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Walter W. Bettinger II, Charles Schwab

Industry Spotlight > Clearing and Custodial Firms

Schwab Beats Q1 Revenue Target After Tough Year

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What You Need to Know

  • Company executives said the pain of 2023 is yielding to a much rosier outlook ahead.
  • Net income and net new assets fell on a yearly basis but increased from the prior quarter.
  • The final 10% of TD Ameritrade advisors and clients are on track to move to Schwab in May.

Charles Schwab’s first-quarter revenue in 2024 topped analysts’ estimates amid a rising equity market and renewed client trading activity.

Total client assets reached a record $9.1 trillion, and while total net revenues of $4.74 billion declined by 7% versus the prior year, they were up 6% from the final quarter of 2023.

Schwab’s shares rose 3.5% in early trading Monday to $72.50 and are up 6% year to date.

During a call with investors and analysts, Schwab CEO Walt Bettinger said the quarter represented an important moment for the organization after a difficult year in 2023.

“As I sit here today, recognizing that risk remains, I can confidently say the green shoots of a turnaround in the environment are appearing,” Bettinger said. “We are seeing positive impacts across nearly every part of the firm. Combined with the timelessness of our strategy and the hard work of the team, my optimism for the future is strong.”

Bettinger also explained that the transition of the final 10% of TD Ameritrade advisors and clients to the Schwab platform is set to happen in May.

“It’s exciting because this last group is a unique and important group. They are our most active traders,” he said. “Many of them are power users of the thinkorswim trading platform.

“We expect the transition to be relatively smooth, because the client experience they will have after the fact will be essentially unchanged. They’ll have access to the trading platform they have historically utilized while also adding benefits and features of Schwab,” Bettinger added.

More Q1 Results

Schwab’s adjusted net income for the quarter totaled $1.4 billion, down about 17% from a year ago, according to an earnings presentation.

Net new assets, meanwhile, droped over 41% relative to the first three months of 2023 to $88.2 billion, although that level is up 33% from last year’s fourth quarter. In advisor services, net new assets were $53.3 billion in Q1, which is down 25% from a year ago but up 29% from the prior period.

Peter Crawford, the chief financial officer, said net interest margin expanded by 13 basis points quarter-over-quarter to 2.02%, primarily due to greater margin balance utilization and a decline in outstanding supplemental funding. Total supplemental funding decreased by $8.8 billion from the prior year-end to finish the quarter at $70.8 billion.

According to the earnings presentation, client transactional sweep cash balances ended March at $399.2 billion, with bank sweep deposits and broker-dealer free credit balances above levels observed immediately before the late-2023 seasonal build.

Asset management and administration fees increased by 21% over the prior year to a record $1.3 billion, while a mix shift in client trading activity compressed the average revenue per trade to $2.25, down 5% versus the final quarter of 2023.

Year-over-year expenses benefited from the effect of ongoing incremental cost savings, with total expenses declining by 2% as acquisition and integration-related costs, amortization of acquired intangibles and restructuring costs came in 40% lower at $140 million.

Exclusive of these items, adjusted total expenses grew by 1% relative to the prior year, reflecting higher volume-related costs, including elevated client engagement amid higher market valuations.

The executives noted that a 10% headcount reduction over the prior year has helped the firm manage its costs, and Crawford said he anticipates “flatish expense growth” in the year ahead.

Charles Schwab Bank’s capital ratios continued to build, with preliminary Tier 1 Leverage and adjusted Tier 1 Leverage reaching 10.4% and 5.7%, respectively.

Pictured: Walt Bettinger 


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