e425
Filed by M&T Bank Corporation
Pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act of 1933
And deemed filed pursuant to Rule 14a-12
Of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Subject Company: Wilmington Trust Corporation
(Commission File No. 1-14659)
The following document is filed herewith pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act of 1933:
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Transcript of M&T Bank Corporation presentation at the Keefe, Bruyette & Woods 2011 Bank
Conference in Boston, Massachusetts on March 2, 2011. |
This filing contains forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities
Litigation Reform Act giving the Companys expectations or predictions of future financial or
business performance or conditions. Forward-looking statements are typically identified by words
such as believe, expect, anticipate, intend, target, estimate, continue, positions,
prospects or potential, by future conditional verbs such as will, would, should, could
or may, or by variations of such words or by similar expressions. These forward-looking
statements are subject to numerous assumptions, risks and uncertainties which change over time.
Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made and we assume no duty to update
forward-looking statements.
In addition to factors previously disclosed in M&Ts and Wilmington Trusts reports filed with
the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) and those identified elsewhere in this
presentation, the following factors among others, could cause actual results to differ materially
from forward-looking statements or historical performance: ability to obtain regulatory approvals
and meet other closing conditions to the merger, including approval by Wilmington Trust
stockholders, on the expected terms and schedule; delay in closing the merger; difficulties and
delays in integrating the M&T and Wilmington Trust businesses or fully realizing cost savings and
other benefits; business disruption following the merger; changes in asset quality and credit
risk; the inability to sustain revenue and earnings growth; changes in interest rates and capital
markets; inflation; customer acceptance of M&T products and services; customer borrowing,
repayment, investment and deposit practices; customer disintermediation; the introduction,
withdrawal, success and timing of business initiatives; competitive conditions; the inability to
realize cost savings or revenues or to implement integration plans and other consequences
associated with mergers, acquisitions and divestitures; economic conditions; and the impact, extent
and timing of technological changes, capital management activities, and other actions of the
Federal Reserve Board and legislative and regulatory actions and reforms, including those
associated with the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.
In connection with the proposed merger, M&T has filed with the SEC a Registration Statement on
Form S-4 that includes a Proxy Statement of Wilmington Trust and a Prospectus of M&T, and
Wilmington Trust mailed the definitive Proxy Statement/Prospectus to its stockholders on or about
February 14, 2011. Each of M&T and Wilmington Trust may file other relevant documents concerning
the proposed transaction. INVESTORS ARE URGED TO READ THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT AND THE
DEFINITIVE PROXY STATEMENT/PROSPECTUS REGARDING THE MERGER AND ANY OTHER RELEVANT DOCUMENTS FILED
WITH THE SEC, AS WELL AS ANY AMENDMENTS OR SUPPLEMENTS TO THOSE DOCUMENTS, BECAUSE THEY WILL
CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION.
Investors can obtain a free copy of the definitive Proxy Statement/Prospectus, as well as
other filings containing information about M&T and Wilmington Trust at the SECs Internet site
(http://www.sec.gov). You can also obtain these documents, free of charge, at http://www.mtb.com
under the tab About Us and then under the heading Investor Relations and then under SEC
Filings. Copies of the Proxy Statement/Prospectus and the SEC
filings that will be incorporated by reference in the Proxy Statement/Prospectus can also be
obtained, free of charge, by directing a request to Investor Relations, One M&T Plaza, Buffalo, New
York 14203, (716) 842-5138.
M&T and Wilmington Trust and their respective directors and executive officers may be deemed
to be participants in the solicitation of proxies from the stockholders of Wilmington Trust in
connection with the proposed merger. Information about the directors and executive officers of M&T
is set forth in the proxy statement for M&Ts 2010 annual meeting of stockholders, as filed with
the SEC on a Schedule 14A on March 5, 2010. Information about the directors and executive officers
of Wilmington Trust is set forth in Wilmington Trusts Form 10-K for the year ended December 31,
2010, as filed with the SEC on a Schedule 14A on March 1, 2011. Additional information regarding
the interests of those persons and other persons who may be deemed participants in the transaction
may be obtained by reading the definitive Proxy Statement/Prospectus and other relevant materials
filed with the SEC. You may obtain free copies of these documents as described in the preceding
paragraph.
TRANSCRIPT
Corporate Participants
René Jones
M&T Bank Corporation CFO
Don MacLeod
M&T Bank Corporation IR
Presentation
KBW Bank Analyst Matthew Clark
M&T doesnt need much of an introduction, I dont believe. I think based on their performance that
they can easily be considered one of the darlings in the industry.
