Motley Fool Money - "It's the vanilla ice cream of the banking sector."

Episode Date: April 18, 2023

Now that all of the Big Banks have reported earnings, what stands out? (00:21) Bill Mann discusses: - Warren Buffett's recent comments about holding Bank of America - CEO Brian Moynihan's persistence... - Johnson & Johnson's dividend hike and guidance boost - Nvidia's unsurprising pricing power (11:14) Robert Brokamp and Alison Southwick answer your questions about mortgages, recessions, and employee stock options. Companies discussed: BAC, JNJ, PG, NVDA Host: Chris Hill Guests: Bill Mann, Alison Southwick, Robert Brokamp Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineers: Dan Boyd, Rick Engdahl Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi everyone, I'm Charlie Cox. Join us on Disney Plus as we talk with the cast and crew of Marvel Television's Daredevil Born Again. What haven't you gotten to do as Daredevil? Being the Avengers. Charlie and Vincent came to play. I get emotional when I think about it. One of the great finale of any episode we've ever done. We are going to play Truth or Daredevil.
Starting point is 00:00:18 What? Oh, boy. Fantastic. You guys go hard, man. Daredevil Born Again, official podcast Tuesdays, and stream Season 2 of Marvel Television's Daredevil Born Again on Disney Plus. Your call is very important to us. Please remain on the line to listen to the next available episode. Motley Fool Money starts now. I'm Chris Hill, joining me today. Montley Fool Senior analyst, Bill Mann. Good to see you, my friend.
Starting point is 00:00:55 Well, we barely made it here. There were some technical problems, and the dozens of listeners don't care about that. So let's just plow ahead, shall we? I was speaking more towards our dueling back injuries. Oh, well, there's that too. But I also, there's only so much that doesn't care about that as well. Before we get to Johnson and Johnson, we are through all of the big banks reporting. We got Bank of America reporting this morning. It started last week with J.P. Morgan, Wells Fargo City.
Starting point is 00:01:35 When you step back and look at the current state of the big banks, does anything in particular out to you whether it's any one bank's results, commentary from a CEO, or any sort of through line that you see among them? I think maybe the most interesting through line happened both over the weekend when Warren Buffett had his sit down with CNBC, with Becky Quick, and he was noting that he sold out of banks, some of which he'd held for the last 25 years, because he had become so concerned about how accounting principles were creating bad incentives for the banks. And the one that he called out that he wanted to continue holding and did continue holding in full effect
Starting point is 00:02:29 was Bank of America, who turns out today just came out and crushed it and crushed it in a very, you know, in terms of their earnings, but crushed it in a very specific way. When Brian Moynihan, the CEO, came out and said, straight up, the results demonstrate just how over the last decade we have been consistent in our commitment to responsible growth, which I think a lot of banks that find themselves now under duress were not quite as responsible. So, fascinating to me that Warren Buffett stepped back. from the banking sector, but stuck with Bank of America.
Starting point is 00:03:14 Someday Brian Moynihan is going to retire as CEO of Bank of America. And when that happens, someone... I'm taking over. I was going to say, someone is going to write about his tenure at Bank of America, which really got off to a rocky start. I think about the countrywide acquisition that they made. And obviously, they spent years writing that thing down. They dealt with the Great Recession like everybody else.
Starting point is 00:03:44 But the persistence of Moynihan and the way he has, as you said, they've just consistently gone about their business. It's one of those things that if you've been a patient shareholder and you've stood by Moynihan, I think you've been rewarded. Yeah, it's true. And if you think about it in some ways, amongst the big banks, all of them saw a surge in deposits, which is probably not surprising given the amount of turmoil that's at the smaller banks, not that banks like Silicon Valley Bank are small, but they're not one of the huge banks,
Starting point is 00:04:19 like Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and their ilk. One of the most interesting things to me is that they've all done pretty well, but in some ways, Bank of America is almost like the vanilla ice cream of the banking sector. They're never crushing. it, but at the same time, they're never having to really explain a whole lot of missteps that they have made. It's just a well-run bank. Unlike almost every other industry, I find myself getting nervous when I see a bank's deposit surging or their earnings number surging. So for Bank of America under Brian Moynihan, just to get it done quarter after quarter after quarter, it really does remind you that investing is a long-term game, but maybe more than any
Starting point is 00:05:11 other industry, if you're going to hold financials, you just have to make sure that you have one that's not going to be exciting for all the wrong reasons. Let's move on to Johnson and Johnson, which started off the fiscal year about as well as you can. Profits and revenue were higher than expected in the first quarter. where they raised guidance for the full fiscal year, gave the dividend a little bit of a boost. I'm not sure why the stock is off a couple of percentage points, but this seemed like a pretty strong start of the year. Yeah, you have to be careful with whenever a company starts with the words, adjusted anything.
