|
Issue 1, January/February 2004
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Small Banks’ Competitors
Loom Large
Small banks have long played a
key role in the U.S. financial system. Sprinkled heavily
across the country, they serve virtually all but the
most isolated geographic areas. Built on personal contact,
community ties and close lender–borrower relationships,
these institutions traditionally have met the banking
needs of individuals, farms and small businesses. But
small-scale banking has encountered rough going in recent
years. Competitive forces, unleashed by technological
advancement and financial deregulation, have led many
small banks to combine or otherwise grow to achieve
a larger scale, suggesting a reduced role for the traditional
small bank. In addition, other types of financial institutions,
such as credit unions, have made significant inroads
into small banks’ market segments.
These developments call into question
the competitive position and future viability of small
banks. A close look at financial trends shows small
banks meeting with some success as they adjust to the
changing environment. Nevertheless, small banks continue
to lose ground to competing types and forms of financial
institutions. An important goal for public policy is
to ensure that the outcome of this competitive struggle
reflects the fundamental strengths and weaknesses of
the various players involved as opposed to the regulatory
environment, which, if misaligned, could favor one set
of institutions over another.
Fall from Prominence
The decline of small banks—defined
here as banking organizations with assets of less than
$1 billion, measured in 2002 dollars—has been
dramatic. While there were about 6,000 small banks as
of June 2003, that represents a substantial decline
from more than 11,000 in 1984. Further, since 1984,
small banks’ share of commercial banking system
assets has fallen by almost half, from 23 percent to
13 percent (Chart 1). Midsize banks likewise
dropped from 35 percent to 16 percent of the market.
Only large banks have gained market share, rising from
42 percent to 71 percent. Moreover, these shares based
on asset size actually overstate the relative position
of small banks because off-balance-sheet activities,
such as securitization and derivatives trading, tend
to be concentrated at the largest institutions.

In one sense, small banks’
declining market share understates their performance
because many of the more successful small banks have
grown rapidly, both organically and through mergers
and acquisitions, so that they have crossed the $1 billion
threshold to become part of the midsize group. If these
previously small banks are counted as still belonging
to the small size group, then small banks’ market
share actually has increased slightly since 1984, from
23 percent to 24 percent.
But while small bank growth can
account for the shrinkage in small bank market share,
small banks nevertheless are becoming a less prominent
feature of the financial landscape. Many small banks
have merged or otherwise grown out of their previous
smallness, fueling a continuing structural shift toward
the largest size class of banks. While substantial numbers
of new small banks have been chartered in recent years,
the additions to small bank assets have been insufficient
to offset the reductions associated with growth into
the midsize category. Industry growth has tended to
occur through the movement to larger sized banks, as
opposed to greater numbers of small institutions. As
a result, there has been a dramatic shift in the mix
of banking firms toward large-scale banking and a resulting
fall from prominence for small banks.
Not only do small banks represent
a shrinking component of the banking industry, but their
profitability lags as well (Chart 2 ). While the
banking industry as a whole has generated record profits
in recent years and small bank profits have been substantial,
the profitability of small banks nevertheless has fallen
behind that of larger institutions.