So wed like to welcome M&T, a name that, again, has done very well throughout the cycle
maintained the dividend, put up some good numbers; has TARP but is not in a rush to repay it try
to mitigate the dilution from any potential to capital raise, but run with less capital, make more
money I think is the mentality. And I think with the pending acquisition of Wilmington Trust,
its going to easily could easily go down as one of the best, well-priced deals this cycle.
With that, let me thank and turn it over to CFO René Jones. And also with us today head of IR,
Don MacLeod.
René Jones - M&T Bank Corporation CFO
Good morning, everybody. Thanks, Matt. Its nice to be here at the KBW Conference. I havent been
at a KBW Conference in, I think, a couple cycles. But its important to us. Because back when I
joined the Bank in 1992, I went to the head of IR and asked who covered us. And they said well,
its not too many people, these three guys. I cant even remember the other two. But one of them
was KBW. And they also did a number of things for us, when they were much smaller and when we were
much smaller. So its nice to be back here. Now we have no shortage of coverage.
What Im going to talk about before I get started, Ill sort of just quickly direct your
attention to the forward-looking disclaimer. As we always say, probably the most important thing
here is we talk about operating earnings and operating earnings per share. And the reason we do
that is to give you some insight into the impact on our financials in terms of mostly the impact
actually, all of the impact from the previous acquisitions that weve done. Weve had that method
in place since 1998. We dont change it. But we think it sort of helps you understand the numbers.
I mention that because under SEC guidelines in the back if you want to understand the
reconciliation between GAAP and operating, weve included that in the Appendix.
So just a couple of slides on who we are. At some point, somebody tagged us as a super-community
bank; we thought that was a nice phrase. And so, we kind of grabbed onto it, in a sense. Because it
really reminded us of who we are. And in essence, what our approach is is to try to take a very
simple approach to banking.
First and foremost, we like to call ourselves individuals who provide banking services in the
communities that we live and work. And what we mean by that is if you come on Tuesdays to
Buffalo, theres a Management Committee. Its headed by Bob Wilmers, our Chairman, and there are 12
to 14 people that sit around the table. And all of those individuals live in the major communities
that we bank. So New York City, a number of people from Baltimore, Rochester and Pennsylvania.
And we think that really makes a difference. Because at the end of the day, we try to focus our
lending on having a really good understanding of our customers. And thats sort of our second point
is that the way I would put it is we have a certain appetite for risk. We all manage risk in
the banking industry. Ours is slightly less of an appetite for risk. To get to that space, we try
to know the people we lend to. So being in the communities is an important part.
In terms of acquisitions weve got a long history of doing them. We think that we do them
sparingly and when the time is right. Our focus is not being big, but being big in the communities
that we service that we choose to actually operate in.
And then, all of that it really comes down to employees. Whether it be doing well in the
community, knowing credits, knowing customers; or having a team that can quickly do an integration
your employees is what matters most. And if you look at the tenure, whether it be our Management
Committee, which averages over 20 years at M&T; our Senior Management Group, which is probably
around 18 years of service; or our overall employee base, which is just about 11 almost 11,
which is twice the industry average having long-tenured employees is sort of key to our success.
Finally, youll see heres our footprint. Just wanted to give you some sense of what that looks
like. How we run it is by breaking it into 15 community banking regions, where we have a regional
president whos head of each of those areas. And in that process, we service the number of
customers, both retail and commercial, that you see here.
So what I wanted to do is just sort of give you some sense quickly about a summary of how we see
the year, and then get into a quick snapshot of we often get asked the question youve done
okay through the cycle, and so what does the normalized earnings look like? We dont do any
forecasting, but I can tell you how I think about things. And maybe you can get some sense of how
we feel about where we stand, and more importantly, what we probably will look to focus on as we
move forward.
Were fairly pleased with our results. Weve got a lot of work to do still. But our operating
earnings per share of $5.69 was almost double that of 2009, and it exceeded the level of our
dividend by more than two times, which allowed us to build capital during the course of the year.
Our tangible common equity grew about 18%. I think the number was $33.26, at the end of the year,
per share. And despite the fact that we grew our capital, our tangible ratio, by about 100 points;
with that higher level, we still were able to increase our return on tangible common equity up to
about 19. Youll see in a minute weve been 29.5, because we dont really focus on size; were
very focused on doing quality business and focused on returns rather than size.
