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Wells And Fargo Bank

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While the company continues to derive more than half its revenues from interest income (about $26 billion), its activities are not limited to collecting deposits and lending money. Wells Fargo engages in other businesses such as brokerage services, asset management, and investment banking. The company also makes venture capital investments.



Over the last ten years, Wells Fargo has averaged a 1.57% return on assets and an 18.19% return on equity.

Location

Wells Fargo is closely associated with California in the minds of most investors. The company now operates in 23 different states. However, the concentration in California remains.

Mortgage lending in California accounts for approximately 14% of Wells Fargo's total loan portfolio. Commercial real estate loans in California account for another 5% of the company's total loans. No other single state accounts for a similarly sized portion of total loans. In fact, neither mortgage lending nor commercial real estate lending in any other state accounts for more than 2% of Wells Fargo's total loans.

Cross-Selling

Wells Fargo's focus on cross-selling is well known. The company has a stated goal of doubling the number of products the average consumer and business customer has with Wells Fargo to eight products per customer (from the current four products per customer).

Cross-selling increases customer stickiness. It also helps increase profitability by decreasing expenses relative to revenues. The need for a large physical footprint is reduced - as is the need for a large number of bankers. Instead, the existing infrastructure is able to provide additional revenue from the same customers.

Wells Fargo's Chairman and CEO, Richard Kovacevich, explains the importance of the company's cross-selling in the "Vision and Values" section of the corporate website:

"Cross-selling - or what we call "needs-based" selling - is our most important strategy. Why? Because it is an "increasing returns" business model. It's like the "network effect" of e-commerce. It multiplies opportunities geometrically. The more you sell customers the more you know about them. The more you know about them the easier it is to sell them more products. The more products customers have with you the better value they receive and the more loyal they are. The longer they stay with you the more opportunities you have to meet even more of their financial needs. The more you sell them the higher the profit because the added cost of selling another product to an existing customer is often only about ten percent of the cost of selling that same product to a new customer. This gives us-as an aggregator - a significant cost advantage over one product or one channel companies. Cross-selling re-invents how financial services are aggregated and sold to customers - just like other aggregators such as Wal-Mart (general merchandise), Home Depot (home improvement products) and Staples (office supplies)."

Mr. Kovacevich's enthusiasm for the cross-selling model is well justified. It is difficult to quantify the importance of meeting all the varied needs of your customers, because you can not measure the opportunities you missed. However, it is obvious that reducing each customer's interest in considering a competitor's services will greatly increase long-term profitability for any company engaged in any line of business - not just for a bank.

Later, in the same website section, Mr. Kovacevich addresses the importance of customer stickiness:

"(Cross-selling) is our most important customer-related sales metric. We want to earn 100 percent of our customers' business. The more products customers have with Wells Fargo the better deal they get, the more loyal they are, and the longer they stay with the company, improving retention. Eighty percent of our revenue growth comes from selling more products to existing customers."

This focus on retention is an important part of a long-term plan to maintain Wells Fargo's above-average returns on assets and equity. Extraordinary profitability comes from differentiating your product or service from those of your competitors. Increasing customer stickiness and reducing "comparison shopping" is a key part of maintaining extraordinary profitability.

Some businesses are blessed with enviable economics because of their product's natural prominence in the minds of their customers. Most businesses are obsessed with market share. But, how many really think about "mind share"? Obviously, a product like Coke (KO), Hershey (HSY), or Snickers is going to have a positive association in the minds of consumers.

For many people, these products will also have a prominent place in each customer's mind (relative to other products and services on which money can be spent). A few other businesses have a healthy mind share without the positive association; GEICO is the most obvious example. The company's brand conjures up nothing but the words "auto insurance". Of course, that's all the GEICO brand has to do.

So, what does all this have to do with Wells Fargo? Mind share isn't just the result of exposure to advertising. In fact, in most cases, exposure to advertising can not duplicate the kind of results that a direct, differentiated experience creates. Entertainment properties are by far the leaders in mind share. People who saw and loved Star Wars remember the film. In fact, they don't just remember the film, they actually file it away (or, more precisely, cross reference it) in countless ways within their mind.

The evidence for this particular example is abundant. There are countless references to Star Wars in other media. The name, the music, the opening text and countless other elements are immediately recognizable. Even the films Star Wars fans hated made more money than almost any other movies in the history of cinema - and this was decades after the original came out. So, obviously Star Wars has the kind of lasting mind share any business should aspire to if it hopes to continuously earn extraordinary profits.

