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Northern Trust Corp (NTRS 1.66%)
Q3 2020 Earnings Call
Oct 21, 2020, 10:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good day, everyone, and thanks for standing by. Welcome to today's Northern Trust's Third Quarter 2020 Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions] And at this time, I'd like to turn the floor over to Mr. Mark Bette, Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Thank you, Greg. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Northern Trust Corporation's third quarter 2020 earnings conference call. Joining me on our call this morning are Michael Grady, our Chairman and CEO; Jason Tyler, our Chief Financial Officer; Lauren Allnutt our Controller; and Kelly Lernihan from our Investor Relations team.

Our third quarter earnings press release and financial trends report are both available on our website at northerntrust.com. Also on our website, you will find our quarterly earnings review presentation, which we will use to guide today's conference call. This October 21st call is being webcast live on northerntrust.com. The only authorized rebroadcast of this call is the replay that will be made available on our website through November 18th. Northern Trust disclaims any continuing accuracy of the information provided in this call after today.

Now for our safe harbor statement. What we say during today's conference call may include forward-looking statements, which are Northern Trust's current estimates and expectations of future events or future results. Actual results, of course, could differ materially from those expressed or implied by these statements because the realization of those results is subject to many risks and uncertainties that are difficult to predict. I urge you to read our 2019 annual report on Form 10-K and other reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission for detailed information about factors that could affect actual results.

During today's question-and-answer session, please limit your initial query to one question and one related follow-up. This will allow us to move through the queue and enable as many people as possible, the opportunity to ask questions as time permits. Thank you again for joining us today.

Let me turn the call over to Michael Grady.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Mark. Let me join and welcome you to our third quarter 2020 earnings call. Amid the ongoing public health crisis, I hope you and your families are healthy and well. At Northern Trust, we continue to operate in what we call resiliency mode, which means, we're focused on providing our clients continuity of service, while over 90% of our employees worldwide are working remotely. In this environment, we have adapted to a new normal as to how we serve and communicate with our clients.

Though challenging, the transition across each of our businesses has been effective. Within Wealth Management, earlier this year, we introduced the Northern Trust Institute, the embodiment of the intellectual capital of our Wealth Management business drawn from our experience, serving the most affluent individuals and families in the world. It combines and integrates the best thinking of our firm across 34 practices, including areas such as investments, fiduciary, banking, planning, family business, philanthropy and governance.

We have also published a number of insights and research pieces covering timely topics in the current environment, including family governance, philanthropy, commercial real estate, investing and the upcoming U.S. election. Lastly, we've been very encouraged by the client and prospect participation in our digital Navigate the Now campaign, which is driving more engagement.

Our Asset Management business has seen considerable market share gains during 2020 within our liquidity products, which have strategically been positioned over time. We've also experienced recent success in our active and index fixed income in tax-advantaged equity products.

We managed nearly $100 billion in assets globally under ESG mandates, where our strong capabilities position us for future growth in this space. Within asset servicing, as we've mentioned previously, we did see a deferral in implementation activity from the end of the first quarter and into the most recent quarter. However, the pipeline is strong and opportunities have increased as clients and prospects have adapted and become more comfortable operating in the current virtual environment.

Recent notable public wins include Driehaus Capital Management and Federated Mutual Insurance Company in the U.S., Marks & Spencer Pension Trust in the U.K., Hannover Re, a European-based insurer, and Azimut Limited for its funds in the Middle East. We continually developed our solution-based services to support the needs of our clients, with two recent examples being enhancements to our ESG analytics capabilities to support our clients oversight risk and exposures and the launch of dynamic valuation and reporting tools for asset owners using our innovative front office solutions product. We also continue to build our positioning in the outsourcing space, most notably in outsourced foreign exchange and trade execution.

Finally, we just recently published our latest Corporate Social Responsibility Report, detailing our progress toward reducing our greenhouse gas emissions, enhancing our diversity, equity and inclusion strategy and launching client-focused ESG tools and investment vehicles, as I previously mentioned.

As we move forward in the current and persistent low interest rate environment, we will accelerate our focus in two areas. First, we will continue to drive greater efficiencies with a focus on technology solutions to drive productivity gains. Second, from a growth perspective, we are focused on doing more with our existing client base and also bringing on new clients to allow us to continue to grow organically in a scalable, profitable manner.

Finally, I want to express my sincere appreciation for our staff whose commitment, expertise and professionalism throughout these extraordinary times has been exceptional.

Now, let me turn the call to Jason to review our financial results for the quarter.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Mike. Let me join Mark and Mike in welcoming you to our third quarter 2020 earnings call. Before I start, I would also like to take a brief moment to recognize all those affected by this ongoing crisis, especially those who working on the frontlines. Our thoughts are with you and we hope you and your loved ones remain safe and healthy.

Now, let's dive into the financial results of the quarter starting on Page 2. This morning, we reported third quarter net income of $294.5 million. Earnings per share were $1.32 a share and our return on average common equity was 10.5%. The quarter included a $43.4 million pre-tax charge related to a corporate action processing error. The issue was identified internally by our corporate actions team and to put the impacted clients in the same position as they would have been at the year has not occurred, we executed open market transactions, which resulted in a loss.

You can see on the bottom of Page 2, equity markets, particularly domestic U.S. markets, performed well during the quarter. Recall that a significant portion of our trust fees are based on quarter-lag or month-lag asset levels and both the S&P 500 and EAFE Local had strong sequential performance based on those calculations. It's worth noting that on a year-over-year basis, the EAFE Local Index remains negative, which creates an unfavorable impact to our fees compared to the prior year. As shown on this page, average one-month and three-month LIBOR rates continued to decline during the quarter.

Let's move on to Page 3, and review the financial highlights of the third quarter. Year-over-year, revenue was down 3% with noninterest income up 3% and net interest income down 21%, expenses increased 6%. The provision for credit losses was $500,000 in the current quarter, net income was down 23%. In a sequential comparison, revenue declined 1% with noninterest income up 2% and net interest income down 11.4%, expenses increased 6% and net income declined 6%. Return on average common equity was 10.5% for the quarter, down from 14.9% a year ago and 12.2% in the prior quarter.

Assets under custody and administration, $13.1 trillion grew 13% from a year ago and increased 8% on a sequential basis. Assets under custody of $10.1 trillion grew 16% from a year ago and increased 9% on a sequential basis. Assets under management were $1.3 trillion, up 9% from a year ago and up 4% on a sequential basis.

Let's look at the results in greater detail, starting with revenue on Page 4. Third quarter revenue on a fully taxable equivalent basis was $1.5 billion, down 3% compared to last year and down 1% sequentially. Trust, investment and other servicing fees representing the largest component of our revenue totaled $1 billion and were up 3% from last year and 4% sequentially.

Foreign exchange trading income was $62 million in the quarter, up 3% year-over-year and down 14% sequentially. The increase compared to a year ago was primarily driven by higher volatility, while the sequential decline was impacted by lower volumes and lower volatility. The remaining components of noninterest income totaled $91 million in the quarter, up 7% compared to one-year ago and down 10% sequentially.

Security commissions and trading income decreased 10% compared to a year ago and was down 22% sequentially. Both year-over-year and sequential declines were primarily due to lower interest rate swap activity and referral fees.

