© Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Exhibit 99.1 BancAnalysts Association of Boston Conference Daniel T. Poston Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer November 4, 2010 Please refer to earnings release dated October 21, 2010 for further information |
2 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved 3Q10 in review 3Q10 credit actions driving further improvement in credit trends • Sale or transfer to held-for-sale of $1.2B in loans: $228mm of consumer loans and $961mm of commercial loans • Net charge-offs $956mm: $510mm on credit actions, $446mm otherwise • Compared with 2Q10, nonperforming assets (NPAs) declined 30% (flat before the effect of 3Q credit actions) and nonperforming loans (NPLs) declined 38% (down 2% before the effect of 3Q credit actions) – Total delinquencies down 10% sequentially (lowest level since 1Q07) • Provision expense of $457mm – ~$337mm reserve reductions related to credit actions, ~$162mm reserve reductions related to remainder of portfolio • Loan loss allowance of 4.20%; coverage 153% of NPAs and 202% of NPLs Actions driving progress • Focusing on credit quality, portfolio management and loss mitigation strategies • Executing on customer satisfaction initiatives and improving customer loyalty • Enhancing breadth and profitability of offerings and relationships • Becoming an employer of choice in the industry by continuing to enhance employee engagement Continued strong operating results • Net income available to common shareholders of $175mm, or $0.22 per diluted share – Includes $127mm pre-tax net impact of BOLI settlement and 3Q10 credit actions described below • Return on average assets of 0.84%; return on average common equity of 6.8% • Pre-provision net revenue (PPNR)* of $760mm: $633mm excluding BOLI, driven by strong NII growth and higher fees reflecting mortgage results • Strong capital ratios: Tier 1 common 7.3%, Tier 1 ratio 13.9%, Total capital ratio 18.3% * Pre-provision net revenue: net interest income plus noninterest income minus noninterest expense |
3 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Strong profitability results Core PPNR / Average assets (Annualized)* Core PPNR / NCOs* ROAA Source: SNL Financial and company reports. Data as of 3Q10. * Core pre-tax pre-provision earnings excludes the following items: securities gains/losses, gains/losses from debt extinguishments, leveraged lease gains/losses, gains from asset sales, and other non-recurring items. Net charge-offs exclude net charge-offs related to loans sold or moved to held-for-sale during 3Q10 for FITB ($510mm), RF ($233mm), and BBT ($432mm) • Strong PPNR profitability creates higher than average loss absorption capacity • Profitability not dependent on reserve releases • Return on assets higher than peer average Lighter portion excludes charge-offs on loans sold or moved to held-for-sale |
4 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Stable net interest income trends (bps) NIM and YOY growth versus peers Peers include: BBT, CMA, HBAN, KEY, MI, MTB, PNC, RF, STI, USB, WFC, ZION Source: SNL Financial and company reports * Reflects purchase accounting adjustments from the First Charter acquisition of $29mm, $24mm, $21mm, $17mm, and $14mm in 3Q09, 4Q09, 1Q10, 2Q10, and 3Q10, respectively. Yields and rates NII and NIM (FTE) ($mm) • Sequential trends in net interest income and net interest margin (FTE) reflect CD runoff and repricing, lower securities premium amortization, and a mix shift towards higher-yielding loans – NII up $29 million, or 3%, sequentially and up $42 million, or 5%, year-over-year – NIM up 13 bps sequentially and 27 bps year-over-year |
Liability mix and pricing discipline drive strong net interest income/NIM results • Strong, deposit rich core funding mix supports relatively low cost of funds – Low reliance on wholesale funding • Continued pricing discipline on commercial loans, consistent with market trends toward better risk-adjusted spreads – C&I spreads over 1-month LIBOR have increased more than 150 bps in the past two years Source: SNL Financial and company reports as of 3Q10. Deposits / Assets C&I Spread to 1-month LIBOR 3Q10 Cost of Funds Peer Comparison Peer average 1.01% Peer average 70% 5 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved |
Stable loan trends and strong core funding • Extended $22 billion of new and renewed credit in 3Q10 • C&I loans up 1% sequentially largely due to higher originations of ~$1.1 billion per month during the quarter • CRE loans down 4% sequentially and 14% from the previous year • Consumer loans flat sequentially and up 1% from the previous year • Warehoused residential mortgage loans held-for-sale were $2.1 billion at quarter end Flat QoQ; (4%) YoY (2%) QoQ; +8% YoY • Core deposit to loan ratio of 98%, up from 87% in 3Q09 • DDAs flat sequentially and up 14% year-over-year • Retail average transaction deposits up 1% sequentially and 13% from the previous year, driven by growth in savings, demand deposit, and money market account balances • Commercial average transaction deposits down 4% sequentially, driven by $1.2B decline in public funds balances Average loan growth ($B)^ Average core deposit growth ($B) 80 78 78 70 72 76 Average wholesale funding ($B) 26 20 22 • Reduced wholesale funding by $6.7 billion from the third quarter of 2009 – Non-core deposits down 4% sequentially and 40% from the previous year – Short term borrowings up 25% sequentially, although still very low levels, and down 62% from the previous year – Long-term debt up 1% sequentially and 8% from the previous year ^ Excludes loans held-for-sale Note: Numbers may not sum due to rounding 77 77 19 19 75 6 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved |
7 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Core fee income growth and stable core expenses Core fee income ($mm) Core expenses ($mm) • Core noninterest income of $676mm increased $74mm, or 13%, compared with prior quarter, primarily due to increased mortgage banking net revenue • Sequential strength in mortgage banking revenue (+104%) and investment advisory revenue (+4%) • 3Q10 mortgage revenue results reflected continued strong originations and refinancing activity ~$5.6B in originations in 3Q10 • Deposit service charges down just 4% sequentially despite impact from Reg E (impact from Reg E expected to be ~$15-20mm/qtr before mitigation) • Credit-related costs affected fee income by $40mm in 3Q10 compared with $14mm in 2Q10 and $45mm in 3Q09 • Expense trends continue to reflect elevated credit costs • Core efficiency ratio of 59.9% in 3Q10, compared with 62.6% in 2Q10 and 64.4% in 3Q09 • Credit-related costs affected noninterest expenses by $67mm in 3Q10 ($55mm in 2Q10 and $111mm in 3Q09) • Noninterest expense related to mortgage repurchases ~$45mm in 3Q10 compared with $18mm in 2Q10 and $11mm in 3Q09 – Increased claims, file requests and losses resulted in higher 3Q10 mortgage repurchase expense and increase in reserve (mortgage repurchase reserve increased ~$18mm in 3Q10) * Refer to slide 19 for itemized effects of non-core fees and expenses |
8 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Impact of portfolio actions • Residential mortgage loan sale – $228 million of balances sold – $205 million of balances were nonaccrual – $123 million of NCO realized • Commercial HFS transfer – $961 million of balances transferred – $694 million of balances were nonaccrual – $387 million of NCO realized • Reserve reduction – Approximately $337 million related to sale or transfer of loans to held- for-sale Residential mortgages sold Balances NCO Florida $141 $72 Ohio 25 15 Illinois 15 9 Michigan 15 8 Indiana 10 6 Other 23 13 Total $228 $123 Commercial HFS transfers - O/S Florida Michigan Other Total Commercial mortgage $174 $45 $267 $486 Commercial construction 32 12 123 167 C&I 51 38 219 308 Total $257 $95 $609 $961 Commercial HFS transfers - nonaccruals Florida Michigan Other Total Commercial mortgage $106 $38 $183 $327 Commercial construction 32 11 86 129 C&I 49 35 154 238 Total $187 $84 $423 $694 Commercial HFS transfers - NCO Florida Michigan Other Total Commercial mortgage $75 $20 $107 $202 Commercial construction 20 6 51 77 C&I 26 10 72 108 Total $121 $36 $230 $387 Net charge-off composition Credit Actions Remaining Portfolio Total Consumer $123 $206 $329 Commercial 387 240 627 Total $510 $446 $956 |
9 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Strong relative credit trends Source: SNL and company reports. NPA and NCO ratios exclude loans held-for-sale and covered assets for peers where appropriate. * 4Q08 net charge-offs included $800mm in NCOs related to commercial loans moved to held-for-sale; 3Q10 net charge-offs included $510mm in NCOs related to loans sold or moved to held-for-sale. 4Q10 expectations based on outlook provided on 10/21/10. FITB credit metrics were higher than peers but are now generally better than peers NPA ratio vs. peers Net charge-off ratio vs. peers* Loans 90+ days delinquent % vs. peers Loans 30-89 days delinquent % vs. peers (7.5%) (HFS transfer) 3.80% Before credit actions 2.33% Before credit actions 4Q10 expect stable* 4Q10 expect below 2%* |
