Charles Schwab continues to see higher assets but cautions that low interest rates are likely to take a toll on third-quarter results.
While total client assets reached almost $4.5 trillion on Aug. 31 — up 21% from a year ago and 5% from July 31, the "continued compression of interest rates has been pressuring investment yields," Chief Financial Officer Peter Crawford said Tuesday.
The executive explained that, although the brokerage firm has been restructuring its investment portfolio in recent years to boost its allocations to "less-prepayable securities, the sharp reduction in long-term rates has led to an acceleration of prepayment activity" in the mortgage-backed securities it owns.
"These dynamics are pushing our third-quarter net interest margin into the upper 130s basis point range," Crawford added, "and therefore our third-quarter total net revenues are running slightly lower than the company's second-quarter results."
In the quarter ended June 30, Schwab had net interest income, or NII, of $1.4 billion, down 14% from the year-ago period; NII accounted for 56% of total revenue, which was $2.5 billion.
Its shares fell 2.5% to $34.85 in mid-afternoon trading Tuesday.