KeyCorp's Q3 Earnings Beat, Stock Dips on Weak Asset Quality

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KeyCorp’s KEY third-quarter 2024 adjusted earnings from continuing operations of 30 cents per share beat the Zacks Consensus Estimate of 27 cents. Further, the bottom line reflected a 3.4% rise from the prior-year quarter. The reported quarter included the FDIC special assessment charge of $6 million, but its impact on earnings was negligible.

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The stock lost 1.1% in pre-market trading on deteriorating credit quality and spread income weakness concerns.

Results benefited from a rise in adjusted non-interest income, higher net interest income (NII), and lower expenses. Improving deposit balance was another positive. However, lower provisions and a lower loan balance were undermining factors. Further, higher deposit costs weighed on net interest margin (NIM).

Results in the reported quarter excluded $737 million after-tax loss on the sale of securities as part of a strategic repositioning of the portfolio. After considering these, net loss from continuing operations attributable to common shareholders was $447 million against a profit of $266 million in the prior year quarter. Our estimate for the metric was a loss of $442.9 million.

KEY’s Revenues Up, Expenses Decline

Total quarterly revenues were $695 million. Adjusted quarterly total revenues (tax equivalent or TE) rose 3% year over year to $1.61 billion. Moreover, the top line beat the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $1.59 billion.
 
NII (on a TE basis) increased 4.4% to $964 million. NIM (TE basis) from continuing operations increased 16 basis points (bps) to 2.17%. Both metrics benefited from the re-investment of proceeds from maturing investment securities into higher-yielding ones and a shift in funding mix, partially offset by lower loan balances because of balance sheet optimization efforts during 2023 and higher deposit costs. Our estimate for NII (FTE) and NIM was $940.9 million and 2.16%, respectively.

Non-interest income was negative $269 million.  Excluding securities losses, adjusted non-interest income grew roughly 1% to $649 million. The rise was largely attributable to higher trust and investment services income, commercial mortgage servicing fees, and investment banking and debt placement fees. Our estimate for the metric was $654 million.

Non-interest expenses declined 1.5% to $1.09 billion. This included an additional FDIC special assessment charge of $6 million but excluded a $7 million intangible asset amortization charge. We projected the metric to be $1.11 billion.