Emily Portney
Chief Financial Officer at Bank of New York Mellon
Thank you, Todd, and good morning, everyone. As I walk you through the details of our results for the quarter, all comparisons will be on a year-over-year basis, unless I specify otherwise.
Starting on Page 3, total revenues grew by 5% reflecting higher fee revenue, partially offset by lower net interest revenue and higher money market fee waivers. Fee revenue grew by 6% or 11% excluding the impact of fee waivers. This reflects the positive impact of higher market values, strong organic growth and the favorable impact of a weaker US dollar. Money market fee waivers, net of distribution and servicing expense, were $233 million in this quarter, an improvement of $19 million compared to the prior quarter, driven by slightly higher average short-term interest rate. Other revenue was $129 million and included roughly $55 million of valuation gain on strategic equity investment. Net interest revenue was down 9%.
Expenses increased 9% or 6% excluding the impact of higher litigation reserves, a notable item this quarter, the impact in which you can see at the bottom of the slide. Provision for credit losses was a benefit of $45 million, primarily driven by an improved macroeconomic forecast, including an expectation for a continued recovery of commercial real estate pricing. EPS was $1.04, higher litigation reserves negatively impact EPS by $0.06 and provision benefit had a $0.04 positive impact this quarter. Pretax margin was 29%.
On Page 4, we see the trend across a few key metrics over time. On to capital and liquidity on Page 5. Our capital and liquidity ratios remained strong and well above regulatory minimum and above our internal target. Our Tier 1 leverage ratio, which is our binding constraint with 5.7%, down approximately 30 basis points sequentially, primarily driven by the return of $2.3 billion of capital to our shareholders, partially offset by earnings and a 1% quarter-over-quarter reduction in average asset. We ended the quarter with a CET1 ratio of 11.7%, down 90 basis points compared to the end of the second quarter. Finally, our LCR was 111%, roughly flat compared to the prior quarter.
Turning to Page 6, and further details on net interest revenue. NIR for the third quarter was $641 million, down less than 1% sequentially. The impact of lower interest earning assets and continued pressure on reinvestment yields was partially offset by lower premium amortizations, the benefit of a full quarter of higher IOER and lower deposit and funding costs.
Turning to Page 7 for some color on our balance sheet. Average deposit balances declined by 2% or approximately $6 billion sequentially. This is as we continue to work with our clients to pursue off-balance sheet alternatives for their excess cash. This decrease in deposits drove an approximately equal size reduction of our average held -- average cash held at Central Bank. The size of our securities portfolio remained flat quarter-over-quarter. Average loans increased by about 1% sequentially and 14% year-over-year, the growth primarily driven by margin loans, secured loans to global financial institutions, collateralized loans in wealth management and growth in capital co-financing.
Turning to Page 8. As I mentioned earlier, expenses of $2.9 billion were up 9% year-on-year. Excluding the impact of a notable item, I also mentioned earlier, expenses were up 6%. Almost two-thirds of this increase was attributable to revenue-related expenses and the remainder was evenly spread between incremental investments and the unfavorable impact of the weaker US dollar.
On to Page 9 for a closer look at our businesses. Investment Services reported total revenue of $3 billion, up 3% year-on-year on higher fees, partially offset by lower net interest revenue and higher fee waivers. Excluding the impact of fee waivers, fee and other revenue was up 10%. Assets under custody and/or administration increased by 17% to $45.3 trillion, roughly half driven by growth from new and existing clients and half driven by higher market values.
As I discussed, the individual Investment Services businesses, I'll focus my comments on the fee revenue for each business. In Asset Servicing, we saw strong growth despite the impact of fee waivers, that's on the back of higher market values and client activity, as well as higher FX revenues. Fee waivers impacted growth by roughly 400 basis points.
In Pershing, fees were also up nicely reflecting higher market values and continued underlying organic growth offsetting the impact of lost business and waivers. The waivers impacted fee growth by approximately 500 basis points. In Pershing, clearing accounts were up 4% and mutual fund assets were up 23%. Net new assets in the quarter were up $7 billion. Excluding the impact of a deconversion of client lost to consolidation that we have discussed previously, net new assets in the quarter would have been roughly in line with the second quarter.
In Issuer Services, fees were down included a roughly 600 basis point impact on fee growth from waivers. The redemption of issuance activity and seasonally higher dividend payments in DR were offset by a decline in Corporate Trust fees.
In Treasury Services, healthier fee growth on the back of improved economic activity and net new business results -- resulting in higher payment volumes and was offset by approximately 700 basis points from fee waivers.
Lastly, Clearance and Collateral Management fees were up, primarily driven by growth in non-US collateral management balances and higher clearance volumes, partially offset by lower intraday credit fees.
FX revenue across all Investment Services increased by 17%, driven by higher client volumes, as we are winning new business and growing with existing clients. This was partially offset by lower volatility in spreads.
Page 10 summarizes the key drivers underneath the year-over-year revenue story for each of our Investment Services businesses.
Now, turning to Investment and Wealth Management on Page 11. Investment and Wealth Management reported total revenue of $1 billion, up 12% year-over-year, primarily driven by higher market values, valuation gains on strategic equity investments, the benefit of the weaker US dollar and increased performance fees, all partially offset by higher fee waivers. Excluding the impact of fee waivers, fees and other revenue was up 18%.
Assets under management grew to $2.3 trillion, up 13% year-over-year, reflecting higher market values, high inflows, and the favorable impact of the weaker US dollar, principally versus the British pound. In the third quarter, net inflows totaled $14 billion, driven by LDI and cash strategies. As Todd highlighted, the business has now seen its sixth consecutive quarter of net inflows in the long-term products.
Investment Management revenue grew 13%, primarily driven by higher market values, equity income and gains on strategic equity investments and benefit of the weaker US dollar and higher performance fees. Fee waivers negatively impacted revenue growth by 650 basis points. Wealth Management grew by 10%, primarily driven by higher market values. Client assets reached $307 billion, up 16% year-on-year.
Page 12 shows the results of the other segment.
I'll conclude with a few remarks about the outlook for the remainder of the year. Our guidance on NIR based on the current forward curve remains down 14% compared to 2020. Also, using the forward curve, we expect fee waivers in the fourth quarter to be roughly in line in the third quarter.
With regard to fees, excluding waivers, given growth in the third quarter exceeded our expectations and given the continued momentum across the franchise, we now expect fee ex-waivers for the full-year to be up closer to 8.5%.
On expenses, we continue to expect that full-year to be up about 5% excluding notable items. And we also expect our effective tax rate for the year to be approximately 19%.
And then, lastly, with regards to buybacks. Even we ended the quarter 20 basis points above our management target for Tier 1 leverage, the fact that we continue to have excess deposits that we expect to recede over time and based on our expectation for continued strong capital generation, we intend to once again return capital well in excess of 100% of earnings to our shareholders in the fourth quarter.
With that, operator, can you please open the line for questions?