10 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Non-performing loans Non-performing loans ($mm) $2.9B $2.9B $2.7B Non-performing loans improving with lower severity mix; benefit of sale/transfer $2.5B Fifth Third’s non-performing loan inflows (relative to loans) were higher than peers throughout 2008. More recently, FITB inflows have been lower than peers and generally in the top quartile. FITB NPL inflows (relative to loans) vs. peers FITB Peers include: BAC, BBT, C, CMA, HBAN, JPM, KEY, MI, MTB, PNC, RF, STI, USB, and WFC New non-performing loan flows ($mm) NPL flows have declined significantly $1.6B |
11 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Strong credit metrics compared with peers Source: SNL Financial and company reports. * Excludes net charge-offs related to loans sold or moved to held-for-sale during 3Q10 for FITB ($510mm), RF ($233mm), and BBT ($432mm). ^ FITB as of 3Q10 HFI NPA Ratio Peer average: 2.3% Peer average: 3.8% Net Charge-off Ratio* (Annualized) “Texas Ratio” (HFI NPAs + Over 90s) / (Reserves + TCE) (HFI NPAs + Over 90s – Reserves) / TCE Peer average: 11% FITB credit metrics lower than peer average and represent position of relative strength Peers 2Q10 Peers 2Q10 Peers 3Q10 Peers 3Q10 |
Strong reserve position Source: SNL Financial and company reports. NPAs/NPLs exclude held-for-sale portion for all banks and covered assets for BBT, USB, and ZION. * Net charge-offs exclude net charge-offs related to loans sold or moved to held-for-sale during 3Q10 for FITB ($510mm), RF ($233mm), and BBT ($432mm) Coverage ratios are strong relative to peers Industry leading reserve level 1. FITB 4.20% 2. ZION 4.07% 3. KEY 3.81% 4. RF 3.77% 5. HBAN 3.56% 6. MI 3.51% 7. PNC 3.48% 8. WFC 3.18% 9. USB 2.83% 10. STI 2.68% 11. BBT 2.56% 12. CMA 2.38% 13. MTB 1.76% Peer Average 3.13% Reserves / Loans 12 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved |
13 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Strong capital position Source: SNL Financial and company reports. Data as of 3Q10. * MTB Tier 1 capital and Tier 1 common ratios as of 2Q10. MI Tier 1 common ratio as of 2Q10 ^ 2Q10 RWA for MTB, PNC, STI, ZION Strong capital ratios relative to peers, particularly considering reserve levels (TCE + reserves) / Loans Peer average: 13.8% Peer average w/o TARP: 10% Tier 1 capital ratio (with and without TARP) 9.2% 10.8% 14.2% 13.6% 12.8% 14.3% 13.9% 12.1% Tangible common equity ratio Peer average: 7.2% (Tier 1 common ratio + reserves) / RWA^ Peer average: 8.1% TARP Reserves 10.6% 12.0% 11.2% 11.6% 12.0% 10.5% 10.3% 11.0% 10.9% 10.3% 7.6% 9.8% 10.5% |
14 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Strong liquidity profile Retail Brokered CD maturities: $254mm in 2010; $31mm in 2011 FHLB borrowings $2.6B 9/30 unused avail. capacity $25B ($18.7B in Fed and $5.8B in FHLB) Holding Company cash at 9/30/10: $1.2B — Total Fed deposits ~$2.9B Expected cash obligations over the next 12 months (assuming no TARP repayment) — $0 debt maturities — ~$32mm common dividends — ~$205mm preferred dividends (~$35mm Series G, ~$170mm TARP) — ~$365mm interest and other expenses Cash currently sufficient to satisfy all fixed obligations* for more than 2.5 years without accessing capital markets/subsidiary dividends/asset sales Bank unsecured debt maturities ($mm – excl. Brokered CDs) Heavily core funded Holding company unsecured debt maturities ($mm) * Debt maturities, common and preferred dividends, interest and other expenses S-T wholesale 8% |
15 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Continuing to invest for the future |
16 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Peer performance summary – YoY Comparison Source: SNL Financial and company reports. (1) Regional bank peer average consists of BBT, CMA, HBAN, KEY, MTB, MI, PNC, RF, STI, USB, WFC, and ZION. * Operating fee growth, core pre-tax pre-provision earnings, and operating efficiency ratio exclude the following items: securities gains/losses, gains/losses from debt extinguishments, leveraged lease gains/losses, gains from asset sales, BOLI litigation, and other non-recurring items. Average loans include only loans held-for- investment. NPAs exclude loans held-for-sale and covered assets. ^ Excludes net charge-offs related to loans sold or moved to held-for-sale during 3Q10 for FITB ($510mm), RF ($233mm), and BBT ($432mm). Continued relative outperformance on key value drivers FITB 3Q10 Regional bank peer average (1) 3Q10 Performance vs. peers Core pre-tax pre-provision earnings* / average assets (annualized) 2.2% 1.9% Better Operating efficiency ratio* 60% 64% Better Net interest margin / (bps) 3.70% (+27) 3.62% (+26) Better NPA ratio* / (bps) 2.72% (-137) 3.76% (-26) Better Net charge-off ratio^ / (bps) 2.31% (-144) 2.25% (-50) Inline Average core deposits growth 7.6% 2.7% Better Average loan growth* (4.3%) (6.3%) Better |