Unfortunately, most businesses, however well run, can not attain this kind of mind share. The products and services they provide can never be as differentiated and memorable as a motion picture. Just as importantly, the positive associations will not be present, simply because the product or service is not inherently exciting, entertaining, or pleasant. This is clearly the case in financial services.

So, what can a financial services company do to improve its mind share? The most obvious tactic is simply to "wow" its customers. In fact, Wells Fargo's CEO discusses this particular option in the "Vision and Values" section of the company's website:

"We have to 'wow!' them. We know what that feels like because we're all customers. We go to the cleaners, the grocery store, a restaurant or whatever, and we find a situation where we're 'wowed!' We walk out and we say, those people really listened to me and helped me get what I need. All of us hear stories about customers, say, who pick a certain line at the supermarket because they know the person who bags the groceries connects with customers - smiles, greets regular customers by name, asks how their families are doing. When a personal banker helps a customer in one of our stores, or when a customer gets help from one of our phone bankers or does transactions on wellsfargo.com we want them to say, 'That was great. I can't wait to tell someone.'"

Another option worth pursuing is widening the associations present in the customer's mind. Financial services is a business where associations tend to be more conscious, categorized, and hierarchical than the associations formed in more heavily branded businesses. Put simply, the (potential) customer usually thinks of a "set" before thinking of an "element" within that set. Like many mental associations, the information can be returned in either direction. For example, the customer may normally think "banks" and then think "Wells Fargo", but will also be able to return the word "bank" if prompted by the name "Wells Fargo". This categorization is important, because it provides (limited) permission for Wells Fargo to expand its mind share horizontally (across service categories).

In other words, providing a diverse range of financial services doesn't just make sense from the provider's perspective, it also makes sense from the user's perspective, because the user of financial services has already grouped deposits, borrowing, credit cards, insurance, brokerage services, asset management, etc. together in a very loose way within his mind. As a result of this mental network, one positive experience with Wells Fargo will greatly affect a customer's desire to pay for an additional service, even if the two services are not really all that similar.

The three key elements here are: a broader definition of what Wells Fargo is (a place that does "money things", not just a bank), a positive experience, and some sense of trust that the quality of service will be consistent. The last requirement is the easiest to meet, because it's natural for a customer to assume that the positive experience was not a fluke, much the way a diner assumes the good meal he had at a particular restaurant was not caused by his picking the best offering from the menu. The diner usually assumes the overall quality of the restaurant's various entrees is superior. Likewise, a good experience with one of Wells Fargo's products or services will likely rub off on its other offerings.

Valuation

Shares of Wells Fargo currently yield just over 3%. The stock trades at a price-to-book ratio of just under 2.75 and a price-to-earnings ratio of less than 15.

Conclusion

Wells Fargo's CEO makes the case that his company's P/E is simply too low. Wells Fargo has a solid history of strong growth and profitability. So, why should it be valued similarly to most other banks? Shouldn't it be awarded a multiple more in line with a growth company?

There's actually some merit to this argument. Wells Fargo is unusually well positioned for a bank. Often, those banks that seem certain to earn very high returns on assets and equity for many years to come are poorly positioned for future growth. These banks are often smaller than their competitors and focused on a specific geographic niche. Any acquisitions would dilute the exceptional profitability of the bank's niche.

Of course, there are also many consolidators in the banking industry. Unfortunately, many of these banks do not have a history of earning the kind of returns on assets and equity that Wells Fargo has achieved. Even more importantly, there is little differentiation between these titans of the banking industry and their national competitors. Therefore, their moats are highly suspect.

Wells Fargo is a different kind of bank. It has a history of extraordinary growth and profitability. There are two obvious opportunities for future growth: geographic expansion and cross-selling. Of these two opportunities, it's clear I'm more enamored with the latter. An eastward push is not necessary, and certainly not via an ill-advised acquisition.

There is a lot of value in the Wells Fargo franchise and there is plenty of room within that franchise for future growth. That's one of the great advantages of the financial services industry. With the right model, limits to growth are almost non-existent. In other highly-profitable industries, there is often nowhere to reinvest new capital at a similar rate of return.

If Wells Fargo is a growth stock, it is a peculiar sort of growth stock. Maybe that is what attracted Buffett to the company in the first place. Here is a business with a strong franchise that can grow for many years to come. Perhaps most importantly, it is a growth business that frequently trades in the market at value like multiples, simply because it's a bank.

At the current market price, Wells Fargo is the sort of investment you make once and forget. The valuation is not so cheap as to promise a good return if the business falters. But, the business is not so suspect as to require the margin of safety be provided by a low P/E ratio. Sometimes, near certain growth is the margin of safety.
Wells And Fargo Bank
WELLS FARGO

Wells Fargo is one of the United States' most versatile mortgage lenders. They offer a range of refinancing products, mortgage programs, types of mortgages and arrangements for borrowers of all stripes and colors.