So weve done pretty well this year. But as we see it, we still have a ways to go.
In sort of understanding our performance, and maybe how we think about where were going, weve got
this slide which weve used for some time; we changed it a little bit. But whats nice about it is
that it goes back five years, and it gives you some sense of where we were when everything was rosy
at the beginning of 2006 or, at least, we all thought it was very rosy.
First on the list you see our net interest margin. And we often were asked we were in a cycle
of downward margin we were often asked about how we thought about margin. And our thought
process was that it was a lot of disintermediation. And if something ever happened to the capital
markets, maybe wed get wider margins. And of course, as you can kind of see, now that weve been a
couple of years through the storm you can see that at 3.84,
our net interest margin is about as high as its been probably since 2004, which I would
characterize as just an effect of the sort of re-intermediation of the markets we have. Were a
healthy institution, and so we have quite a bit of I guess I would call it pricing power
relative to where we were before, when the capital markets were still fully functioning and at
their height in 2009.
Look at the pretax, pre-provision earnings its higher than 2006. The absolute dollar amount
doesnt matter, and Ill show you that in a minute. But I just want you to look at that. Over time,
weve been able to sort of hold pretty steady over the years. And we ended up in 2010 at a higher
number.
Youll see our charge-off and credit quality metrics, our reserve to loans on a legacy basis.
Remember, what we do is we remove the acquired loans because theyre marked to fair value, and we
set them aside. And then, this is our allowance relative to the loans that are allowed to have
reserve. And its about as high as its been any time in that cycle.
Were slowly building our reserve coverage of net charge-offs. So were at 2.6 years, essentially.
And youll see that, relative to the industry, headed back in, I think, the right direction.
Im going to skip over net operating returns for a minute and come back to that. And then, down at
the bottom you see our capital. And if you look at the capital story and we think the only
measure thats really important is the common equity to assets, or tangible common equity. We
started off at 5.84.
And that year, I think we bought the upstate New York branches from Citibank. And then in 2007, we
did an acquisition of Partners Trust and brought our capital ratios down. We then in 2009, we
did Partners, and brought us down to about 4.5. And that year, we also did an FDIC-assisted deal in
Bradford. This past year, we did an FDIC-assisted deal in K Bank. We did a smaller thing where we
helped out the FDIC.
And then, as you know, we announced Wilmington Trust on November 1st. And what we said is that by
the time we get done with that, our capital ratios will look similar to what they looked like
before we announced the transaction.
So what weve been doing through the cycle is weve kind of kept our capital ratios relatively
steady all the way through. Weve generated a fair amount of capital over time, and weve sort of
put that back into the institution, into the business, over time.
And what you see is if you, for a minute, look at the bottom, youll see what youre familiar
with, which is our trend in EPS, GAAP EPS, in the bottom. Cash EPS is in the light green line. And
you kind of see that dip that were down we ended the year in operating basis at 5.84.
So the questions we tend to get are how are you doing, and what do you think the likelihood is
youll get back to normal earnings, and what is normal earnings? I dont know the answer. But what
I do know is that when you step back and look at the top line, which is our earnings before
provision and before taxes, were sort of at a relatively high point as weve gone into the cycle.
Ill say this right now anybody who tells you you can move away credit from a bank I dont
know if I give them too much credibility. So Im going to come back to credit in a minute.
But if you look at that for a minute, what you see is we didnt lose any businesses through the
cycle. So there was nothing that we really got into that was a heavy part of our earnings engine
thats ending up being a space that we cant continue to operate in. And thats primarily because
we bank communities, so we do a little bit of whatever the community needs, and we have a little
bit of our business and almost everything.
If you look at that period between 2006 and the 12.29 that you see in 2010 what you see from
that is those hits you can sort of add up. So those non-provision hits they would be for
example, at the end of 2007, we were lucky enough to have a CDO that we wrote down to zero $127
million hit. Good news is we dont have any more of those. We had Freddie and Fannie about $158
million of Freddie and Fannie securities. Dont have those anymore; those are down to zero.
And theres a whole host of other things. If you look in our financials, in our K that just came
out, and you look at the OTTI line, youll see that Freddie and Fannie. And youll see also several
of our private-label mortgage-backed securities charges that were taken.
So the good news from all that is that as weve taken those charges and gone into the cycle, weve
sort of de-risked a bit, and weve learned a bit. But the core business is humming along pretty
nicely.