Other operating income increased 19% compared to the prior year and is down 5% sequentially. The increase compared to the prior year was driven by higher income related to a bank-owned life insurance program as well as higher miscellaneous income primarily associated with a market value increase in the supplemental compensation plans. This higher income resulted in a related increase within the other operating expenses. The sequential performance was impacted by a lower market value adjustment for a seed capital investment relative to the prior quarter, partially offset by lower Visa swap expense.

Net interest income, which I'll discuss in more detail later was $336 million in the third quarter, down 21% from a year ago and down 11.4% sequentially.

Let's look at components of our trust and investment fees on Page 5. For our Corporate & Institutional Services business, fees totaled $585 million in third quarter and were up 4% year-over-year and up 3% sequentially. Custody and fund administration fees, the largest component of C&IS fees, were $395 million and up 1% year-over-year and up 5% on a sequential basis. The year-over-year performance was primarily driven by favorable currency translation and new business, partially offset by unfavorable markets. The sequential increase was primarily driven by favorable currency translation as well as favorable markets.

Assets under custody and administration for CI&S clients were $12.3 trillion at quarter-end, up 13% year-over-year and up 8% sequentially. Both the year-over-year and sequential increases were attributable to new business, favorable markets and favorable currency translation. Investment management fees in C&IS of $137 million in the third quarter were up 19% year-over-year and up 7% sequentially. The year-over-year growth was primarily driven by strong flows within our money market funds. The sequential increase was primarily driven by the impact of favorable markets.

This quarter's results included $0.9 million in money market fund fee waivers within our C&IS investment management fee. Assets under -- assets under management for C&IS were $993 billion, up 10% year-over-year and up 4% sequentially. The growth from the prior year was driven by favorable markets, client flows and favorable currency translation. The sequential growth was driven by favorable markets and currency translation. Securities lending fees were $20 million in the quarter, down 2% year-over-year and down 28% sequentially. The year-over-year decline was primarily driven by lower spreads and lower volumes, while the sequential decline was primarily driven by lower spreads. Average collateral levels declined 5% year-over-year, but were up 1% sequentially.

Moving to our Wealth Management business. Trust, investment and other servicing fees were $419 million in the third quarter and were up 1% compared to the prior year and up 6% sequentially. Both the year-over-year and sequential performance were impacted by favorable markets, partially offset by money market fund fee waivers. Within our Wealth Management business, fee waivers totaled $4.4 million in the quarter. Assets under management for our Wealth Management clients were $319 billion at quarter-end, up 6% year-over-year and up 5% sequentially. The year-over-year growth was driven by favorable markets and net flows, while the sequential increase was primarily driven by favorable markets.

Moving to Page 6. Net interest income was $336 million in the third quarter and was down 21% from the prior year. Earning assets averaged $129 billion in the quarter, up 23% versus the prior year. Average deposits were $113 billion and were up 27% versus the prior year. The net interest margin was 1.03% in the quarter and was down 58 basis points from a year ago. The net interest margin decreased primarily due to lower short-term interest rates as well as mix shift within the balance sheet. On a sequential quarter basis, net interest income was down 11.4%. Average earning assets increased 3% on a sequential basis, while average deposits were up 2%. The net interest margin declined 19 basis points, primarily due to declining asset yields and securities and loans repriced to lower interest rates.

Turn to Page 7. Expenses were $1.1 billion in the third quarter and were 6% higher than both the prior year and prior quarter. Expense during the quarter included the previously mentioned $43.4 million charge. Excluding the charge, expenses were up 1% on both the year-over-year and sequential basis. Compensation expense totaled $462 million and was up 1% compared to one-year ago and flat sequentially. The year-over-year growth was driven by higher salary expense due to staff growth, base pay adjustments and unfavorable currency translation, partially offset by lower incentives. On a sequential basis, higher salaries driven by unfavorable currency translation and staff growth were mostly offset by lower incentives.

Employee benefits of $97 million was up 11% from one-year ago and up 8% sequentially. The year-over-year increase was primarily related to higher pension expense. The sequential increase was primarily driven by higher medical costs.

Outside services expense of $186 million, it was down 4% on a year-over-year basis and up 5% sequentially. The year-over-year decline was driven by lower cost across a number of categories, including technical services, consulting, third-party advisory fees and data processing, partially offset by higher sub-custody expense and brokerage clearing costs. The sequential increase was due to higher technical services cost, third-party advisory fees, consulting and sub-custody related costs.

Equipment and software expense of a $171 million was up 13% from a year ago and up 4% sequentially. The year-over-year growth reflected higher depreciation and amortization as well as software support costs. The sequential increase was driven by increases in software support and equipment maintenance costs. Occupancy expense of $52 million decreased 2% from one-year ago and was down 14% sequentially. Both declines were related to lower costs associated with executing workplace real-estate strategies.

Other operating expense of a $127 million was up 38% from one-year ago and up 48% sequentially. Results for the quarter included a previously mentioned $43.4 million charge. Excluding the charge, the category declined 9% compared to one-year ago and was down 3% sequentially. The year-over-year comparison is impacted by lower expense related to business travel, partially offset by higher mutual fund co-administration fees as well as higher costs associated with supplemental compensation plan expense within staff related expense. The sequential comparison is impacted by higher costs associated with the Northern Trust sponsored golf tournament, offset by lower other miscellaneous expenses within the category.

Turning to Page 8, our capital ratios remain strong with our common equity Tier 1 ratio of 13.4% under the standardized approach and 13.9% under the advanced approach, both unchanged from the prior quarter. Our Tier 1 leverage ratio was 7.7% under both the standardized and advanced approaches. During the third quarter, we declared cash dividends of $0.70 per share, totaling a $148 million to common stockholders. And it's times like these that show the importance for the strong capital base and liquidity profile to support our clients activities and we continue to provide our clients with the exceptional service and solution expertise they have come to expect.

Our competitive positioning in wealth management, asset management and asset servicing continues to resonate well in the marketplace.

Thank you again for participating in Northern Trust third quarter earnings conference call today. Mike, Mark, Lauren and I would be happy to answer your questions. Operator, please open the line.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator Instructions] And first from Jefferies we have Ken Usdin.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Hey, Ken.

Ken Usdin -- Jefferies Financial Group -- Analyst

Thanks. Hey thanks, good morning guys. I just want to follow-up on the whole side of rates. So good news that NII was down better than the original guide, and I was just wondering if you can update us on what your thoughts are as far as the outlook for NII, and at what point do you expect NII to get close to just flattening out? Is that sometime early in 2021 or how can you help us think through that? Thank you.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, it's -- first of all, I think it's important for people realize that there is, the component for the securities portfolio that are longer-dated and securities we bought in '17, '18, '19 that aren't going to mature for another two, three, four, five years. And so it's going to take a long time to get this whole portfolio reprice. That said, at this point, 75% of overall earning assets have been repriced on the new yield curve. And if you're to break it down even a little bit farther from that, you can look and see that effectively all the floating rate assets have been repriced, 80% of the loan book is -- has been repriced and about 50% of the securities book has been repriced.

And so I think the best way to think about it from what you can see is that from here about 1% to 2% of the overall earning asset base is going to reprice every quarter. And so we've gotten through most of it. And if you think about how aggressively we had to get through going from the first quarter where everything was on the prior book, to then in the second quarter and now this third quarter movement, we've got the vast majority of it done. That's why we think the flattening -- we're at that point now, it's just trickles from here. But it's not going to be a 100% flat for a long time as those longer-dated securities play through.

