Overdraft settlement and fee reductions take toll on Regions

Lower overdraft fee income and a multimillion-dollar overdraft-related regulatory settlement dampened third-quarter profits at Regions Financial.

Professional, legal and regulatory expenses were $199 million in the quarter, more than nine times larger than a year earlier. The cost increase stemmed primarily from the Birmingham, Alabama, company's settlement last month of Consumer Financial Protection Bureau charges that it imposed illegal overdraft fees on consumers.

A few months earlier, Regions updated its service charge policies to reduce certain overdraft fees and eliminate nonsufficient funds charges. Those changes, as well as a decline in mortgage revenues, dragged noninterest income down 6.8% to $605 million, executives at the $158 billion-asset company said during a call with analysts Friday.

Regions Bank
Regions Financial expects to receive a $50 million insurance payment in the fourth quarter to offset part of the cost of a recent settlement with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Gary Tramontina

Those factors and others drove down Regions' third-quarter net income by 34% year over year to $429 million. 

Over the past year, many banks have reined in their overdraft fee policies after facing public and regulatory criticism that some charges unfairly penalized customers. Overdraft fees averaged $29.80, according to research conducted this summer by Bankrate.com, which found an 11% decline in penalty costs from last year.

On the conference call, Regions executives raised their projections for full-year service charges — which include overdraft fee income — to $630 million from an earlier estimate of $600 million. However, they maintained their projection of $550 million for 2023.

In September, the CFPB ordered Regions to pay a $50 million civil money penalty and at least $141 million in customer refunds after the company charged "authorized-positive fees" on consumer accounts. Regions' second overdraft-related penalty in seven years was tied to fee charges on ATM withdrawals and debit card purchases when there was enough money in an account to complete a transaction but insufficient funds when the transaction was posted.

Regions did not admit to any wrongdoing. It responded to the regulatory penalty last month in a statement that said the company "cooperated with the investigation" but disagreed "with the CFPB's characterizations."

The company expects to receive a $50 million insurance payment in the fourth quarter to offset part of the cost of the settlement, Chief Financial Officer David Turner said on the call.

Since last year, banks have sharply reduced what they charge when consumers spend more money than they have, according to new research. Monthly maintenance charges and fees for using out-of-network ATMs have remained much more stable.

August 31

Meanwhile, Regions also pointed to its addition of $20 million in loan-loss reserves to cover looming costs associated with Hurricane Ian's damage to the Gulf Coast in September as another factor that weighed on third-quarter earnings.

Net interest income of $1.3 billion was 30.8% larger than in the same period last year, driven by rising interest rates, loan growth and lower deposit costs. Net interest margin expanded 77 basis points to 3.53% during the same period.

Regions' total loan portfolio grew 13.6% to $94.7 billion, with similar growth in both commercial and consumer lending.

Deposits rose 2.7% year over year to $135.5 billion but declined 2.9% since midyear. The company attributed the latter figure to a return of pre-pandemic seasonal patterns following two years of government stimulus-boosted higher savings rates.

Regions' revenue rose 15.7% from the third quarter of last year to $1.9 billion. Its earnings per share of 43 cents fell short of the 59-cent average of estimates from analysts surveyed by FactSet Research Systems.

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