Home Buying Tools

The Wells Fargo website (http://www.wellsfargo.com/mortgage) is flush with a full guide on the home ownership process - from finding a home to applying for a mortgage, choosing financing and even closing the deal.

For the first-time home buyer or the seasoned real estate pro, their tools are invaluable. Registrants can track home selling prices by email, pick a loan based on personal criteria, calculate the benefits of renting versus buying, and even get pre-approved.

Special Financing Programs

As a versatile and flexible lender, Wells Fargo offers a number of specialty financing programs. They offer special programs for borrowers with less than perfect credit, people building their own homes, military personnel and veterans, and even reverse mortgage programs. They even offer special rates and consideration for Wells Fargo customers.

Better Payment Plan Options

Tired of having your mortgage payment always coming out two days before your pay check gets deposited? With Wells Fargo, you can set up a preferred and personalized payment schedule that makes your payments match your payday schedule.

Personal Support

With hundreds of branch locations, all staffed with local mortgage experts, you're guaranteed to get ongoing, personalized, quality customer support. That kind of mortgage counseling and personal service isn't easy to come by.

Not only do they provide ongoing support, but their hours are open until 11pm CT during the week and all-day Saturday.

Renovation and Construction Financing

Along some other lenders, Wells Fargo does offer additional financing for home construction and planned renovations on new properties. Alongside documentation of your project plan, budget, and estimated completed dates will be your loan application for the property.

CHASE MORTGAGE

Chase Bank and its mortgage division are one of the largest mortgage lenders in the United States. By offering home buyer's guides, loan calculators, and fast closings, they've attracted a lot more customers over the past decade.

Reduced Closing Costs

Chase Mortgage offers what it calls its "Closing Cost Advantage." By not charging commitment fees, appraisal fees, underwriting fees, flood certification fees, credit report fees or origination fees, they promise to save you as much as $200.

Though helpful, however, you must remember there will still be fees and costs associated with your mortgage, including a $395 application fee.

Fast Closing Guarantee

Chase Mortgage promises its customers it will close their house sale on time or they'll give you $300. Unfortunately, this program - Purchase Promise - is only available on purchase mortgages and not for refinancing loans.

Also, to qualify for the Purchase Promise you need to submit a full loan application with documentation at least 30 days prior to your closing date. You then must meet the underwriting conditions of your loan as quickly as possible.

Finally, you need to sign and date the Purchase Promise form. While the promise is there, actually getting the $300 guarantee is harder than it looks.

Options for Poor Credit

Chase Mortgage offers a number of loans for a variety of home buyers, including those with less-than-perfect credit. According to Chase, if you can prove the financial problem is in the past and behind you, they're willing to work with you to find the right home loan.

However, that home loan will cost you in interest rate points and closing costs, so be prepared to get a rate that's a few points higher than the mortgage rate advertised in the paper.

Home Connect Service from Chase

Home Connect is a service offered by Chase that's designed to make the house selling and buying process a whole lot easier. Their Home Connect service provides homeowners with mortgage prequalification and early financing, a personal assistant, real estate expert guidance, recommendations for real estate professionals, guided service and even cash-back when you buy or sell your home.

The service is free to everyone, while Chase offers bonuses of between $175 and $2500 when you sell your home through the Home Connect service.

Remember, when you decide to put your business with a mortgage lender, you're basically saying that you're ready to be this lender's customer for the next 30 years.

Whether you wind up needing an extra day on a payment, a break on a refinancing deal, or simply quality customer service, is that 30-year relationship really something you want to jeopardize by opting for a mortgage company that doesn't offer renovation financing, personal support, extended hours, flexible payment plans, varied financing and customized tools?
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About Author
Both Geoff Gannon & Ben Horne are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Geoff Gannon has sinced written about articles on various topics from Computers and The Internet, Home Management and Finances. Geoff Gannon writes a daily value investing blog and produces a twice weekly (half hour) value investing podcast at . Geoff Gannon's top article generates over 4400 views. to your Favourites.

Ben Horne has sinced written about articles on various topics from Real Estate, Mortgage and Real Estate. For information on mortgages, please see , a popular site providing mortgage preparation ideas, such as the. Ben Horne's top article generates over 3600 views. to your Favourites.
Adult Victims Of Child Abuse
For Peggy herself, its an ongoing process. Im on the road to recovery, she says. Its a long road. But Im hopeful Ill make it with the help of family and friends.
 
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