Ken Usdin -- Jefferies Financial Group -- Analyst

Okay. And I guess just relative to your prior comments, just want to give you the opportunity to level set us on what your expectation would be for 4Q NII versus third Q?

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, I appreciate. And I do think that, well, first I'll answer the question. I -- the way we look at it now and it comes back to that dynamic of about 2% repricing, you could say it's going to be down 2% give or take a point, and I think that's what you should expect from the math at this point.

That said, now that we're at the point where so much of the book has been repriced, the movement in NII from here is going to be driven more by what happens in the business and more by what happens in loans and what happens in the deposit book and how that stays on. And frankly, our confidence level in reinvesting that into not just cash at central banks but into higher yielding assets. And so from here, it's going to be much more business driven.

Ken Usdin -- Jefferies Financial Group -- Analyst

Okay. Thanks, Jason.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Ken. Sure.

Operator

And we have Glenn Schorr with Evercore.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Hey, Glenn.

Glenn Schorr -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Hello there. Thanks. So definitely not the norm for you guys, but I think everyone has a little bit higher sensitivity to issues of existing base, so I was going to ask, just for a little more color on the corporate action item. Was this a manual issue? What have you done to rectify? And have there been MRAs outstanding related to this? I think that some of the Q&A back and forth pre-call, was about that. So I figured if you could just address it. Thanks.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sure. I appreciate, Glenn. So first of all, I just want to provide a little bit of context on this group, for people that don't know it well and how an item like this occurs. And I think it's important to understanding we have $13 trillion in assets under custody or administration, the security services group is processing literally millions of transactions a year. We got errors in the group on a consistent basis and they total somewhere between $5 million, $10 million a quarter on average, that's typically what we experience there. And they are accounted for consistently in the other operating expense line on the income statement that you see. And so the event itself is not unusual, it's the dollar amount. And if we focus on that a little bit, we think over the last 10 years, we've actually never had a loss cumulatively in a quarter to even get to $20 million. And if you look back even on the years, we've never had a full year that amounts to this level of a loss. And interestingly, this quarter in and of itself from a volume perspective of losses, it was light and even the other items added up to a less than normal level, it was at the bottom end of that kind of $5 million to $10 million range. And so, then if you ask, what have we done? I mean, you can imagine, the first thing we do is unpack the situation and once we're confident that there has been a mistake, we did everything we needed to do in order to make our clients hold. We did that, and then at that point, we look at the processes, identify ways to improve even the process we felt strongly about, but we identified ways to strengthen it, we put those in place and at this point, we move on.

From an MRA perspective, we wouldn't be able to talk about that at this point, if it were even -- if that had even been surfaced. But obviously, we took this very seriously, this is not -- I think it's important to note, this isn't -- this is not out of the normal course of servicing $13 trillion in assets in terms of the event, it was really the fact that we had a very large exposure within it that was unusual.

Glenn Schorr -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Okay, cool. Now, I'd like to follow up on some related to the balance sheet. Jason, the other securities line is up 30% year-on-year and it's almost the biggest part of the earning assets now. The footnote talks about community development investments. But could you just expand a little bit more on that because it's such a larger part and it's growing more, what benefit you get from that, what kind of yield pickup and should we expect to see more of that? Thanks so much.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sure. Just before you go on mute, Glenn, I want to make sure we answer your question really specifically. So you're talking about the increase in the securities portfolio that was kind of $56 billion -- $58 billion, is that where you're looking?

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

I think most of that growth came on that other securities line, so if we address -- we address the growth in securities year-over-year. I think that will...

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. So in general...

Glenn Schorr -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Yeah.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sorry, were you going to add a clarification line or?

Glenn Schorr -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

No, you got it but other lines in the securities line on the balance sheet. Thanks.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

So the -- in general, the treasury group is always looking for opportunities to lean out a little bit from just cash and we feel confident and there'll be types of investments that are short-term, where it's not cash, but it's -- but there are items where we pick up a little bit of yield. And so it could be short-term JGBs, it could be other short-term instruments where we pick up a little bit of cash, a little bit of yield without taking too much incremental exposure. And so they've been looking at that in different ways. And part of it -- I think we talked last time about the fact that part of this NII journey is going to be not just the size of the balance sheet, but when we felt confident that we could step out of central banks. And so as the treasury groups looking to do that, they're looking for, not just these traditional what are we going to do with two year, three year, four year securities or mortgage backs, but other items that can stay short, but still pick up a little bit in yield.

And so that's not necessarily something you should see as a longer-term trend, it's something that as we did this initial step out, we saw opportunity.

Glenn Schorr -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Great, thanks so much. Appreciate it.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sure.

Operator

Next question will come from Alex Blostein with Goldman Sachs.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Hi Alex.

Alex Blostein -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Hey guys, thanks. Good morning. So maybe just a quick clarification on NII first. So here you're on the kind of 1% to 2% decline in NII from here as the securities book reprice. Does that include any mitigation efforts? Do you offset the roll-off, roll-on dynamics or that's really kind of like a gross number? And then, there are things you could do to help mitigate the remaining pressure albeit it's obviously selling small, which could get you to more of a kind of flattish IR from here?

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Well, the answer is, it's very much just looking organically at the amount that's in the book. So that doesn't include any other strategic items, that's just the math of what's rolling off from here. That said, I do want to caution people even though net interest income is down significantly, obviously, we're not going to be looking to have dramatic changes in our strategy or our risk profile to think about quote-unquote, offsetting the decline in rates.

And so, we're constantly thinking about optimizing the investment book and we continue to do that. No change in our risk appetite at all, but the 1% to 2% a quarter is very much just the math of what exists in the book right now, absent any other things that we would be -- so you shouldn't be thinking, that's exactly what's going to happen over time, there are other things we're thinking about in terms of the securities portfolio, other things we can do with the balance sheet, but those are the things we were contemplating before rates came down frankly.

Alex Blostein -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Got it. That's very clear. Thanks for that. My bigger picture question kind of revolves around fees and this has obviously been a pretty volatile year with respect to both markets and new business and volumes, etc. Maybe help us level set what has been the organic fee growth in the business. Maybe kind of over the last 12 months, given your comments around strong pipeline and sort of the building momentum in C&IS, maybe help frame what that kind of organic fee growth could look like over the next 12 months?

And then, specifically, I was hoping you guys could also hit on the multi -- on the Global Family Office business, that revenue has been kind of flattish for the last four quarters despite a pretty significant growth in assets, I know there is a little bit of lag there, but still feels like the fees are lagging -- lagging the asset base. So I -- kind of bigger picture question, but if you guys could hit on all that, that would be awesome. Thanks.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sure. So if I start on -- if I -- if I start on C&IS, I think the -- we'd separate it into two different buckets there, interestingly. One is that there has been significant growth that's come in the investment management fee line and that's come from very good collaboration between the asset management business and C&IS and a lot of work we did in the last couple of years, setting up the liquidity business to be able to take on assets.