Starting point is 00:05:51 And so in this case, they listed adjusted earnings of $2.68 per share, which beat the $2.50. per share. Now, what is the adjustment? In this case, it's $6.9 billion of what is nearly a $9 billion settlement that they have because of Johnson's Talcum powder, Johnson's baby powder, excuse me, having been found to cause cancer. So there's a huge element of cost, but they adjust their earnings because it is truly what you would hope one time in nature. So, yeah, It was a good quarter from them, raising the dividend nearly 5%. It was a really good quarter in their medical device division. Great setup there for what we really see as continued reopening and a resurgence of demand during the pandemic.
Starting point is 00:06:49 One of the things that maybe we focused on for a while and then forgot about was that all sorts of elective surgeries were put off down the road. And so I think you're seeing a lot of a rebound in that type of demand. So it was a really great quarter from them. They did come out and say that their results were a condition of really every single division that they had doing better than they had anticipated. Real quick, before we move on, later this year, if everything goes according to plan, Johnson and Johnson will execute the, the, split that the company has been planning for the last year plus, anytime a company is trying to execute something like this, we're spinning off a division, or we're just splitting in two or multiple parts. What does history, if anything, tell us about what to be watching for?
Starting point is 00:07:51 If you're a shareholder, well, like, are you nervous about this at all? Is there a way to screw this up? Or is it the sort of thing? We're like, no, if they're doing this right, this should be fine. There are plenty ways to screw it up, especially going out of the gate. And I'm not going to claim at all to say that Johnson and Johnson is doing this because they are not. But you've seen situations where a company in doing a spinoff of a division that's not important to the parent company, does something like just lard up the spinoff company with a bunch of debt. A chemical company called Rodea did that within a Foss about 15 years ago.
Starting point is 00:08:32 It was a tiny spinoff, but it was a huge amount of the debt of Rodeo. It got sent with the spinoff company. And obviously, that makes it hard for a smaller company to really get its footing. I think probably the best model that you can look at here for Johnson and Johnson was a spinoff a couple of years ago by Procter & Gamble of some of its food division. And that has worked really well. It's given investors the opportunity to focus on whether they want to buy a commercial products company primarily, or do they want a food company? I think in the case of Johnson and Johnson, the same thing is true.
Starting point is 00:09:14 It just, it's really hard to tease out where the growth that Johnson and Johnson is coming from, not that they don't have growth, but is it band-aids? Is it knee replacement? Is it contacts? So the ability for investors to be able to fine-tune where they want to gain exposure, I think is a positive. Nvidia got an upgrade today from a Wall Street firm, and I just wanted your reaction to what I think is the most amazing pull quote from the upgrade, which is the following sentence. we're shocked by NVIDIA's pricing power on AI chips. Sorry, I didn't mean to laugh. No, that was kind of my reaction.
Starting point is 00:10:08 I was like, why are you shocked by that? I mean, we were just talking about, you mentioned Procter & Gamble. I wouldn't say I was shocked. I was surprised by the pricing power that Procter & Gamble has demonstrated over the past year or so. I don't, P&G is not what leaps to mind when I think about companies with pricing power. In video with AI chips? Like, why are you surprised by this? Okay, a qualifying question, was this written or spoken? This was written. So this person thought about it and then wrote that. That's amazing to me. You are talking about a company that in several segments, and in the last
Starting point is 00:10:48 two years, it was crypto mining. Before that, it was graphics and it's not. now in artificial intelligence, they have the leading edge chips that have been absolutely imperative for those industries or segments of industry or in terms of processing power, etc. Of course they have pricing power. I don't know how that's a shock. It's always nice to be validated. Bill Mann, great talking to you. Thanks, Chris. You've got questions. They've got answers. Robert Brokamp and Allison Southwick answer listener questions about recessions, employee stock options, and mortgages. Our first question comes from Cheryl in Massachusetts. Dear Dr. Offelizer. Bro, that's you.
