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Bank Financial Metrics Cheat Sheet

Bank financial statements look nothing like those of regular companies. There’s no revenue line, no EBITDA, and the balance sheet is the most important statement. This cheat sheet breaks down how bank financials actually work and which metrics drive equity value.

Bank Income Statement Structure

Line ItemDescriptionKey Drivers
Interest IncomeIncome from loans, securities, and other earning assetsLoan volume, yield on assets, rate environment
Interest ExpenseCost of deposits, borrowings, and other fundingDeposit rates, wholesale funding costs
Net Interest Income (NII)Interest Income – Interest ExpenseNIM × average earning assets
Provision for Credit LossesEstimated future loan losses (CECL methodology)Credit quality, macro outlook, loan growth
NII after ProvisionNII – ProvisionCore lending profitability after credit costs
Non-Interest IncomeFees, trading revenue, wealth management, service chargesFee-based business mix, market activity
Non-Interest ExpenseCompensation, occupancy, technology, other operating costsHeadcount, branch network, tech investment
Pre-Tax IncomeTotal revenue less all expensesOperating leverage, efficiency ratio
Net IncomeAfter-tax earningsTax rate, preferred dividends

Bank Balance Sheet Structure

AssetsLiabilities & Equity
Cash & due from banksDeposits (demand, savings, time)
Fed funds sold & securities purchased under repoFed funds purchased & securities sold under repo
Investment securities (AFS & HTM)Short-term borrowings
Loans & leases (net of allowance)Long-term debt / subordinated notes
Goodwill & intangiblesOther liabilities
Other assetsShareholders’ equity

Loan Portfolio Composition

Loan CategoryDescriptionRisk Profile
Commercial & Industrial (C&I)Loans to businesses for operations, working capitalMedium — tied to business cycle
Commercial Real Estate (CRE)Loans secured by commercial propertyHigher — concentration risk, property values
Residential MortgageHome purchase and refinance loansLower — secured by residential property
Consumer LoansAuto, credit card, personal loansMedium — unsecured = higher loss rates
Construction & LandLoans for new developmentHighest — speculative, cyclical

Deposit Mix Analysis

Deposit TypeCostStabilityWhy It Matters
Non-Interest Bearing (NIB)Zero — free fundingHigh (checking accounts)Most valuable — drives NIM higher
Interest-Bearing CheckingLowHighSticky deposits, low beta
Savings & Money MarketMediumMediumRate-sensitive, can move to higher yields
Time Deposits (CDs)HigherLocked until maturityExpensive funding, but contractual
Wholesale / BrokeredHighestLow — flight riskSign of funding stress if over-reliant

Interest Rate Sensitivity

Banks are fundamentally exposed to interest rate movements. An “asset-sensitive” bank benefits from rising rates (loans reprice faster than deposits). A “liability-sensitive” bank benefits from falling rates. Most US banks are moderately asset-sensitive. The key metric is deposit beta — how much deposit rates rise for every 100bp increase in the fed funds rate. Lower deposit beta = more NIM expansion when rates rise.

Analyst Tip
The single most important driver of bank earnings is the mix between non-interest bearing deposits and total deposits. Banks with 30%+ NIB deposits have a massive cost advantage. When rates rise, they earn more on assets while paying nothing on NIB — that’s the NIM expansion story. Watch the banking ratios to track this.

Key Takeaways

  • Net Interest Income is the primary revenue driver for most banks — it’s NIM × earning assets.
  • The bank balance sheet is the most important financial statement — loans and deposits drive everything.
  • Non-interest bearing deposits are the most valuable funding source — free money for the bank.
  • CRE and construction loans carry the highest risk; watch concentration limits.
  • Deposit beta and asset sensitivity determine how a bank performs in different Fed rate environments.

FAQ

Why is the balance sheet more important than the income statement for banks?

The balance sheet drives the income statement for banks. Loan and deposit volumes and their respective rates determine net interest income. Asset quality (NPLs) drives provisions. Capital ratios determine whether the bank can grow or must raise capital.

What is deposit beta?

Deposit beta measures how much a bank raises deposit rates relative to fed funds rate changes. A 40% beta means if rates rise 100bp, the bank raises deposit rates by 40bp. Lower beta = more profitable in a rising rate environment.

What is the difference between AFS and HTM securities?

Available-for-Sale (AFS) securities are marked to market, with unrealized gains/losses flowing through equity (AOCI). Held-to-Maturity (HTM) securities are carried at amortized cost. During 2022–2023, large unrealized losses on HTM portfolios became a significant risk factor (as seen with Silicon Valley Bank).

How do you model bank revenue?

Model NII by projecting average earning assets × NIM. Model non-interest income by line item (fees, trading, wealth management). The key assumptions are loan growth rate, NIM trajectory (driven by rate expectations), and fee income trends.

What is PPNR and why does it matter?

Pre-Provision Net Revenue is total revenue minus non-interest expense, before loan loss provisions. It measures the bank’s core earnings power before credit costs. Regulators use PPNR in stress tests to assess whether a bank can absorb losses and maintain capital.