So I'm going to do this at the corporate level, but a lot of these assets apply to C&IS. But if you go back to last year, to the beginning of this year, the liquidity business had $215 billion in AUM and now, we're closer to $285 billion, $290 billion. Very significant growth, bigger than what's happened in the industry and so that's led to good organic growth in the business as a result of good collaboration, again not 100% of that is in the C&IS business, but the vast majority of it is.

The other aspects of C&IS, as you just get to the traditional custody and other asset servicing type activities, the -- interestingly, the organic growth this quarter was not great, it was positive, but it wasn't great. They do feel stronger about the pipeline that they have, the one not funded business and part of that is a result of the fact that there were a lot of prospects that we won that delayed implementation partially because of COVID, but still very high confidence level that's going to be on-boarded in fourth quarter or first quarter. And so we see good opportunity set to bring on that business in the next couple of quarters. That said, the growth in the money market mutual fund business, it's been great, but it has flattened out at this point. And so it's good diversification in the business to sometimes get growth coming from the investment management side and sometimes from the other.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

This is Mike, I mean, I have to pick up for Jason when I get the chance to, I -- get a sip of water, Alex. So I think importantly, longer term, I -- that again, we continue to see the opportunity to grow at a higher organic growth rate. Having said that, as we've always said, it's critical that that's profitable growth for us. And so that we're doing it in a way that is coming with operating leverage and fee operating leverage. Now, with the change in the rate environment, that dramatically impacts your ability in the short-term to get the operating leverage. And so as a result, it makes -- it focuses us on ensuring that that growth does not come with the requirement for significant resources. So looking at the expense side of the equation and just making sure that I -- that we keep those in line in this type of environment and that the growth is high quality, scalable growth for us. So that's on the asset servicing side and Jason mentioned, asset management.

Just to close off on Wealth Management, again, as you mentioned, this has been an unusual year and so we've had to shift our sales and new business strategy as a result. I -- and I would say that I'm very optimistic on the long-term prospects for that, but it has, in this interim period, it has caused some additional volatility in the normal sales pattern that we would have. And so, long term, very positive, but to your point, there is some bumpiness that we've had this year that we haven't had in previous years.

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Alex, this is Mark, and I could comment on the GFO asset growth. I think you're seeing the growth of step-up in the second quarter, can't get into a lot of specifics there, but that type of client, that type of segment for us, both clients can move pretty large concentrated asset holdings onto our custody platform and that's what the majority of the increase was in the second quarter.

There is not necessarily a corresponding noticeable increase in fees with that, just because of the nature of the holding, single holding that we might be having on our platform for those clients.

Alex Blostein -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Great. Thanks, everybody, for tackling all of that. Thanks.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Alex.

Operator

Next up from Morgan Stanley, we have Betsy Graseck.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Hi, Betsy.

Betsy Graseck -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Hi, good morning. I had a couple of questions. On the capital ratios, I know you typically said what a pretty nice cushion above your regulatory minimums and above you know, what your management buffers might add to it, obviously, in this period with no buybacks that some capital ratios improve even further.

Could you give us a sense as to how you're thinking about utilizing that excess capital in the event that if succession on buybacks continues? Is there any -- anything that you might want to discuss about how you could be using that capital outside of buybacks? We've seen some acquisitions in the space recently on the asset management side and wanted to get your sense on that if there is anything to do there. That's the first part of question. Thanks.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

All right. I mean, I'll try it and see if I get my voice back. The good news is that Mike and I talk about this a lot, so if I don't, he's going to -- he will definitely be on the same page on it. So it is -- I mean, I'm going to start with, and you've heard me talk about it a little bit, Betsy, but I think there's four components to how firms, to at least how we think about, how we deploy capital, and how we -- what capital levels we maintain.

The first is we have very good genuine discussions with our Board about it and that's not to say that there's any tension there, there is not at all. We're completely aligned, but we also want to make sure that we're not being presumptuous in saying where we want capital levels to be without having good conversations with them. So that, it really does through if you start with that discussion. And then secondly, we think about capital on an absolute basis, we want to have good cushion relative to where we need to be from a regulatory perspective.

The third is we look very closely, frankly, out the side-view mirror and we look at things on a relative basis. When we talk to clients on prospects, they care and we want to be able to reflect, it's part of our overall value proposition that we've got strong capital levels and we have to be able to evidence that on a relative basis. And the fourth, maybe most constructively, given the fact that the stock price has come down is thinking about things on a returns basis.

And so we think about that deployment of capital, not just do we take capital up or down, but what types of returns are we getting for it, and there we have to compare what returns are we getting by investing in our own stock effectively. And that has to do a lot with where we think things are from a price-to-book perspective and how it's trading and what we think. And secondly, what opportunities do we have to reinvest organically in the business. And then, third, we're looking at what examples there are where we can invest non-organically outside.

And so we've talked about the fact, we're very open and I'd say, particularly, in the Wealth Management space, where it is difficult to have organic growth, we feel very strong about the franchise and we feel like our ability to maintain a high-quality client base is very strong if we were to bring that in.

Betsy Graseck -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

I mean, you're talking about Wealth Management, you're talking about teams, firms, portfolios, is there any nuance to that?

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. You know, the teams, I think is harder. I think those tend to be -- first of all, culturally, it's not super consistent for us to do something like that for various reasons and happy to talk about it a little bit more. I think firms, where you've got more of a sense of scale that's been there, but there maybe not at the scale that we are, and we can bring that in. And we think about our different groups almost as large teams, and we think about the offices, we have the $320 billion in assets, you split that between the offices we have and you have a team of $1 billion to $3 billion. So something of that size or $10 billion -- up to $8 billion is kind of a couple of teams from our lens, but extracting a team out of another firm is not something that we have tended to do.

And so thinking about an organization, and an established organization with the client base, but with the leadership that hasn't been able to develop a succession plan in place or they think it just might be better to go to the infrastructure of a larger organization and you think about the scale we represent at that asset level, we can be a good solution for firms that don't have that succession planning in place.

Betsy Graseck -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Okay. And what I'm hearing your answer is wealth management over asset management, is that fair?

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

There -- it's there to the extent their asset -- there are opportunities in asset management. It's a little bit more nuanced, we've done some things there quietly, more small that had been extremely consistent with our strategic desire to do more intermediary distribution. And so we look closely at those as well. I think the distinction might be -- probably a little bit of a higher bar right now to do something in size at the asset servicing side of the business.

Betsy Graseck -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Got it. And then, what if the Fed does lift the restrictions on buybacks? Maybe you could give us a sense as to how you're thinking about, how you would manage the capital in that scenario in terms of the pace that you might start buybacks back up at, and how quickly you want to get back down to the capital ratios that you think are most efficient for your business model?

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Mike, you want to answer?

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. So Betsy I think Jason laid out the framework, so I won't go into that. But that is the framework that we would apply should the Fed lift the restrictions. And we'll see but prior to the pandemic, we were repurchasing our shares and so it depends on that broader environment that we would lay over with the regulatory constraints. And so, I would hope that to the extent that the Fed removes the restrictions, that's also an indication that the environment is relatively favorable, which will put us back in a position similar to at the beginning of the year, where we were both able to and were repurchasing our stock.

Betsy Graseck -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Okay, got it. Thank you.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Sure.

Operator

Our next question will come from Mike Carrier with Bank of America.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Mike.