Starting point is 00:11:50 It is me. Doc off if you're really close to him. And Allison, it's also sent to me. So, total credit card debt is about a trillion dollars and the Fed keeps hiking interest rates. I think this will lead to people. pulling back on their spending, and that will create an economic depression. There's no way this ends well, right? You found a fellow awfulizer in Cheryl, bro. I know, isn't it so nice to be so pessimistic? Well, we'll see. I'm not quite that pessimistic, but indeed, credit card debt is at an all-time high, almost $1 trillion. The previous record was $850 billion before the pandemic, and then it dropped to $750 billion almost exactly two years ago. But since then, it has sky. highrocketed. And it's not just the level of debt that is problematic. The average credit card rate is at an all-time high of over 20 percent, up from just 16 percent a year ago. And then the
Starting point is 00:12:43 rates on auto loans and mortgages are also up significantly over the past year, thanks to the Federal Reserve raising interest rates nine times over the past 13 months. And the Fed is raising rates to intentionally slow down the economy. And it's working. Bloomberg does a monthly survey of economists and the one from late March had 65 percent expecting a recession in the next 12 months, and that's up from 60% in February. So yes, Cheryl, this likely will lead to people cutting back on their spending. In fact, it's already happening. In June of last year, the U.S. personal savings rate hit a measly 2.7%, which was pretty close to an all-time low. Since then, it has inched up to 4.6%. So saving more and spending less, it's good for a household, but not
Starting point is 00:13:26 necessarily for the broader economy. In fact, there's an economic theory known as the paradox of thrift, which states that increased saving can actually be a drag on the economy, especially when it's an economy driven almost 70% by consumer spending. And there are plenty of other headwoods to add to this negative narrative. And I'll just mention one, and that is the cutback in lending by banks, so they don't suffer the same weight as Silicon Valley Bank and some others from last month. In the last two weeks of March, bank lending contracted by the most in history as banks shared up their balance sheets. And when banks play it safer, the account economy can suffer. So Cheryl, in keeping with my Dr. Awfulizer, reputation, I agree with you that
Starting point is 00:14:06 things could get pretty rough before they get better. However, I don't really see anything that makes me feel like we're going to see anything worse than the typical recession. Since World War II, recessions have lasted around 10 months on average. Could something happen that leads to a depression? Sure. Anything truly is possible. But I'm sticking to a mantra that I've mentioned before on the show, And it's my mantra regardless of what's going on in the economy. And that is, be a short-term pessimist and a long-term optimist. Protect the money you need in the next few years. If you're still working, keep tabs on your company and your customers because during a recession,
Starting point is 00:14:41 you should be more worried about your job than your portfolio. But keep your long-term money in the stock market because historically, in the U.S., we've always recovered from every recession and every depression. Our next question comes from Anush. My employer is offering an employee stock purchase plan, which allows me to contribute a certain percentage of my base pay toward a purchase of discounted shares. I'm curious as to why certain companies offer this and what is the benefit to me as a long-term shareholder. I already contribute to a 401k, up to the company match, but am I missing out on anything if I decide
Starting point is 00:15:16 not to enroll in this stock purchase plan? Well, news, you're not alone. According to CNBC, almost three quarters of publicly traded companies offer some sort of employee stock purchase plan, and almost 40% of them offer their shares at some sort of a discount, the most common of which is a 15% discount. Companies do this for a few reasons. First of all, they like to offer benefits that employees appreciate. It attracts employees, keeps employees. And offering discounted stock is a relatively inexpensive benefit.
Starting point is 00:15:45 Also, they may believe that when employees have a vested interest in the success of the company, they'll perform better. The companies want to create what they'll often call an ownership mentality among their employees, because when you own shares, you indeed are a bona fide, genuine part owner of the company. And there are some studies that have found that employees who participate in these types of plans do work harder. And if the stock performs well or even slightly below the market's average, you'll do well because you bought in at a discount. So those are all the good things.
Starting point is 00:16:13 Let's cover some of the downsides. And the biggest is that you don't want too much of your portfolio tied to the same fate as the company that gives you your paycheck, provides your health insurance, that type of stuff. One rule of thumb is to not have more than 10% of your portfolio in one company, and perhaps even less if you work for that company, right? I mean, many employees of Silicon Valley Bank had a lot of money in SVB stock. An article in Fortune said that for some employees, up to 50% of their compensation, came in the form of company stock.
