Where Will BofI Holding Be in 10 Years?

In This Article:

BofI Holding Inc (NASDAQ: BOFI) has made for a remarkable investment over the past decade. Its stock price is up an incredible 2,140% since the start of 2008, a remarkable 17-fold better total return than the S&P 500 over the same period of time. Over that period it has grown its assets almost 860% and increased earnings per share almost 2,600%.

But what about the future? Can BofI sustain its past success, or has the best money already been made? After all, the big banks have also invested in online banking, building better, more user-friendly apps and making it easier for people to engage in a banking relationship without ever entering a branch. From where I'm sitting, I expect BofI will continue to grow at an above-average rate for years to come, taking deposits and market share. It may not be able to grow assets and earnings by the same incredible rates it did over the prior decade, but it won't have to continue delivering market-crushing results for investors.

A safe with the door opening and binary code coming out.
A safe with the door opening and binary code coming out.

This online banking pioneer should have a great decade ahead of it. Image source: Getty Images.

And the biggest reason why isn't because it's an online bank, but because BofI has great leadership with a solid track record of high returns and minimal losses. That indicates it does very well at the most important thing in banking: Managing risk.

How the branchless model is helping BofI

Because of its branchless model, BofI spends a much smaller portion of its revenues on operating expenses -- called non-interest expense on the income statement -- than traditional banks with retail branches. The simplest way to see how the branchless model benefits BofI is by its efficiency ratio, which measures the portion of revenues required to cover operating expenses. BofI sported a 32.4% efficiency ratio last quarter, which works out to about twice as good as the average retail bank with efficiency ratios in the 60% to 70% range (meaning they spend about twice as much on operating expenses).

Sure, there's an argument that rising interest rates will hurt online banks more than traditional retail banks, as they usually pay higher rates on deposits. One of my colleagues went so far as to take the position that traditional banks will maintain a competitive advantage from their retail branches, giving them cheaper access to capital. The problem with this argument is that it ignores the raw numbers, which show that noninterest expenses are a far-bigger cost for banks than interest expense.

For instance, Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) spent $13.9 billion on non-interest expense in the first quarter versus $3.99 billion on interest expense, or 3.5 times more on operating expenses than interest expense. BofI, spent $45.4 million on non-interest expense, and $28.2 million in interest expense, or 1.6 times more on operating expenses.