Mike Carrier -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Good morning and thanks for taking the questions. First, you guys have been focused improving investing in the business, you're also going to be driving efficiencies in operating leverage. As long as we're operating in this work from home backdrop, I'm just curious if you find additional areas of potential efficiencies whether it's in real estate or other areas that could drive that longer-term?

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

We -- this environment has been very, obviously, made everybody take a step back and think about that, we have, frankly, there are things that we're accelerating the business. I mentioned, super quickly in the opening comments that we're on a real-estate strategy journey right now. We looked deeply at that just a couple of months ago, kind of in the midst to this to say how does the healthcare crisis influence that strategy. And there are elements of it that it accelerates. And there're consolidations you're thinking about that, frankly, we're saying, we can do that faster.

And then, there are other things that we were not considering before that this endeavor makes us consider. And I tell people kind of jokingly, a year ago, I did not know how many square feet we had off the top of my head and now, I do. And I know where they are and I know how much we're paying per foot. And so we're talking about that element a lot to try and think about what does real estate look like in the future, not just domestically, but internationally and there are lot of creative things we can do to try and be more efficient and try and leverage the technology that we've invested in into our partners, in order to decrease reliance on square footage frankly.

And that also leads to areas of saying how we become more resilient, how do we think about resiliency with our workforce overall, and we've had to make them more technologically equipped in order to be resilient and that adds flexibility as well obviously in very creative other ways, the way we think our resiliency centers and other things like that.

Mike Carrier -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Okay, it's helpful. And then Jason, you mentioned in the past, the loan demand will be a key driver in NII going forward and we see fairly emerging trends across the industry, it is still fairly weak loan demand, but pockets of strength within the wealth area. And so just I am trying to get an update on your front, in terms of the demand that you're seeing across the business.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, you can't -- it's interesting, you can't see it from the financial statement, but loans are actually a tick up within September season, and that surprised us. So when you go back 90 days ago, we -- I think everyone felt like we were going to see balance sheets come down, we thought liquidity -- we thought cash was going to come down, deposits going to come down, we thought loans are going to come down. But our balance sheet, on average was up in the quarter and even there it's not those declines are holding more deposits, but loans were held in. And so I -- it does seem like there, some of the loan demand we have is coming from clients that are saying they want to be ready to do things if -- to be more active if they see opportunities come up. It's unclear whether or not that will actually happen, whether or not the opportunity come or whether or not they will actually pull the trigger on it, but that's certainly been the case that they've held in in terms of loan -- of loan volume.

And and we've been talking recently about the fact that liquidity in general is a big component of what we do with our clients. And so if you think about liquidity more broadly as clients wanting to find safe high-quality places to park their cash in short-term assets, they view our balance sheet is strong and we've talked about the fact that our money market mutual funds, very strong investment performance, they are at size, our treasury funds are $80 billion to $90 billion, and so very appealing places, even for very large institutional investors to invest.

And then on the other side clients know that as they've worked with us, we understand their asset composition well, and so we can be a thoughtful lender in terms of how to structure things in the most efficient way for that.

Mike Carrier -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Thanks a lot.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sure.

Operator

Moving on from Deutsche Bank, we have Brian Bedell.

Brian Bedell -- Deutsche Bank AG -- Analyst

Great.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Hey, Brian.

Brian Bedell -- Deutsche Bank AG -- Analyst

Thanks very much. Hi, good morning. Just a couple of 4Q questions getting out of the way. Just if you could comment on the typical seasonality that we see an uptick in expenses that we typically see in the fourth quarter in conjunction with the golf open, which added some expense in 3Q. And also the exit rate for money market fee waivers, just trying to get a sense of sort of where we're running into for 4Q on that?

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sure. Mike, you want to do?

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. So the first was on the seasonality in the Northern Trust?

Brian Bedell -- Deutsche Bank AG -- Analyst

No, just in general expense.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

I think in expenses...

Brian Bedell -- Deutsche Bank AG -- Analyst

Components on fourth quarter expense.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, sure. So...

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

There are components of expenses in fourth quarter that are -- that we should actually curve because I think third quarter in some ways is not an ideal run rate for some of them. And so maybe just walk through it a little bit. First of all, take benefits for example, there you'd see the trend that took place, but the part of it, in fact that medical has gone and it's not the enormous line, but it's had enormous jump from second quarter. And so medical in second quarter was something like $17.5 million that went up to $26 million in third quarter. That's closer to a typical run rate, but could still see some tweak up from there.

And so I think that's just something to keep in mind that as our partners exited effectively doing normal things in their own healthcare maintenance, that's coming back online and it had a surprisingly large level of volatility from my perspective frankly.

And then outside services is another one where we believe we'd see a similar step up in fourth quarter to what we saw in third quarter. There is a lot of business volume related cost within that category that are likely to increase and we're still running at relatively low levels of the costs, when you think about things like consulting, legal technical services, the dial down and we're doing everything we can to tamp those down, but that could come back up.

And then equipment and software. On a year -- on a year-to-date equipment software costs were up 11%, that's likely close to where we're going to land for the full year 2020. The category where the expenses are expected to have high levels -- higher levels of growth this year. As -- in fact, we've invested in the business, we've got higher depreciation and amortization costs, we've called that out. D&A is something like two-thirds of that line in general. And so if that's kind of in the soup, it's hard to tamp that down as aggressively.

And then I'll talk about occupancy, I mentioned it a little bit. There is going to be volatility there. We've -- we're going to make some investments frankly in occupancy to try and get our longer-term run rate down a little bit. And so you're going to see that line item bounce around a little bit. And so in general, I would say it's less about seasonality of run rate and expenses and it's more about two things, one is what -- how do we get back to undoing the COVID related influences on expenses, and second, what are the investments we're going to make to try and decrease our run rate in the long run.

Brian Bedell -- Deutsche Bank AG -- Analyst

That's -- on the money market fee waiver trajectory at the end of 3Q?

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, thanks. So let me -- I'll do a couple of comments there. One is, as we -- you could pick it up from the opening comments, we were right at $5 million only in the third quarter. Now, the reality is, there is the $300 billion in money market mutual fund assets we have, that is relatively stable at this point, but rates are moving around a lot. So we got to assume that rates and volumes stay the same, but third quarter was $5 million. As we sit today, the run rate on a quarterly basis is about $11.5 million, as we sit today.

The team thinks we could have waivers in the fourth quarter, $20 million to $25 million, and exiting the year, so as a launch point coming into 2021 could be $25 million to $35 million. And just to give you a sense of what does that mean, I think it's super important to remember the fact that if you go back to the beginning of this year, when we were $215 billion in assets, the overall revenue run rate was much lower than what it is right now. And so now you go up to $290 billion and the run rate is over $400 million in revenue.

And so, we're talking about the fact that we have a decent amount of waivers, but from a much higher revenue base, and so the story there is kind of mixed in some ways.

Brian Bedell -- Deutsche Bank AG -- Analyst

That's super helpful. And then Mike, maybe on just ESG, you mentioned that at the outset. The ESG analytic service that you have sort of, maybe if you could just talk about where you are in the growth to half of that? And are you rolling it out to all of your asset servicing clients and have to take up? And then also on the wealth management side, are you seeing more demand from your wealth clients for investing in ESG product that you have and sort of the organic growth outlook in the investment management side for your ESG product.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Right. So Brian, the reason why I did mention it upfront, it's because ESG does run across the company in each of our businesses. And you started to highlight it there, but let me go back through a little bit. First of all, just from an investing perspective, to your point, we are seeing more and more demand from our clients, both institutional, but to your point, on the wealth side, I -- including our GFO clients in ESG investment product and investment strategy.