Starting point is 00:16:41 And the share price declined from an all-time high of $750 to a current price of 50 cents, which hurts a lot of people. And also, if you're going to look into this plan, pay attention to how long you have to wait until you can sell. You may not be able to just sell immediately for a guaranteed profit, so factor that into the time frame you have for this money. But if you believe in the company and you have the money, buying in into shares of a good company at a 15% discount or whatever discount you're being given is a pretty attractive offer. Our next question comes from Jace. Hey, fools, I have three different 401ks from previous employment and one IRA from an old employer as well. Would it not be advantageous to roll these into my new 401K sponsored by my new employer?
Starting point is 00:17:32 I'm thinking a larger pool would return more than four separate accounts, but I've had others warn this is a mistake. Thoughts? I would start by saying having more assets at a single account generally doesn't result in higher returns. unless it would qualify you maybe more for better services or reduced fees or maybe investments with higher minimums. But that's generally not the case in a 401K. So for most people of this situation, the best thing to do actually would be to transfer the old 401ks to the IRA. That's because 401Ks generally have higher costs, fewer investment options, and less flexibility
Starting point is 00:18:09 for ways to touch the money. That said, there are a few scenarios when moving all your money to a current 401K might make sense. And here are just four of those very quickly. Number one, your current plan maybe has particularly high quality or low-cost investments that you couldn't get outside the plan, so you'd want to move more money into it. Number two would be you want to do something called the backdoor Roth IRA because your income is too high to make a regular contribution to a Roth IRA. And with a backdoor Roth, you make a contribution to a non-deductible, traditional IRA, and then immediately convert it to a Roth, or very soon thereafter. If you do have money in traditional IRAs elsewhere and you do the conversion,
Starting point is 00:18:51 it's not necessarily a tax-free decision due to something called the pro-rata rules. But if you really want that Roth IRA, what you could do is roll the IRA into a 401K, and you don't have to worry about them. Number three, reason why you might want to put all the money in one 401K is that you'll be retiring between the ages of 55 and 59-5. Generally, if you take a withdrawal from retirement account before age 59.5, you have to pay a 10% penalty. But for some 401k, if the 401k administrator allows this, if you retire from that company's 401k between the ages of 55 and 59.5, you can take the money out early and not pay the 10% penalty. And then the number four reason would be you want to delay required minimum distributions.
Starting point is 00:19:34 For most accounts, they must begin at age 73, but there's an exception from you, you do, You don't have to take required minimum distributions from a 401 if you are working for the employer that offers the 401. You can't do that if you own more than 5% or 10% of the company, but for most people, that's fine. So you bring all the money into that 401k, and you don't have to worry about required minimum with distributions until you retire. So those are just some considerations. And of course, this isn't an all or nothing choice, right? You can transfer some of the money to an IRA and some to your current 401k, if that makes sense for you. Next question comes from Stan in Austin. I'd like to buy a house this fall in the $500,000 range.
Starting point is 00:20:17 My realtor told me that I'll be able to take out a 40-year mortgage soon. Any catches that I need to be aware of? There's some confusion about this. So I'll start by saying, I mean, theoretically, 40-year mortgages have been theoretically around for a while, right? There's nothing that prevents a lender from offering a 40-year mortgage. The problem is it's just not very common. It's difficult to find a lender that offers them. You usually have to go through a broker who maybe could work with a local bank or a credit union or something like that. Also, 40-year mortgages would be considered non-conforming, which means they're not approved by the FHA, and you would have to pay a higher interest rate.
Starting point is 00:20:58 So it's just very difficult to find a 40-year mortgage. However, this has been in the news because recently the FHA did decide that for people who are in distress and who are struggling paying their mortgage payments and are already in default, they can turn their mortgage into a 40-year mortgage. That's probably what your realtor was thinking about, but generally, it's not the type of situation where you can just go out and get a 40-year mortgage. And just in case you do go looking for one and you do find one, the downside is that you'll just pay more in interest, right?