17 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Cautionary statement This report may contain statements that we believe are “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Rule 175 promulgated thereunder, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and Rule 3b-6 promulgated thereunder. These statements relate to our financial condition, results of operations, plans, objectives, future performance or business. They usually can be identified by the use of forward-looking language such as “will likely result,” “may,” “are expected to,” “is anticipated,” “estimate,” “forecast,” “projected,” “intends to,” or may include other similar words or phrases such as “believes,” “plans,” “trend,” “objective,” “continue,” “remain,” or similar expressions, or future or conditional verbs such as “will,” “would,” “should,” “could,” “might,” “can,” or similar verbs. You should not place undue reliance on these statements, as they are subject to risks and uncertainties, including but not limited to the risk factors set forth in our most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K and our most recent quarterly report on Form 10-Q. When considering these forward-looking statements, you should keep in mind these risks and uncertainties, as well as any cautionary statements we may make. Moreover, you should treat these statements as speaking only as of the date they are made and based only on information then actually known to us. There are a number of important factors that could cause future results to differ materially from historical performance and these forward- looking statements. Factors that might cause such a difference include, but are not limited to: (1) general economic conditions and weakening in the economy, specifically the real estate market, either nationally or in the states in which Fifth Third, one or more acquired entities and/or the combined company do business, are less favorable than expected; (2) deteriorating credit quality; (3) political developments, wars or other hostilities may disrupt or increase volatility in securities markets or other economic conditions; (4) changes in the interest rate environment reduce interest margins; (5) prepayment speeds, loan origination and sale volumes, charge-offs and loan loss provisions; (6) Fifth Third’s ability to maintain required capital levels and adequate sources of funding and liquidity; (7) maintaining capital requirements may limit Fifth Third’s operations and potential growth; (8) changes and trends in capital markets; (9) problems encountered by larger or similar financial institutions may adversely affect the banking industry and/or Fifth Third (10) competitive pressures among depository institutions increase significantly; (11) effects of critical accounting policies and judgments; (12) changes in accounting policies or procedures as may be required by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) or other regulatory agencies; (13) legislative or regulatory changes or actions, or significant litigation, adversely affect Fifth Third, one or more acquired entities and/or the combined company or the businesses in which Fifth Third, one or more acquired entities and/or the combined company are engaged; (14) ability to maintain favorable ratings from rating agencies; (15) fluctuation of Fifth Third’s stock price; (16) ability to attract and retain key personnel; (17) ability to receive dividends from its subsidiaries; (18) potentially dilutive effect of future acquisitions on current shareholders’ ownership of Fifth Third; (19) effects of accounting or financial results of one or more acquired entities; (20) difficulties in separating Fifth Third Processing Solutions from Fifth Third; (21) loss of income from any sale or potential sale of businesses that could have an adverse effect on Fifth Third’s earnings and future growth; (22) ability to secure confidential information through the use of computer systems and telecommunications networks; and (23) the impact of reputational risk created by these developments on such matters as business generation and retention, funding and liquidity. You should refer to our periodic and current reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, or “SEC,” for further information on other factors, which could cause actual results to be significantly different from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. |
18 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Appendix |