And if you look at the end the last thing Ill say is that 2010 number when you get our
annual message, we talk about the burden of regulation that weve seen and what its cost us. So I
wont sort of preview that now, but itll be out in a week or so. That includes all the higher FDIC
costs, that includes the hits weve taken on the NSF and so forth. So weve been able to weather
the storm pretty well.
How do we do it? Again, we never have focused on revenue growth; we focus on revenue growth per
share. And what that means is that if we cant take our capital and deploy it in a place that seems
to make sense if the returns arent there, we tend to give that back to our shareholders. And you
see, over this 10- or 11-year period, the only time that on that measure we were equal to the
industry was in 2005 and 2006. And quite frankly, if you look at the absolute revenue growth, we
probably were well below the industry. We just decided that what we needed to do is not book loans
because things were below our returns. And we return that capital.
So a lot of people talk about us in terms of capital and our levels that we have today, post the
storm. But the way we think about capital is we use it as a source of discipline. So if we werent
booking loans when the average C&I loan that you could get out there was priced at LIBOR plus 95,
that made our returns higher. So when the storm hit, we had less problems and we had more cushion
to deal with it. And that capital that we distributed out to the shareholders went to other parts
of the industry. So capitals not just about the level that you have; its about how you use it in
your business and what kind of a balance sheet that you structure.
If you look underneath revenue growth obviously, the biggest engine that we have is our balance
sheet. And weve fared pretty well. Again, as I mentioned, the capital markets being shut down.
Were at a margin today that is much higher than weve been for several years. Weve talked about
that being flat as we go out into the current year little bit of uncertainty there. But I think
thats probably a good case. But whats more important to us is that I cant tell you exactly
what our earnings will be in the future; our job is to try to be the best bank stock investment
that you guys could look at.
So today, we have this 40-point advantage, as we go into 2011. And if you look back in time, thats
a larger advantage than weve had relative to the peer industry or the large regional banks for
some time. And its a big part of how weve done so well.
So now I come back to credit. And if I bring that back into the picture Ive got just a couple
of slides. The thing to take away from the left is that while in the tails, or when things [got]
really bad in the early 90s and in through this cycle, we separated from the pack pretty much,
our customers default at the same rate as everybody else. We kind of mirror the line all the way
through most of the years except in the extreme.
When you look on the right we talk about this a lot. We make loans to the same people everybody
else does, but we tend to focus on a lot of security in our lending. So if its in commercial real
estate, were very focused on loan-to-values being relatively conservative. If its for C&I
lending, we make sure that were getting a fair amount of security, and were lending to sort of
mature businesses that have a lot of resources, so when they get into trouble there are routes to
take.
So when you look at that, what all sums up is that we sort of operated our business over long
cycles as having a slightly below-industry average appetite for risk. These are the things you
cant change your DNA. So if someone said to us why dont you take some more risk, because
theres going to be more [capital] requirements, I think itd be pretty hard for us to do. We sort
of do what we do. And as you can see, it hasnt changed, and its fared pretty well for us.
If you look at that today, where we stood at the end of 2010 we were the lowest amongst our peer
group of 15 peer banks. And we were about a quarter of the median in terms of charge-offs. Our
reserve coverage is number one. Our nonperforming assets is just a little bit below the median
there. And then, when you take nonperforming assets and divide it by the capital and reserves we
have I think its the inverse of a Texas ratio there were about the median bank.
So risk profile versus capital it sort of shows here but as weve moved along, it says weve
done a pretty decent job in managing the risk of our balance sheet, and we hold the appropriate
amount of capital for it. I would argue, if you actually threw out NPAs and looked at charge-offs,
because of that secured nature of the lending, youd get an even better picture of how adequately
capitalized we are.
So when you put the credit together with the margin and our focus on revenue per share that sort
of modest appetite for risk, but a focus on relationship lending and not doing much in the
securities book, gives you a higher margin. It combines for a higher risk-adjusted margin. Its not
a lot of rocket science here. It just kind of worked out for us, and its worked out for us in this
cycle.
What I didnt mention in the formula is this. We talk about this all the time. Youve probably
never seen me do a presentation without talking about efficiency. The rule of thumb for us is that
were mostly in commodity businesses. If were going to try to run an operation with a slightly
lower risk appetite, the efficiency ratio is key. And so our ability to sort of keep our expenses
low and to find cheaper ways to provide our services over time is essential.
