mgmt will share how to navigate the "type A" personality. ^cs
ReplyDelete(Cont) UPMC, Trib Total Media, GetGo, Wheeling Casino, Powerball Lottery, NHL on NBC, Enterprise, Comcast, Honda, Reebok, BNY Mellon, Esmark
ReplyDeleteBig Thank you to the team at BNY Mellon today, great well-being event: Met some really great people, love being a nutritionist :)
ReplyDeleteGreat chat with CEO of BNY Mellon at IMMA prog launch - he's delighted their MOMA NY Photos show has had a great impact on visitor numbers.
ReplyDeleteNexphaze might have something real big in March at Mellon Arena!!.. More details coming soon!
ReplyDeleteGot to spend some time tonight with Rebecca from my Carnegie Mellon days. Fun time!
ReplyDeleteSo far this week our tour has been to Pitt, Penn State, Washington & Jefferson, Duquesne, and Carnegie Mellon - Tomorrow: Ohio St & UC Davis
ReplyDeletePhew, auditions are done for the day. All I have left is Carnegie Mellon, Boston Conservatory dance call, and Otterbein! =)
ReplyDeleteKim Beck just gave a very interesting overview of her career as part of the CFA Spring 2010 Lecture Series at Carnegie Mellon.
ReplyDeletewhen jackdf4444 bought half a mellon and took one bite and smashed me in the face with it!
ReplyDelete"1979" from the album "Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness" by The Smashing Pumpkins
ReplyDeleteMellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness is just as good today as it was in 1995.
ReplyDelete