So as a result, I -- we've -- as you would expect with our business model, we've looked to fulfill those demands with ESG product from our asset management group. And as I mentioned, over $100 billion at this point, but I would say, it's still in the early days of that trend and of the growth opportunity for us there. And then, more broadly in thinking about our institutional clients, particularly asset owner clients, I -- they're being held to a higher standard as well as to how they're investing and from an ESG perspective and as a result, they need the analytics around that. So I talked about the capabilities that we rolled out and to your point, I would say early days on that because I think this is a very long-term trend.

Brian Bedell -- Deutsche Bank AG -- Analyst

Great, that's super helpful. Thank you.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Sure.

Operator

And next we have Vivek Juneja from J.P. Morgan.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Hi, Vivek.

Vivek Juneja -- J.P. Morgan Chase -- Analyst

Hi, Mike, hi, Jason, and Mark. I just want to follow up on the operating error, I know you've had those for years and I know -- I recognize that's one item, but large amounts do get a lot of attention. You, I'm sure, are aware of what's happened to another -- to a GSIB when the amount got much larger similar to their business if they do have postponed compares. And I know you've been -- what do you plan to do to automate more of these processes so that you have less of these or since you probably talk about trying to do stuff, but you need less reconciliation plus checking. So Mike, what do you need to do to step up to limit the -- these and hope that something like this doesn't get even to be a larger amount in the future.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Sure, Vivek. So, as Jason mentioned, this is the nature of our businesses and that part of the business is processing transactions for our clients, broadly speaking and there are certain aspects of that that have been automated and were automated years ago. And that's what you would expect is fine. The areas that lend themselves to automation, you get the benefit of both efficiency, but also dramatic reduction in risk from incurring errors. And so that's the longer-term path that we've been on for and I'd say, the industry as well for some time period.

And then you have other aspects of what we do that don't lend themselves as much to automation because of the idiosyncratic nature of the particular transactions. So in this case, corporate actions where certain aspects of corporate actions are very straightforward and so they've already been automated or portions of them have been automated, but other parts where it's still difficult because of the lack of homogeneity of the transactions themselves.

With that said, we have -- this area, even though it's primarily manual with some level of automation, it's an area that gets a lot of attention from a procedures and control perspective and frankly as much as there have been errors in the past, it's been very well controlled. So think about it as higher inherent risk as we see it, but with procedures and controls that we've been able to manage and mitigate the risk that comes with that. That's not to say that we haven't been on a path of trying to add in additional workflow tools and automate additional things that we can, we've been investing, broadly speaking in our security services areas significantly for years to modernize the technology in there, in that area. So it's on a path and then you have a situation like this that occurs that certainly brings more attention to it, but it wasn't attention that we felt as though, boy, we've ignored this area rather we've controlled it and we've tried to improve it, but it requires additional procedures and control and as we go forward more modernization and automation as well.

Vivek Juneja -- J.P. Morgan Chase -- Analyst

Understood, thanks. A quick one for Jason, I'll take a minor one. Just in the CIS fees, you mentioned, year-on-year benefit from FX translation. Could you give us the number, ex-FX translation?

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

2%.

Vivek Juneja -- J.P. Morgan Chase -- Analyst

2% growth in ex-FX translation. Okay.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, right on.

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Just to clarify -- this is Mark. The -- on the custody and fund services line that's where most of the currency impact would be and that impact was about a 2% benefit on a year-over-year basis.

Vivek Juneja -- J.P. Morgan Chase -- Analyst

Okay. So that means...

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

And that line -- I should also add, even though you didn't ask, that is the area that we saw the EAFE Local is down on a year-over-year basis. So that was actually a drag for that line markets were because that line, as we've talked about before, is probably 2% to 1%, more based on EAFE Local than I would say what domestic indices are doing.

Vivek Juneja -- J.P. Morgan Chase -- Analyst

Okay, great. Yeah,. And I did notice that you mentioned that markets were down and I was wondering, which one, so I'm glad you clarified that one, but is that -- and are you highlighting that because the fee rate is higher on that, Mark, because I don't think EAFE was over 50% of your revenues?

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Now, just to try and give you a sense of the importance, till you try and predict asset levels and trying to just to appreciate the influence of EAFE Local within the C&IS Trust fee base as opposed to Wealth, it's much more exclusively driven by just domestic indices.

Vivek Juneja -- J.P. Morgan Chase -- Analyst

All right. Okay. Thanks for clarifying that, but I'm going -- Jason with Mark. Okay, thanks. Thank you. Thank you.

Operator

Moving on we have Brennan Hawken with UBS.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Hey, Brennan.

Brennan Hawken -- UBS Securities -- Analyst

Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Just -- actually, sort of following up on that line of question from Vivek. When we look at the trends in AUC/A growth in C&IS versus revenue, it looks like, at least the way all of us knuckleheads from the outside model, you -- there was some fee rate pressure. I know that it doesn't always translate that way to how you run the business and how you strike the deals and the contracts and they -- the way all the pricing works, but could you maybe provide some color in helping us understand what might have caused some of those dynamics? Are those sustainable? What was behind that, just to help us inform as we sit down and think about our modeling and where to go from here?

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Understood. I think more and more frankly there is going to be less connectivity between the asset level and revenue level and lot of the negotiations that take place, we're thinking about trying to include more holistic approach to the relationship, which might be what we're doing with the firm with investment management, what we're doing with integrated trading solutions, what we might be doing from an IOO perspective, how we're handling cash and suite. And so I know it's super frustrating to not be able to just use that row on a model to predict the revenue, but more and more the reality is, it's just -- it's disconnected in terms of the way the business actually prices these relationships. Mark's spent a lot of time thinking about this too. Mark, you add your thoughts.

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Right. I mean, part of it, I would also say is fee structure and as we've talked about before, 35% to 40% of those asset servicing fees in C&IS are not directly linked to assets, so an environment where assets are rising, that factor alone would probably put the fees at a lower growth rate. And then, more importantly, and it gets a little bit to what Jason was saying as mix of business and even within the actual asset servicing fee category, a very large domestic U.S. custody mandate large assets, maybe not a large fee, a fund administration mandate could come with much less assets and the fees are significantly higher.

So there is a mix that's at play too besides the timing which we've talked about before, end of period versus earning over a quarter, but hopefully that helps. It's a tough one to unpack we understand to the point that Jason mentioned.

Brennan Hawken -- UBS Securities -- Analyst

Okay. So just -- that's all fair and I totally appreciate that. But to the point of -- can you give some color as to the point of the third quarter as a jumping-off point then? Like were trends that you saw in the quarter then reasonably sustainable? Was there some sort of noise that might have caused that divergence to look a little wider? Just to help us kind of, any help you can give on that front as we think about it?

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Yeah. Well, in the -- a couple of thoughts. One is that in the spirit of -- the business does have some compression, this to get to your specific point earlier, as you asked the question, I want to make sure we come back to and address it specifically. And those decompressions are going to be honored, whether or not we're in a COVID environment or not.