Several interrelated forces set
the stage for small banks’ declining position.
Until the 1970s, regulation had reduced competition,
both among banks and between banks and other types of
financial institutions. Technology and innovation, however,
eventually enabled the various types of financial services
providers to circumvent regulatory restrictions and
compete more directly. An increasing number of banks
then found that not only did the old regulatory structure
no longer protect them from competition, it actually
restricted their ability to respond. Regulations that
had prevented banks from competing by paying market
interest rates on deposits were gradually removed. Laws
that had prohibited banks from competing through the
establishment of branch networks met a similar fate.
The new, more open and interconnected
financial environment has posed some challenges for
small banks. Geographic expansion through branching
has enabled previously distant banks to reach into local
markets, achieve closer contact with potential depositors
and borrowers, and thereby compete more directly with
small, community-based institutions. Distant banks have
also increasingly contacted potential customers through
brokers and the Internet, thereby reducing the advantage
of a local presence. Similarly, armed with large data
warehouses and automated data-mining tools, lenders
are relying more and more on computer-aided statistical
analyses of historical data to identify creditworthy
borrowers, as opposed to the personal contact and informal
lender–borrower relationships typically associated
with a small bank. And securitization, whereby individual
loans are grouped together and sold as a traded security,
has added liquidity to the lending market and helped
other institutions, such as mortgage companies, compete
more effectively with banks, both large and small.
Credit unions, aided by favorable
legislation and regulation, have emerged as another
particularly severe threat to small banks. Beginning
in the early 1980s, rule changes gradually relaxed the
“common bond” requirement for credit union
membership, leading to legislation in 1998 allowing
a federal credit union to serve multiple membership
groups. The loosening of membership restrictions enhanced
growth opportunities, especially when coupled with policies
favoring credit unions over banks, such as credit unions’
exemption from both federal taxation and the regulatory
requirements of the Community Reinvestment Act.
Here, too, small banks have lost
significant market share. As shown in Chart 3, credit
union assets, adjusted for inflation, have more than
tripled since 1984, from $194 billion to $611 billion,
whereas small bank assets have actually decreased in
value. If small banks that grew into the midsize group
are still counted as small, then small bank assets have
risen to $1.8 trillion from $1 trillion in 1984. But
even this growth of 80 percent pales in comparison with
credit unions’ 200 percent growth.

Looking to Rebound
Despite their declining prominence,
small banks have shown signs of resilience. They have
met with some success in their efforts to shore up business
with traditional customers. One positive sign is found
in regional trends in the presence of small banks. While
nationally small banks have lost market share to large
banks, the losses have been uneven across states. Since
1991, small banks have tended to lose the most market
share in states where their share had been unusually
high, perhaps correcting an overabundance of small banks
associated with prior regulatory protections. At the
same time, small banks have actually gained market share
in many states for which the initial small bank share
was unusually low (Chart 4 ). The positive
adjustment of small bank market share in these states
suggests an important role for small banks in a region’s
banking structure. The trend line fit to the points
in Chart 4 crosses the horizontal axis at 12 percent,
providing some evidence of an equilibrium small bank
market share well above zero.

Small Businesses. A
substantial part of small banks’ activity involves
providing financial services to small businesses. While
lending decisions have increasingly relied on data-rich
statistical analyses, in many cases the most relevant
indicators regarding the creditworthiness of individual
small businesses still take the form of firsthand information
gained through close lender–borrower relationships.
And it is here that small, community-based banks may
have retained a degree of competitive advantage.
Despite the continuing shift in
banking system assets to larger institutions, small
banks’ share of total bank lending to small businesses
(business loans with original amounts of $1 million
or less) has slipped only slightly. Small banks currently
account for 37 percent of total bank lending to small
businesses, compared with 40 percent in 1993, when data
first became available. Small banks’ 37 percent
share of small business lending is particularly remarkable
given that they control only 13 percent of banking system
assets. Small banks’ greater focus on small business
lending explains their disproportionate share of system-wide
small business loans. Small banks currently devote more
than 19 percent of their assets to small business loans,
up from 17 percent in 1993. In contrast, small business
loans represent only 3.5 percent of aggregate large
bank assets.
The high and increasing share
of small bank assets in small business loans reflects
an effort to shore up business with this customer group.
While business loan demand generally has fallen off
in recent years, small banks have achieved growth in
a particular subset of this area—business lending
backed by nonresidential real estate. As a proportion
of total small bank assets, small business loans secured
by nonresidential real estate have increased substantially
(Chart 5 ). And the trend toward real estate-secured
lending is also evident in large business loans.

Farms. While
small business lending represents an important niche
for small banks, it is not the only one. Just as firsthand
borrower information can often still give small banks
an advantage in lending to small businesses, community-based
banking appears to have the upper hand in farm lending.
The advantage associated with close lender–borrower
relationships may be especially important in agriculture;
farms are typically located a substantial distance from
regional banking centers, which would make it difficult
for a large bank’s central office to evaluate
farm borrowers or monitor lending decisions made at
rural branches.
A positive association between
small banks and farming is clearly visible in the market
share data for 2001, the most recent year for which
data on farming’s share of state output are available.
Small banks tend to account for a large share of total
deposits in states where farming accounts for a large
share of total gross state product (Chart 6 ).
Further reflecting their agricultural niche, almost
59 percent of all small banks are headquartered in rural
areas.

