Small Banks' Durbin Shield Worked in 4Q (American Banker)
Many small banks have never accepted that an exemption from the Durbin amendment will protect them from the measure's roughly 50% cut in debit interchange rates.
Earnings at banks with assets of less than $10 billion appear to have been entirely untouched by the cap in the first quarter since its Oct. 1 implementation, however.
Interchange revenue at banks identified as exempt by the Federal Reserve ticked up a few tenths of a percentage point from the third quarter to about $507 million in the fourth quarter, according to regulatory financial reports.
Meanwhile, at banks that are not exempt — those with assets of $10 billion or more (including affiliates) — interchange revenue fell 26%, to about $6.2 billion. Excluding the 15 banks where credit card loans exceeded 5% of total assets from this group — credit cards, which were not targeted by 2010's Dodd-Frank Act, account for much of the interchange income at such banks — interchange fees plummeted by almost 40%, to $2.5 billion (see the first chart).
The uptick in interchange income at exempt banks, and the crash at large banks, occurred as overall debit transactions volume grew, but at a decelerating pace (see the second chart).
Last week, Visa Inc. Chief Executive Joseph Saunders attributed some of the slowdown to "expected de-emphasis by issuers of debit card marketing and debit rewards programs."
He said it was difficult to quantify the impact, but, "Obviously, issuers seem to be pushing their credit businesses a little bit more strongly or a lot more strongly than they do their debit businesses."
All of the largest institutions were hit hard. At JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s JPMorgan Chase Bank NA, interchange income fell 37%, to about $509 million. (Most of its credit card assets are housed in other units.) At Bank of America Corp.'s Bank of America NA, interchange income dropped 50%, to about $413 million.
Exempt banks like Eastern Bank, the bank subsidiary of Eastern Bank Corp. in Boston, and First Financial Bank NA, a unit of First Financial Bancorp in Cincinnati, showed quarter-over-quarter growth in interchange revenue
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