Starting point is 00:21:37 If you're spreading the loan over a longer period, you'll get a smaller monthly payment, which could be good, but you'll pay way more in interest. Bank rate had an article on this. Just as example, if you took out a $312,000 loan at a 6.85 interest rate, you pay that over 30 years, your total payments, principal and interest would be $424,000. Total payments over 40 years, $600,000. You're talking about $175,000 difference or so. Generally speaking, I wouldn't go out there looking for a 40-year mortgage.
Starting point is 00:22:15 Stick with the 30 or even the 15 if you could afford it. Our next question comes from Aaron. I just started a job and am going through my 401k paperwork. I'm planning on contributing 8% and we'll get a 3% match. However, I don't know how much risk I should take. For now, I just click the middle between conservative and aggressive investing on the slighty swiper thing. Good old, slighty swiper thing. Also, pick the regular option instead of the Roth. Does this sound
Starting point is 00:22:44 reasonable to you, or should I change it? Well, and these are excellent questions, and the right answer for you will be very dependent on things like your age, your income, and how much you've already saved. And I don't know those things, but I can still offer some general thoughts. So you are saving 11% of your income for retirement. That's your 8% that you're contributing and the 3% match. If you're in your 20s or so, That might be enough, but generally you should be shooting for 15 percent, unless you are getting a late start, you know, late 30s, 40s, then you should be shooting for even higher. So think about that in terms of how much to save.
Starting point is 00:23:22 In terms of the slidey swiper thing, I would want to know if that factors in your age as well as your risk tolerance. It sounds like to me like you have a moderate risk tolerance, but a moderate risk tolerance for someone who is in their 20s will look very different from someone with a moderate's tolerance to someone in their 50s or 60s. So I hope that tool factors in your age. But another consideration might be a target date retirement fund if your plan offers them, and most do these days. And you choose a target date retirement fund that has a date in its name that's around when you want to retire. And for farther out, it'll be very aggressive, but then it gets
Starting point is 00:24:05 gradually more conservative as you get closer to the retirement date and it does all the asset allocation for you. Stocks, bonds, cash, U.S. stocks, international stocks. It's a pretty reasonable allocation for someone with a moderate risk tolerance. And then as for the Roth, it really just depends on your tax bracket today versus where you think it'll be when you retire. And this doesn't have to be an either or a decision. You could contribute to both. So unless you're in a very high tax bracket, I'd contribute at least some to the Roth account because it gives you some so-called tax diversification in retirement. If you're in the 12% tax bracket, the Roth is almost a definite, even in the 22% tax bracket,
Starting point is 00:24:47 it might make sense to contribute to the Roth, or at least some to a Roth. And since we all just did our taxes, it should be pretty easy to figure out where we are on the tax bracket spectrum. All right. Next question comes from Eric in Montana. I own two foreign companies and have been reinvesting dividends for several years. They are Johnson Controls, Inc. and Lindt PLC. But my broker was acquired. Now, I can't reinvest these dividends as fractional shares since they are from foreign companies,
Starting point is 00:25:15 and it's against my new broker's rules. Boo. That's me editorializing there. All right. Should I consider selling out these positions because I can't reinvest the dividends? I don't expect an opinion on the companies, but the opportunity to passively compound shares is a huge plus for nearly all the positions I hold. Well, Eric, if you still believe in the companies, you don't have to sell. Especially if this account isn't an IRA and you have some capital gains in there, because if you sold, then you'd have to owe the taxes.
Starting point is 00:25:44 Instead, you can just transfer the account to a different broker that allows fractional shares for dividend reinvestment for these types of stocks. And of course, if this isn't an IRA and all the shares are a net loss, you actually might want to sell. You lock at a loss that you could write off on your 2023 tax return, and then just move the cash to a different broker, but then don't buy the shares back within 30 days or you'll be in violation of the wash sale rules and you won't be able to write off those losses. Those are some ideas, but you're absolutely right that passively and automatically reinvesting
Starting point is 00:26:15 your dividends is very powerful. It allows you to buy more shares, which then pay more dividends, which then allow you to buy even more shares and so on. It's this snowball effect. If you instead have to wait until enough dividends accumulate this cash so you can buy another share, miss out on a lot of growth, assuming that the share prices rise over time. So definitely, I think it makes sense to put some effort into finding a broker that will automatically reinvest your dividends. As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about, and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against. So don't buy yourself stocks solely on what you hear. I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. We'll see you tomorrow.

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