The financial crisis that began in 2007 exposed many flaws in modern financial practice and highlighted much need for change. Key among those needs is a way of understanding how and why banks fail or succeed. Integrated Bank Analysis and Valuation provides readers with a practical guide to the ROIC for Banks methodology - one of the few ways of both understanding what makes a bank tick and getting a fundamentally robust indication as to how much a bank is worth. It provides all the necessary tools for use in the real environment of investment banking to analyse banks results, evaluate strategic options and assess regulatory changes - with an eye towards whether a bank is creating or destroying value. Up-to-date case studies of ten of the world's largest banks show how integrated ROIC analysis and valuation works in practice, and the accompanying website features ROIC spreadsheets for each of these banks, so that each step of analysis and valuation can be explored in detail. Written by a leading banks analyst, Integrated Bank Analysis and Valuation: A Practical Guide to the ROIC Methodology translates the complexity of banks into a simpler, clearer language - that can be applied by analysts, regulators and students in practice.
PART I: INTRODUCTION PART II: OTHER APPROACHES TO BANK ANALYSIS AND VALUATION 1. Operating Performance Ratios 2. Regulatory Ratios 3. Bank Valuation Measures 4. Example of Analysis and Valuation in Practice - HSBC PART III: ROIC FOR BANKS METHODOLOGY 5. Some Guiding Principles 6. ROIC Analysis - A Step-by-Step Guide 7. Calculating Invested Capital 8. Calculating Return on Invested Capital (ROIC) 9. Key Processes and Tools for ROIC Analysis 10. Linking ROIC Analysis to Valuation 11. ROIC Valuation - Calculating Value-Added Margin 12. Aggregative Value Creation/Destruction 13 Deriving a Fundamental ROIC Valuation 14. Deriving Implied Market Assumptions of Value Creation/Destruction 15. Forecasting with ROIC 16. Integrating Forecasts with Valuation. PART IV: OTHER CASE STUDIES 17. Bank of China 18. Barclays 19. Citigroup 20. Credit Suisse 21. Deutsche Bank 22. JP Morgan 23. Lloyds 24. RBS 25. Standard Chartered