I actually think though that doesn't have as much of an influence on the dynamic that you're realizing, which is that there seems to be, there's a disconnect between the growth and asset levels in the growth trust fees. And then, the short run, you can have flows into and out of the business that are going to be reported on -- the assets you're going to be reported on where they are at the end of the period and the revenue is going to be reported based on where they were a prior period, period before that, maybe average.

And so, it's very misleading to try and do the math on short-term, to try and get a sense of what the fee-realization rates look like on the business, on an incremental basis, and even the business is being added, if it's being -- if it's a very large pieces of business, they could be at extremely low fee rates and -- but if it's more a middle-market activity, it could be much higher. So the business mix itself will have an influence there, but much less on the ultimate profitability.

Brennan Hawken -- UBS Securities -- Analyst

Okay. Thanks for your patience with that one. My second one, second question is around just trying to get at the processing error again, and I think, Mike, you might have made some comment about this, but I just wanted to kind of explore. I think you said that you all are continuing the review, those processes fee opportunities for automation control and process review, which is of course is ongoing, but maybe an event loss like this might sharpen pencils, so to speak.

Will this have some kind of impact do you think on investment in the near term or some of the expense lines as you guys look to maybe shift or invest in some automation, hire some additional staff through that effort, or what have you? Or is it more operational focus rather than the potential for investment?

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

So Brennan, I would say it's some of both. So certainly, there are the operational aspects, which I talked about. And just to be clear, we've done the full scrub on this incident already and have changed the procedures already and changed the controls already in that area. And from a resource perspective, it was not a question of insufficient resources in the area that resulted in the air all the same. We're trying to ensure that that isn't the case at any point going forward as well. So whatever resources, but that's not something that would result in a change in our financials if you will or expense run rate.

And then on investments, to your point there, it will -- the incident in and of itself, it doesn't change our investment plan. But the broader environment, without a doubt, you're always, we are always impacted by the situation that we're in, and as a result, prioritizing our investments. So there's -- the opportunities we have to invest far outstretch what we would deploy in a given year, and as a result, you have to determine, OK, how do you prioritize those? And do you focus on productivity investments for productivity, investments for risk management, investments for innovation and growth. And so that's a process we go through every year and ongoing. And I would say in the environment that we're in now, we have to ensure that yes, we have the operational resiliency and levels of automation to ensure that going forward.

And then, second, I would say, productivity. We have to make sure that we're investing the technology dollars in a way to get the productivity improvements we think we need in this environment to be able to drive scalable growth.

Brennan Hawken -- UBS Securities -- Analyst

Great. Thank you.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Sure.

Operator

And next from Seaport Global, we have Jim Mitchell.

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Hi, Jim. Jim, you might be on mute. Jim?

James Mitchell -- Seaport Global Securities LLC -- Analyst

Can you hear me?

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Yeah, I can hear you now.

James Mitchell -- Seaport Global Securities LLC -- Analyst

Can you hear me? Okay.

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Yes.

James Mitchell -- Seaport Global Securities LLC -- Analyst

Sorry about that. So maybe just a follow-up on deposits. It seems like noninterest-bearing deposits for you guys grew pretty nicely, both on a average and period-end basis, where your peers saw declines. And it seems like that helped you, I guess, outperform on NII a little bit. So I just, is there anything unusual in the noninterest-bearing side, is that something you're trying to grow or is that just these episodic puts and takes?

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

I mean, I -- maybe I'd put it a little bit in between. I mean, first of all, actually, I think it's good for people to realize the reason we did better than we anticipated with NII frankly, a little bit less around the size of deposits that certainly played a factor, but I come back to the fact that we were able to turn on non-cash and loans held in better.

And -- but then to your specific question about the growth in that category, hard for us to comment on what the industry is experiencing, but we've -- back to the scene that we talk about liquidity a lot with our clients and they view, they tended comment to us that they view our balance sheet is very strong, we try to position it that way. And so we're happy to be liquidity partner for our clients there, and I do think that has an influence on where they tend to park their short-term assets.

James Mitchell -- Seaport Global Securities LLC -- Analyst

Okay. Looks fair and then -- and maybe for Mike. You mentioned it upfront that you're trying to do more with current clients. What -- any example that you can give us in terms of what you see as the biggest opportunity set to do more with your current clients?

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

So, first of all, I would say within the businesses there is definitely the opportunity and one we're pursuing to do more, particularly, I would say with asset managers. And so just thinking about our approach to the market from a whole office perspective, it's not just back office or middle office, but also, what we can do on the front office. So I mentioned, for example, integrated trading solutions or essentially outsourced trading for those institutions, that's doing more with those clients. So it's using really our position of strength, which is in the back in the middle office to be able to do more in the front office for them.

So that's on that side and I could use, I'll say, other examples within the businesses but also, I want to add though and highlight, it's also across the businesses. And so, it's a concerted effort to say, if we have a, let's say, an administration client, fund administration client, are we providing wealth management to the executives of that firm? Or if we have a corporate client where we are the asset servicer for their pension plans, can we provide a wealth management solution or program, what we would call firm-to-firm for their executive group. And so it's those types of cross-business opportunities that -- historically, we've done very well with these, but I would say it's more because of the culture and the way that we operate, and we're trying to be more purposeful and disciplined about how we do that.

James Mitchell -- Seaport Global Securities LLC -- Analyst

Okay, great. Thanks for the talk.

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Sure.

Operator

All right. We'll move on to Steven Chubak with Wolfe Research.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Hey.

Steven Chubak -- Wolfe Research, LLC -- Analyst

Hi. Good morning. So, wanted to start off with a question on just some of the NII comments. And specifically, I was hoping you could help us think about the incremental capacity that you have currently to remix some of those excess reserves into securities. And just as we think about modeling the securities yields, where are you into reinvesting today versus the 130 basis points on the back book?

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

The capacity is a trickier one because it depends on how quickly that deposits come in and if we -- and sometimes we have to let deposits season in order to get proper treatment for those to -- and get it, and get the confidence level, they're going to be -- that they're going to stick around, so that we know we can take more duration risk with those. And so the reality is the size of the deposit base doesn't necessarily correlate exactly to what we can think about in terms of non-cash reinvestment opportunity.

In terms of the opportunities on where we are investing at the time, there is more of a distinction there. Frankly, we did step away from just Central Bank Deposits once we started to feel that the balance sheet was more stable. And frankly, it is just something people have missed, part of the reason that that I think all banks were even going to the point of why did -- why were share repurchases suspended. Banks wanted to be there for their clients, if in case there were significant loan demand and in case there is very significant demand to place deposits where you want to make sure that regulatory ratios were going to be adequate.

And given the fact that we've got such a large custody base, we wanted to make sure that if those assets started to come for the balance sheet, we were going to feel good about it. And so we were patient on that and -- but the more we realize that there was stability from a client perspective, the other components to the regulatory environment were there and more stable, we could take a step away. And what we did in third quarter was really incremental in size and in asset class.

But if you think about eventually the things that we can start to move more toward longer-dated securities and we can start to move more toward CLOs, more toward MBS. Now the -- unfortunately, in a typical environment, you might see more or less 50, 70 basis point differential between the non-HQLA portfolio and the HQLA portfolio, that's compressed and it's more like a 30 basis point differential at this point. And there are other things that we can do and explore based on what the opportunity set is given the risk and return framework at the different securities that we feel comfortable in. But that should at least give you a little bit of a framework on how we think about it, and a little bit of the dynamics from a quantitative perspective as well.

