Bank of America Estimates Leverage Ratio Was 4.9% to 5% - Bloomberg
Bank of America Corp., the second-largest U.S. bank, estimated that its ratio of capital to total
assets was between 4.9 percent and 5 percent in the second
quarter, near the proposed minimum.
The bank disclosed the so-called supplementary leverage
ratio with its second-quarter earnings today. The Charlotte,
North Carolina-based bank didn’t estimate the ratio for its
federally insured deposit-taking subsidiary.
Under the U.S. plan introduced last week, the parent
companies of eight of the largest banks, including Bank of
America, would need capital equal to 5 percent of assets and
their bank subsidiaries would require 6 percent.
The U.S. proposal surpasses the 3 percent global minimum
that the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision approved to help
prevent another financial crisis. The changes would force
lenders to fund more assets with capital that can absorb losses
instead of with borrowed money.
The higher threshold could complicate efforts by Chief
Executive Officer Brian T. Moynihan to increase dividends.
Lenders that don’t reach the minimum in time could face curbs on
bonuses, stock buybacks and payouts to shareholders. While banks
would have until the end of 2017 to comply, some may have to
retain earnings to meet the goals.
Licks finger, sticks it in the air. Hmmn. Yeah 4.9% sounds about
right. CFO trundles back to office to log out and hop in his town car to
head for the Hamptons.
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