LAKE SUCCESS, N.Y., Dec. 9, 2015 /PRNewswire/ -- Nearly two-thirds of equity analysts (61 percent) who cover global capital markets institutions expect regulatory pressures on banks to intensify further through 2020, with potential new capital rules, informally known as "Basel IV," likely to have the greatest effect on their operations, according to a global survey of nearly 150 buy-side and sell-side analysts. The first-of-its-kind survey, developed by Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. (NYSE: BR), canvassed analysts across the U.S., Europe and Asia on their outlook for banks and their views on the industry's opportunities and challenges over the next five years.

According to the report, "Restructuring for Profitability," more than two-thirds of analysts (68 percent) believe regulation has made the financial system safer. But, they are also concerned about "regulatory creep" and its potential impacts on the industry. Although so-called "Basel IV" rules are still under discussion, nearly three-quarters of the analysts surveyed (72 percent) believe these rules - which are expected to standardize the risk-weighting of bank assets - will have the biggest regulatory impacts in the next five years. Among European analysts, 87 percent held this view. U.S. analysts surveyed are primarily concerned with the future effects of annual stress tests (cited by 77 percent).

New regulation will have the most impact on banks' trading operations through 2020, according to the study:



    --  More than three-quarters of analysts (78 percent) expect regulations to
        disrupt equity-trading business models over the next five years.
        Ninety-two percent expect FICC trading business models to be disrupted,
        including 28 percent of analysts who characterize these changes as
        "dramatic."
    --  While analysts predict revenue growth rates to increase across business
        lines, compared to the period between 2010 and 2014, trading growth is
        expected to recover but remain relatively muted. FICC, which experienced
        annualized declines of 8.5 percent over the previous four-year period,
        is expected to grow at 0.2 percent, while annual equity trading growth
        is estimated at 2.8 percent, versus 1.7 percent previously.

"Regulation has imposed tougher capital rules on banks, creating pressure on traditional models," said Broadridge Senior Vice President of Strategy Vijay Mayadas, who oversaw the study. "This means that banks will need to explore more creative ways to realign their operations and employ more transformative measures to reduce costs."

Favoring Cost Reduction, Restructuring

Analysts generally favor bank responses focused on cost reduction - above efforts in balance-sheet management and top-line growth - or restructuring. More than half believe banks over the past five years were not aggressive enough at re-engineering business processes (55 percent) and investing in new technology (54 percent) to improve efficiencies. More than half (55 percent) sees back-office technology as having high potential to increase efficiency and reduce costs over the next five years, with another 30 percent citing some potential.

A key challenge facing these institutions is how to streamline the technology and operations that enable equities and fixed income trading. Commenting in the report, Brad Hintz, a top-ranked banking analyst for more than a decade and now adjunct professor at New York University's Stern School of Business who advised on the study, said, "Wall Street has cut back in each silo but done very little re-engineering across the business."

Three-Speed Industry Transformation

The survey spotlights major differences in how analysts across the U.S., Europe and Asia foresee the industry evolving over the next five years:



    --  U.S. analysts are the most positive about the outlook for global banks
        and had the most upbeat predictions for revenue growth across nearly all
        lines of business. Similarly, they expect return-on-equity to double
        from 2014 levels over the next five years, essentially meeting the cost
        of capital. European and Asian analysts also expect banks' returns to
        increase substantially, but still fall short of average equity capital
        costs.

    --  European analysts advocate most strongly for restructuring and cost
        reduction. More than half (58 percent) cited "significant opportunity"
        in rationalizing and disposing business units to improve performance,
        compared to 38 percent of U.S. analysts and 40 percent of Asia analysts.
        Forty-five percent of European analysts believe cost controls will have
        the greatest impact on bank valuations over the next five years--above
        balance-sheet management or growth--compared to 39 percent of U.S.
        analysts and 28 percent of Asia analysts.
    --  Asian analysts hold the strongest views on regulatory changes. Nearly
        half (49 percent) believe that new regulations since the 2008 financial
        crisis have not notably improved the stability of the financial system,
        compared with 22 percent of U.S. analysts. They were nearly twice as
        likely as U.S. analysts (75 percent vs. 39 percent) to predict
        regulatory pressures on global securities firms will increase--rather
        than remain the same or decrease--over the next five years.

"These trans-oceanic differences reflect a three-speed industry transformation," added Mayadas. "Put simply, U.S. banks have adapted more quickly to the post-crisis environment. Many of the most persistent cost challenges are still common across regions, but rulemaking will weigh more heavily on Europe and Asia in the years to come."

Methodology
The report is based on qualitative interviews with top-ranking analysts and a global survey of 147 buy-side and sell-side analysts (56 percent and 44 percent, respectively). Broadridge, Brad Hintz, adjunct professor of finance at New York University's Stern School of Business, Institutional Investor Custom Research Group (IIRG), and various capital markets experts collaborated in the design of the survey and analysis of results. IIRG fielded the survey online between June and September 2015. Respondents included analysts in North America (33 percent), Europe (29 percent), Asia (30 percent) and other geographies (7 percent). The sample consisted of buy-side voters and sell-side nominees from II's annual rankings; it represents 10 to 15 percent of the overall population, according to IIRG.

About Broadridge
Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. (NYSE: BR) is the leading provider of investor communications and technology-driven solutions for broker-dealers, banks, mutual funds and corporate issuers globally. Broadridge's investor communications, securities processing and managed services solutions help clients reduce their capital investments in operations infrastructure, allowing them to increase their focus on core business activities. With over 50 years of experience, Broadridge's infrastructure underpins proxy voting services for over 90% of public companies and mutual funds in North America, and processes on average $5 trillion in equity and fixed income trades per day. Broadridge employs approximately 7,400 full-time associates in 14 countries. For more information about Broadridge, please visit www.broadridge.com.



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