19 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Pre-tax pre-provision earnings Core PPNR trend * Pre-provision net revenue (PPNR): net interest income plus noninterest income minus noninterest expense • Reported PPNR of $760 million up 34% from strong 2Q10 levels driven by strong net interest income growth, higher fees reflecting mortgage results and litigation settlement • Adjusted PPNR of $634 million, due to adjustments totaling ($126) million, resulting in adjusted sequential and year-over-year increases of 15% and 18%, respectively • Excluding the impact of credit-related adjustments ($107mm in 3Q10), PPNR up 19% versus 2Q10; up 7% versus 3Q09 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 Reported PPNR $511 $2,393 $844 $562 $568 $567 $760 Adjustments: BOLI 54 - - - - - (127) Gain on sale of Visa shares - - (244) - 9 - - Gain from sale of processing interest - (1,764) 6 - - - - Divested merchant and EFT revenue (155) (169) 2 - - - - Class B Visa swap fair value adjustment - - - - - - - Securities gains/losses 24 (5) (8) (2) (14) (8) (4) Visa litigation reserve expense - - (73) - - - - Other litigation reserve expense - - - 22 4 3 - FTPS warrants + puts - - - (20) 2 (10) 5 Seasonal pension expense - - 10 - - - - FDIC special assessment - 55 - - - - - Divested merchant and EFT expense (est.) 49 54 2 - - - - Core PPNR $483 $564 $539 $562 $569 $552 $634 Credit Related Items: OREO write-downs, FV adjs, & G/L on loan sales 3 8 45 30 1 14 40 Problem asset work-out expenses 94 57 111 73 91 55 67 Credit adjusted PPNR $580 $630 $695 $665 $661 $621 $741 Adjusted PPNR +31%; Credit adjusted PPNR +28% |
20 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved NPL Rollforward NPL Rollforward Commercial 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 Beginning NPL Amount 1,406 1,937 2,110 2,430 2,392 2,172 1,980 New nonaccrual loans 799 544 832 602 405 310 290 Paydowns, payoffs, sales and net other activity (157) (190) (246) (332) (425) (401) (631) Charge-offs (111) (181) (266) (308) (200) (100) (379) Ending Commercial NPL 1,937 2,110 2,430 2,392 2,172 1,980 1,261 Consumer Q109 Q209 Q309 Q409 Q110 Q210 Q310 Beginning NPL Amount 457 459 477 517 555 561 550 New nonaccrual loans 157 125 160 152 137 205 157 Net other activity (155) (107) (120) (114) (131) (216) (384) Ending Consumer NPL 459 477 517 555 561 550 323 Total NPL 2,396 2,587 2,947 2,947 2,733 2,530 1,584 Total new nonaccrual loans 956 669 992 754 542 515 447 Continued significant reduction in inflows of nonperforming loans |
21 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Troubled debt restructurings (TDR) overview TDR performance has improved in newer vintages Outperforming redefault benchmarks Source: Fifth Third and OCC/OTS data; data through 1Q10 industry data cumulative through 1Q10 (starting point altered to conform with current OCC reporting) Mortgage TDR 60+ redefault trend by vintage 1Q08 $69 2Q08 $135 3Q08 $146 4Q08 $176 1Q09 $221 2Q09 $257 Months since modification Mortgage TDR 60+ redefault rate: Fifth Third comparison (January 1, 2009 through March 2010) Fannie Mae Industry portfolio loans Fifth Third Volume by vintage ($mm) Freddie Mac 3Q09 $386 4Q09 $153 $1.0 billion 2008 2009 1Q10 $156 Successive improvement in vintage performance during 2008 and 2009, even as volume of modification increased Fifth Third’s mortgage portfolio TDRs have redefaulted at a lower rate than other bank held portfolio modifications — Fifth Third’s TDRs are about a third less likely to redefault than modifications on GSE mortgages Of $1.8B in consumer TDRs, $1.59B were on accrual status and $175mm were nonaccruals — $1.0 billion of TDRs are current and have been on the books 6 or more months; within that, over $700 million of TDRs are current and have been on the books for more than a year As current TDRs season, their default propensity declines significantly — We do not typically see significant defaults on current loans once a vintage approaches 12 months since modification 21 Current consumer TDRs (%) |
22 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Industry leading reserve levels Reserves / NPAs Reserves / Loans Source: SNL Financial and company reports. Data as of 3Q10. NPLs and NPAs exclude loans held-for-sale. * Net charge-offs exclude net charge-offs related to loans sold or moved to held-for-sale during 3Q10 for FITB ($510mm), RF ($233mm), and BBT ($432mm) Reserves / Net Charge-offs* (Annualized) Reserves / NPLs Peer average: 3.1% Peer average: 157% Reserve coverage strong relative to problem assets and losses Peer average: 89% Peer average: 107% Lighter portion excludes charge-offs on loans sold or moved to held-for-sale |