Today, we stand at a very, very wide margin relative to the industry. I would guess that a big
chunk of that is credit costs. And so as credit costs normalize, youre going to see some of that
advantage go away. But I would still bet that were pretty much at our all-time high in terms of
advantage relative to the peers. And this allows us to actually be a little bit more conservative
and not stretch as much in terms of seeking out return.
The final thing is I told you Id get back to operating returns. Things have gone fairly well.
But if theres something that were focused on, its our return on tangible assets and our return
on tangible common equity. And as we think about where were going down the road, its nice to say
that we were at 19. Were very proud of the fact that we were able to do that in 2010, and up from
13%.
But if you look on a historical basis, were nowhere near what our high was. And were not yet back
to even 2007. And on the face of that, theres a couple of other headwinds coming which are what
are the liquidity requirements going to be? You guys are all asking where well end up with
capital. Were sort of getting there and figuring that out.
But as we kind of think about the business at M&T, were not thinking about size, were not
thinking about what state we go to next. Were thinking about the products and services, and how do
we end up operating such that we can sort of maintain that higher level of return that weve always
had.
I think one of the things that benefits us is we started out the cycle at 29.5. Too little credit
is given to profitability. You can take a lot of hits before you get down to zero and start chewing
up your capital. And we like that position, so wed like to get those returns up. And thats what
were talking about trying to figure out how to do.
So thats our profitability. And I think one of the things that then we felt transitioned nicely is
lo and behold, on November 1st, we had the opportunity to join forces with Wilmington Trust.
Youve seen some of the slides before, so I wont go over them in detail. But just to reiterate why
we think its so important in one sense, Wilmington Trust is sort of a classic M&T transaction.
We come into Delaware, we end up with the number-one market share and a nice distribution network.
It allows us to have a footprint that allows us to be really big in the community, and to be a big
participant in that community. And we feel when we have that, and when were a partner with the
community, then we can actually operate a bank profitably. Being in in a light way, we probably
dont have much advantage, and it probably isnt a good formula for us.
But in another way, its totally different from any deal that weve done in the past. And the fact
that when we closed the transaction with no change in the companies, and that service charge income
will no longer be our largest source of fee income, that mortgage banking income will no longer be
as big of a source of fee income as it is today, is really important.
And in the context of all those regulated things, and in the context of the returns that I talked
about, its not something that you couldve planned, but its something that we think fits very,
very nicely with M&T and sort of helps us start thinking about how were going to offset some of
the headwinds that we see down the road.
Ive described it a number of times, and Ill try to do it again the partnership is really new.
But for a minute, if you think about the wealth management expertise that Wilmington and its
professionals bring to the table back when I started in the Bank in 1990, we did some loans for
customers, and we had a pretty basic plain-vanilla model. We invested through the 90s in cash
management, so we did a lot more there. And that helped us with our middle-market and business
banking customers.
In 2003, we acquired a retail depository called Allfirst. And what we didnt talk about much was
the fact that that came with some capital markets expertise and allowed us to sort of participate
more in the lifecycle of those middle-market and business banking customers. So today, seven years
later, well help them buy other companies, well take advisory fees for helping them sell their
company, well do much more in the way of syndications. I think by 2000, if youd said the word
syndication in M&T, everybody would run. Afterwards, we realized we could help our clients
syndicate out some of the debt they wanted that didnt fit our appetite.
So weve broadened our ability in our lifecycle. And I think of Wilmington Trust in the same way.
This is a group of people who have, for 107 years, made it their purpose to find solutions for
their customers. And when you talk to them, you say wow, you got a lot of different products,
and youve done a great job of designing products; and they say back to you no, all were doing
is trying to find solutions for our customers, and this is where they asked us to go.
So when we start thinking about those wealth management services, and when we think about what we
do for our commercial customers through the lifecycle of their business, it fits in very, very
nicely. And not only does it fit in nicely from a product perspective; weve got people whove
proven themselves over time to be able to and have a reputation to be able to sort of manage
that next stage of those companies, whether it be a liquidity event or what have you.
So we think that its going to do a lot for us. Obviously, we think, as was just mentioned, that it
was attractive economics in terms of the deal. But I think its much more important in terms of
what it does for us in the future and how it sort of repositions M&T.
So a lot of focus on people, revenues; not much focus on costs. You often hear M&T talking a lot
about cost-saves and all that, in terms of this is much more about the revenue side of the
equation.