The positive association between
small banks and farming involves strong financial ties.
Small banks currently account for 64 percent of total
bank lending to farms, down only slightly from 68 percent
in 1993. As a group, small banks devote 5.6 percent
of their assets to farm loans, and for many small banks
this ratio is much higher. Small banks in rural areas
hold 10.3 percent of their assets in farm loans. In
contrast, the farm loan ratio for large banks is 0.3
percent.
Individuals. Small
banks have also been working to reinforce their position
in even some of the most hotly contested areas of the
consumer market. These efforts are perhaps best illustrated
by developments in home mortgage lending.
Today’s home mortgage market
is highly securitized and competitive, bolstered by
government-sponsored enterprises like Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac. Large mortgage lenders have adopted high-volume,
low-cost strategies based on highly automated systems,
resulting in strong price competition. Such a market
may appear to leave little role for small banks.
But despite the seemingly long
odds, small banks remain active players in the home
mortgage market, and recent data indicate small bank
mortgage operations have been profitable. Fourteen percent
of small banks’ total assets currently are in
first-lien home mortgage loans, reflecting substantial
involvement in this area. In addition, many of the home
mortgage loans small banks originate are sold in the
secondary market, either directly or more often indirectly
through a mortgage broker, and are no longer reflected
on the banks’ books. Taking the share of assets
in home mortgages as a rough indicator for involvement
in the home mortgage market, the available data indicate
small banks are successful in this line of business.
A large portfolio of home mortgage loans has tended
to boost small banks’ return on assets, while
reducing the variability of that return.
The positive relationship between
home mortgage lending and profitability at small banks
suggests they retain significant capacity in this area.
Some small banks have pursued aggressive approaches,
including direct connections to the secondary market
and web sites that allow geographically distant individuals
to apply for home mortgage products. In this sense,
technology increasingly is allowing small banks to acquire
some large bank attributes. Other small banks have followed
a more scaled-back approach, opting to outsource much
of the mortgage function. Even here, though, many have
found a way to satisfy their customers’ mortgage
needs.
Churned or Cheated?
An important question for
public policy has to do with the reasons behind the
dramatic shift in the mix of banking firms toward large-scale
banking. Has small banks’ decline stemmed only
from the technology-induced dismantling of regulations
that previously had protected them from competition?
If so, the reduced prominence of small banks may simply
represent another manifestation of technology’s
beneficial effect in churning the economy, whereby new,
superior modes of business are enabled, which then supplant
more traditional, but less effective, business forms.
Another possibility, however,
is that the regulatory environment has evolved into
one that not only no longer protects small banks but
actually works against them. The decline in small banks
might then be overdone, to the detriment of their primary
customers. Disparities in regulatory treatment involving
competitors outside the banking industry, such as credit
unions’ exemption from both federal taxation and
Community Reinvestment Act requirements, represent a
potentially important disadvantage for small banks.
With regard to competition between banks of different
sizes, the burden of regulation often weighs most heavily
on small institutions. Because compliance costs contain
a substantial fixed component, they can easily eat up
a greater share of revenue for small banking operations
than for larger ones.
Such considerations, coupled with
the pronounced decline in small bank market share over
recent years, suggest policymakers may need to assess
whether a once protective regulatory environment has
evolved into one that now places small banks at an artificial
disadvantage.
—Jeffery W. Gunther
and Robert R. Moore
 |
| About
the Authors
Gunther is a senior
economist and research officer and Moore
is a senior economist and policy advisor
in the Financial Industry Studies Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Notes
The authors thank
Bob DeYoung, Bob Hankins, Jim Harvey, Richard
Kiker, Evan Koenig, Gary Palmer, Ken Robinson,
Harvey Rosenblum, Ken Spong, Art Tribble and
Mark Vaughan for helpful comments.
About Southwest Economy
Southwest Economy
is published six times annually by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas. The views expressed
are those of the authors and should not
be attributed to the Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas or the Federal Reserve System.
Articles may be reprinted
on the condition that the source is credited
and a copy is provided to the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Southwest Economy
is available free of charge by writing the
Public Affairs Department, Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas, P.O. Box 655906, Dallas,
TX 75265-5906, or by telephoning (214) 922-5254. |
 |
|
|