23 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Potential impact of key elements of Dodd-Frank Act and other recent financial legislation* Scope of activity Potential impact** Volcker Rule / Derivatives • Vast majority of derivatives activities are exempted (FITB generally not a market maker) • Any proprietary trading de minimis • “P/E” fund investments <$100mm (<1% of Tier 1 capital) • Expect minimal financial impact from loss of existing revenue • Potentially higher compliance costs despite small levels of non-exempt activities Debit Interchange (Durbin Amendment) • LTM^ debit interchange revenue of $197mm • LTM debit interchange $ volume: $15.3B – Signature $11.9B, PIN $3.4B • LTM debit interchange transaction volume: 422mm – Signature 337mm, PIN 85mm • Will not know what “reasonable” and “proportional” mean until after Fed study • Each 10 bps reduction in overall interchange rates would represent ~$15mm revenue impact annually, before effect of mitigation • Additional follow-on effects on industry debit card payments business could result from changes Deposit Insurance • Current assessed base (Deposits): ~$80B • Proposed assessed base (Assets-TE): ~$97B • FITB percentage share of new industry assessment base lower than its percentage share of old base (due to lower reliance on wholesale funding) • Don’t know assessment rates on new base • DIF reserve target increase to 1.35% from 1.15% – May be achieved from banks >$50B through higher annual assessments or longer period of elevated assessments Reg. E • Requires customers to “opt-in” to allow non-recurring electronic overdrafts (e.g. debit, ATM) from accounts • Estimated $15-20mm per quarter ($60-80mm annualized) reduction to deposit service charges, before effect of mitigation Potential impact of these and other elements of financial regulatory reform, such as CFPA activities and many other aspects, are unknown at this time TRUPs exclusion (Collins Amendment) • ~280 bps of non-common Tier 1 capital in capital structure • >300 bps of non-common Tier 1 currently – Likely more than needed post-Basel III • 3-year transition period begins 2013 • Will manage capital structure to desired composition * Based on current understanding of legislation. ** Potential impact, as noted above, is not intended to be inclusive of all potential impacts that may result from implementation of legislation. Please refer also to cautionary statement. ^ LTM = last twelve months |
24 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Well-positioned for changed financial landscape Fifth Third’s business model is driven by traditional banking activities — Making loans, taking deposits, treasury management — Largest bank headquartered within core Midwest footprint No significant business at Fifth Third impaired during crisis; core business activities not generally limited by financial reform — Didn’t/don’t originate/sell CDOs or securitize loans on behalf of others; no mortgage securitizations outstanding (except <$150 million HELOC from 2003) — Didn’t/don’t originate/sell subprime mortgages or Option ARMs — De minimis market making in derivatives — De minimis proprietary trading — Small private equity portfolio <$100 million (holding company subsidiary) — Low level of financial system “interconnectedness” (e.g., Fifth Third loss in Lehman bankruptcy should be less than $2 million) — Daily VaR less than $500 thousand While financial reform will be costly, expect financial reform to create new opportunities for banking industry through re-intermediation Fifth Third’s businesses have performed well through the crisis, and we expect to continue capitalizing on our strong competitive position as the landscape evolves further toward our traditional strengths |
25 © Fifth Third Bank | All Rights Reserved Mortgage repurchase overview Demand requests and repurchase losses remain volatile and near-term repurchase losses are expected to remain elevated — Number of outstanding demand requests (units) down 10% from Q2 2010, outstanding demand requests ($) up 11% Virtually all sold loans and new claims relate to GSEs or GNMA — 96% of outstanding balance of loans sold — 93% of outstanding claims Majority of new claims and repurchase losses relate to 2006 through 2008 vintages — 82% of new claims for 2010 YTD Majority of outstanding balances of the serviced for others portfolio relates to origination activity in 2009 and later Claims and exposure related to whole loan sales (no outstanding first mortgage securitizations) Repurchase Reserves* ($ in millions) Q3 2009 Q4 2009 Q1 2010 Q2 2010 Q3 2010 Beginning balance $44 $48 $58 $84 $85 Net reserve additions 17 25 39 19 47 Repurchase losses (13) (15) (13) (18) (29) Ending balance $48 $58 $84 $85 $103 Outstanding Counterparty Claims ($ in millions) Outstanding Balance of Sold Loans ($ in millions) GSE GNMA Private Total 2005 and prior $10,519 $335 $806 $11,660 2006 2,395 74 360 2,829 2007 3,951 107 304 4,362 2008 4,327 915 - 5,242 2009 and later 21,856 6,484 - 28,340 Total $43,048 $7,915 $1,470 $52,433 * Includes reps and warranty reserve ($86 million) and reserve for loans sold with recourse ($17 million). |