Just an update these are probably things you know. Weve filed our S4, and the shareholder vote
thats been scheduled, thats out there publicly. Weve filed all of our regulatory applications,
and theyre on separate but parallel tracks. And I guess as we sit here today, we see no reason why
it shouldnt be possible to close somewhere in the first half of the year. So everything seems to
be going on track as we speak.
So in terms of our philosophy and what thats resulted in you can see that even with the [blips]
that weve all taken here through the cycle, we still have a 17% compounded growth in our operating
earnings per share since Bob Wilmers and the management team that resides today came into the
organization. And as important, by not cutting our dividend through the cycle, we now have weve
maintained a 16% compounded growth in our dividend.
So this is very important. When you think about how stocks are valued and what value is provided, a
lot of people talk about the returns you get and the growth that you have. But no one really ever
talks about whether you actually, as an investor, get your hands back on the money. And the way we
think about it is if we cant use the money to grow, we redistribute that capital back. And you see
that here.
So in the form of share buybacks and dividends, weve distributed about $5.8 billion and only
retained $2.8 billion to grow our business and our capital ratios. Our philosophy is really simple
if we cant redeploy the capital at decent returns, we walk away. That more than anything else
has sort of kept us safe and healthy through the crisis, and through others in the past. And we
think that thats in the best interest of our shareholders.
Its resulted in pretty good performance. Weve added [a year to] our slide here. And as you go
back to 2000, there are only two years where we kind of fell to the top of the return list. This is
a list of top 50 banks that existed in 1950[sic]. We were lucky enough to be fifth, I think it is,
in 2000. Interestingly enough, thats right around the dot-com bust, and the economy wasnt doing
too well there in 2001. And then, if you look at the other times that weve been up there was last
year in 2009, and we didnt fair too bad in 2010.
Most of the time, were average to above average. But when you add it all up, it gives you the
number-one position. Banking is about keeping it simple, not making mistakes. And so, you dont
hear us talk a lot about growth. You hear us talking about sort of sticking to our knitting and
figuring out how we can deal with challenges on a day-by-day basis. And it sort of helped us
produce great returns.
Since the management took place in 1983, weve got of the 100 largest banks that were in
existence, 25 are left. Weve posted a 16.2 compounded return on our stock price, which is number
one. And maybe more important is our company is very good. And were among a host of banks that are
very well run.
And then, if you take it outside of the banking space, going back to 1980, weve posted a 20.1%
return and rank 20th out of all of the publicly traded stocks that you could have invested with,
700 are left, and we rank 20th over time.
So we think our formula has worked pretty well. In essence, its a relatively simple approach to
banking. From time to time, I think well make mistakes. But overall, we look to have a pretty
bright future as we move forward.
So happy to take any questions that you might have.
QUESTION AND ANSWER
Unidentified Audience Member
Thank you. Your success clearly has related significantly to providing services in communities that
you know are desired by the communities. That, it seems to me, is a little bit of a disconnect with
the Wilmington model. Can you comment on the changes that that might imply, either for Wilmington
or for M&T philosophically?
René Jones - M&T Bank Corporation CFO
Its a great question. For those of you that didnt hear the question you pride yourselves
as being part of the communities and knowing the communities. But here youre going into a new
community, and that might not be the case. Its almost never the case, day one. And when I talk
about the tenure of our folks at the end of the day, our thought process is that that whole bank
will be in Delaware, will be run by the people that were running the bank before. So think about
it this way, in terms of the branches on day one, when you close, the success of whether the
retail deposit stays is as a function of whether the branch tellers stay, and whether theyll be in
place.
So if you take it back to Allfirst for a minute that was one of the big changes. We dont have
the resources to be able to walk into Baltimore, where nobody knows us, and do that. So a big
function of what youre saying is true, in the sense that its dependent upon all of the employees
that you have there in Wilmington.
Unidentified Audience Member
Im afraid I didnt make my question [basically] clear. I was speaking more with regards to the
wealth management side
René Jones - M&T Bank Corporation CFO
Yes.
Unidentified Audience Member
of Wilmington, where a lot of their business is outside of a footprint. And again, that is
a different business model necessarily than M&Ts approach
René Jones - M&T Bank Corporation CFO
Yes.
Unidentified Audience Member
to all of the kinds of services [that they provide].
René Jones - M&T Bank Corporation CFO
Yes, its a good question. Id say some of the I think in terms of size, that some of their
business theyve done a number of things that are outside of their footprint. When you look at
the totality Delaware, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania are a big part of what they are, in terms of
where their revenues come from, where their clients are somehow associated with.
And I think youre right. At the end of the day, its not a business that we know. The only thing
that really makes it possible for M&T to come into that business is the fact that the management
team will continue to run it.
From our perspective, if you look at our businesses over time, one of the businesses that has
produced good profits for M&T, but has not really been able to grow at any kind of a rapid rate, is
our Trust Investment Group. So when we look at it, its a big part of M&T, its a big part of our
offerings. But we think that the challenge for that part of the institution is to come in and help
us understand how to help run and recharge the M&T side of it.
So at the end of the day, what youll see is, in our management structure, the people who ran the
wealth business and the people who ran the CCS business, as they call it, will be part of our
management structure. And theyll keep doing what they do today. And then, what youve got is sort
of the cultural process of having them sift through and try to figure out how they can spend time
helping us.
On the flipside, the M&T people are going to be doing things like looking at the risk committees,
looking at commercial real estate lending, helping them with those sides. So its an interesting
marriage. Because were entering a space in one sense that we know very well, but another space
that the only way we could do it is if their expertise is actually coming to help us.
Unidentified Audience Member
(Inaudible) do you still see that out there? And how long do you expect (inaudible)?
René Jones - M&T Bank Corporation CFO
Yes, I dont know. I said that for 11, I think were relatively flat. When you think about it,
just mechanically, because of where we are in the interest rate cycle, most of us are
asset-sensitive. So very technically, rates have to go up, and so theres some lift there. But I
would guess that what happens is just the the other force is going to be that as the capital
markets get healthy again, and youre actually seeing it in certain spaces actually, really
interesting a little bit in real estate. If you look at the spreads, youre definitely seeing it in
indirect auto where, as the capital markets come back a little bit, youre already seeing that
competition.
So for some time, we might be able to maintain these margins. But I think as you look at the long
cycle again, I wouldnt be surprised, as the capital markets get healthy, that we get back into a
state of disintermediation. And we cant do much about that. All we can sort of do is keep our
space relative to the other regional banks.
Unidentified Audience Member
I have one more question. You guys obviously are very [opportunistic] (inaudible). Are there
markets that (inaudible) general footprint (inaudible)?
René Jones - M&T Bank Corporation CFO
I guess our profile would be that anything in our market or anything adjacent to our market were
probably very, very familiar with. But at the end of the day, maybe something happens, maybe it
doesnt. Weve been, for example, in the Albany market for a long, long time. But weve just never
I know weve never done and acquisition in that market. Weve done a little bit south we did
Premier, which is a smaller institution. But weve never found the opportunity to do something, so
were happy to run it organically.
In Albany, we have this great commercial bank, which they do a lot of work and have garnered a
lot of respect over time, without the help of a lot of branches. So were patient if it happens,
it happens. But were not afraid of any particular geography thats in and around where we operate.
Unidentified Audience Member
René, along those lines, would you be willing to consider an acquisition a target thats got a
lot of capital, that has a dominant presence in [their] markets, which is maybe an extension of
what you already have to essentially deal with TARP, as an example? Or would you rather not go
that route?
René Jones - M&T Bank Corporation CFO
Well, I think those are two separate questions. The first one is yes, sure. Anything is
possible. But if you look back over history, and you look at our board, you kind of see what
happens. Most of the transactions we do theres somebody sitting on our board. Its not that
they sold their stock. There mightve been a crisis going on or not. But at the end of the day,
theyve sort of converted their shares into M&T. Theyve helped us participate in running the
operations going forward. And most recently, thats Gary Geisel. Further back, thats Bob Bennett.
So what it means is that the feel of those opportunities and that one you described would have to
be that kind of a partnership where we could both feel that we would make it work. And but for
that, we consider everything just a wide range of things that weve considered in the past.
The TARP is something different. That just has to go, and it has to go in its time. And I think
youre seeing it now, but as the rules kind of roll out and theres more certainty around where
were going to be and what the rules will be, it just makes it more tenable to kind of get there. I
cant tell you when its going to happen. But I wouldnt be surprised that there wont be many
banks down the road that have TARP at all. I think thats just got to go.
When I think about capital, I just think about safety and soundness, and the structure I have, and
then I just deal with that. Because if I get focused on anything else or any rules that dont have
to do with that, it throws us off, and it kind of messes with the value.
Unidentified Audience Member
In Wilmington, other than what you updated us with on that slide in terms of the progress, can you
give us a sense for what may be has surprised you positively and negatively since you guys
announced the acquisition?
René Jones - M&T Bank Corporation CFO
Positively, its people. The depth of talent the talent is very, very deep. The dedication is
probably above average, greater than maybe what weve seen in past acquisitions. And our ability to
sort of interact with the group, the cultural things while we have a ways to go, I think are
I said this before. The first day we sat down, before there was any transaction, I was amazed that
we all hadnt met before. And it sounds kind of canned, but that doesnt happen. And so I think
thats really surprised us and helped us, and bodes pretty well for the future.
You could almost see right away although we dont really include a lot of revenue synergies, you
could see where the businesses fit together. To give you an example, you could see in the early
discussions that, to the earlier question, their market was Delaware and Philadelphia. And it was
somewhat constrained because they had a lot of market share, so they were looking to go other
places. Well, our market includes Baltimore, for example. Huge distribution, both in terms of the
network and the customer rates. Thats a place that they would love to go, and they had their toe
in. Its a whole different game now. Theyre sort of walking into the room with all of us, and so
theyre part of the bigger family.
So I think thats the biggest positive. Id say we were pretty pessimistic going in, when it comes
to credit. And its not a pretty story. So it didnt surprise us negatively, but there wasnt a lot
of positive surprise there, either.
Any other questions? Down front here?
Unidentified Audience Member
You have a lot of ATMs in Western Pennsylvania, and I assume that thats supermarket branching, or
something like that. But is that going to be a good way, you think, for you to expand into markets?
New Jerseys a big, gaping hole in the footprint is that a place where youd maybe seek to do
something like that, to just get a toehold or sort the market out? Im just wondering how you think
philosophically about that.
René Jones - M&T Bank Corporation CFO
Western Jersey that was right. I got that right, right?
Unidentified Audience Member
Right.
René Jones - M&T Bank Corporation CFO
Yes.
Unidentified Audience Member
As I looked at the branch map, it looks like youre in Western Pennsylvania, just in a number of
ATMs [and] some other locations where you dont have a branch presence. Im just wondering,
logically, how youre thinking about that.
René Jones - M&T Bank Corporation CFO
There are two networks. Interestingly enough, at various times not today, but in both cases,
large convenience store owners, networks one in upstate New York and one in that area that you
mentioned of Eastern Pennsylvania sat on our board and were partners with us. So its not sort
of like a supermarket type of thing; our ATMs are tied to this local convenience store chain, where
you come up, that provides fuel and all those types of things. Its pretty pervasive. So if you
drive through that area, youll see us. Same is true in Western New York.
In New Jersey, weve opened up an office there, weve done some business there. Again, well do
commercial business in that space, particularly following some of our New York City customers or
people who, particularly now, may come from Philly and that surrounding area.
But again, weve never seen an opportunity where we could go in and get scale with branches. Weve
seen a number of opportunities where things were available, but not with the level of density that
would allow us to actually hit the ground running.
In a very tactical way, weve never really done a great job in terms of figuring out how to make a
de novo profitable. Weve done a few, done some well. But on a big scale, it doesnt really fit the
value proposition that we have and how we think about operating. Do we like New Jersey? Love New
Jersey.
In the middle?
Unidentified Audience Member
Generally, for the single-family and multifamily part of the business, do you see going forward a
kind of status quo as far as the business environment and as far as M&Ts intentions there?
René Jones - M&T Bank Corporation CFO
Yes. Thats a pretty tough things have come back already. Obviously, things got kind of crazy in
the multifamily space. But I think that question really depends a lot on the appetite and how fast
the conduits come back. Youve already seen some come out. I think cant quote me on this, but I
think the number was that this coming year, theyre looking to do $40 billion. And we see them in
the market.
So for us, if you think back over time in the 90s, we had a very large multifamily book. And
the percentage of our commercial real estate book that as a percentage of our commercial real
estate book actually shrunk. And the reason was because everybody went there; it got too frothy.
So when we then shifted, and we would do what we have in our if you look in our K, we
classify our real estate, and youll see retail a lot of that retail will be dual-purpose. Itll
be housing on top, with retail on the bottom. And
why we did more deals in that space is because we could get more rational pricing and structure. So
some of the families were the same families. Some of the borrowers were the same borrowers. But
well move away from it.
So what youre really asking me [for about] M&T is whats going to happen in the multifamily space.
I dont know; thats a place that tends to get pretty frothy at times. And I dont know that youre
going to see us take our book and have that grow. It just depends on what happens in the market.
Thank you very much, everybody.