Steven Chubak -- Wolfe Research, LLC -- Analyst

All right, OK, that's helpful color. And then just thinking about the expense outlook, now looking at the 2021, I just wanted to better understand how we should be thinking about the expense growth trajectory? NII is expected to decline about low-double digits assuming versus the current run rate, things are relatively stable. The fee income growth potentially growing mid-single digits at least on an organic basis. And just wondering is there room to do better on costs where expense growth actually lags in the organic fee growth to help dampen some of those pressures or how you thinking about it in terms of the general internal philosophy?

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Well, we still consider ourselves a growth firm and we're investing for growth in new things. Things even like the growth in the money market mutual funds. It takes investment upfront to get the cut-off times right and to get investments done with portals. It takes also the expense growth on an incremental basis, when you think about the administration fees that we pay to some of the -- on some of the processing side.

And so I think that's a good example. Just thinking, we think about things more from an operating leverage perspective. And to the extent that we have good operating leverage in the business, then we're going to feel OK about the expense growth, otherwise we have to be extraordinarily disciplined about it. And so let me just break it down in three different levels of how -- and to your question, how do we think about it in three different levels. One is total operating leverage, two, trust fee operating leverage, and three, organic trust fee operating leverage.

Now on the first, with this total operating leverage that's including a very declining component of revenue which is NII. And so it's going to be very difficult. And I don't think it's a very pure test right now given the unpredictability and the disconnect of that line items from the rest of the business, you think about that as the one we want you to focus on.

The other end of the spectrum is organic trust fee leverage. Unfortunately there that's not a GAAP number and so we can give you some component about how we think about it, but we can't really ask you to track that and just trust us, that it's going to what we're expecting. So let's focus in the middle on trust fee leverage. And there I think that's probably the best from what you can see and from what we think about, that's probably the way to focus our discussion and track how we're doing. But those three elements and certainly trust fee operating leverage, a very big one for us to -- as we think about the expense trajectory next year, it's incredibly front of mind for us.

Again, we went through the entire replan. We did the replan on expenses, we did it on capital, we did it on strategy. And so as we go into 2021, the trust fee leverage is going to be a key item to make sure we're doing and exhibiting the discipline we should given the net interest income environment that we're in. We are giving up $300 million. If you think, if you extrapolate what we're -- what we've done so far this year and put that kind of on a run rate and you try with hundreds of millions of dollars that we've given up in NII. And we're not going to ignore that. We're going to be -- we got to be disciplined and have a high sense of urgency about doing what we can to get the expenses as lean as possible given the environment we're in.

Steven Chubak -- Wolfe Research, LLC -- Analyst

Thanks for that context. And just two quick modeling questions if I may. One is just how we should be thinking about the jumping-off point for other income, given there is a lot of noise in the quarter as we just look out in 4Q and heading into 2021? And then just on the fee waivers, just to clarify quickly $5 million was the impact this quarter but it still sounds like your expectation is somewhere in the range of $25 million to $35 million for the quarter headwind exiting this year, is that right?

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Yes.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, that's right, yeah. Again this is -- and I thought about mentioning it earlier, but I want to make sure we're giving you guys everything we can. The -- I mean if you think about call -- hopefully, call it $300 billion base of business and say $200 billion of it is somewhere in flow for waivers. And the different funds jump into waiver mode at different levels, but if you look at where the overnight repo for example is right now, and if you look at the NIF treasury, if you look at the treasury products and those are the biggest products we have. And this is all -- but you got to imagine that over 50% of the assets are 30 days or less. And so and at $90 billion roughly, you're talking about $9 million per basis point.

And so I cringe giving you guys numbers that have such volatility in them, but just think about how much of a dynamic that is that that fund, if that strategy comes down literally a single basis point, it influences run rate by almost $10 million a year. And so the numbers you've quoted are right, but I think it's important for everybody to track the overnight repo market, track 30-day treasuries, track 6 month, track 12 month to get a better sense intra-quarter of what that number might be looking like.

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

And on the other operating income. This is Mark. It certainly has volatility, so can I appreciate the difficulty modeling it. If you looked at averages over the last year and a half or so, you're probably looking at something in the mid to upper 40 range. This quarter, we did have some benefit from the supplemental compensation plans that sit within that line that were a little bit out-sized versus what they've normally been, so you're probably a little high this quarter. And if you looked at the average, like I said mid to upper 40s.

Steven Chubak -- Wolfe Research, LLC -- Analyst

Perfect. Thanks for clarifying that. Appreciate you taking my questions.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks.

Operator

Moving on we have Mike Mayo with Wells Fargo Securities.

Mike Mayo -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Hi. So it looks like you have best in-class fee growth led by best in-class wealth and asset management growth, but I still need help on the disconnect between the growth in assets under custody, which were up twice the pace up here year-over-year up 16% and the custody fee line, which is up only half as much. And then, you said timing is part of it, but if you look at the last 12 months, assets under custody were up twice as much and your related fees or that in mind, so it just seems like outside AUC growth relative to the fees and I know you said some kind of AUC is not tied fees, that's fine, but instead have been keen to explain everything that's going on there. So either it's something else in there or you're refining based on price or I'm just missing something? Thanks.

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

So let me address -- the -- that business, most of the vast, vast majority of AUC in wealth is GFO. And the reason for that is we're -- that's where the outsized portion of clients that might not manage here, but that want to use us as a custodian, it's kind of a hybrid business between the wealth business and the institutional business. And so, when you look at the AC -- the AUC number there, that's vast majority is GFO, that client base is very, very -- it's very, very spiky. And so, you get very high number of -- you get a small number of clients that can literally have billions or tens of billions of dollars of assets coming in from an AUC perspective and that's not going to influence how we think about the pricing on the overall relationship, we think about the relationship very holistically and if the client has a -- we could be mega, mega liquidity events from a small number of clients that will move that line item, that AUC number dramatically without influencing fees.

Mike Mayo -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

And what's happening with those super high net worth customers then, what are they doing? What did -- and what have you seen recently?

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Yeah. So a lot of times they'll have a large sale, it could be life event, it could be business sale...

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Single stock.

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Single stock exposure that they're dealing with, they'll ask us to custody those assets for a period of time until they decide where to put those funds to work. And so -- and our goal is to work -- first of all, be that provider so that we can be a best-in-class custodian for them and then introduce the other advisors, managers to do what we can to also be a manager and a financial advisor. We might do manager selection for them, we might become an OCIO provider, they might put some of those assets into -- they might move those assets from where they are into our liquidity funds, they might ask us to do tax-advantaged equity investing, where we're very tax-conscious, they might do a more aggressive ESG mandate. But the custodian in that business, especially if it's a mandate of that size, is going to obviously significantly change the denominator, but in the short run, it's not going to change the numerator, which is the fees we're getting off of those assets.

Mike Mayo -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Okay. And I want just one follow-up. So just behind the question was pricing competition in the servicing business, is it getting worse, better? How do you think about competing, I mean, sometimes it might make sense to take lower prices, because of the scalability?

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Yeah. The -- in general, the conversations are have been or hopefully starting to be more about what is your capability set, what does resiliency look like, how did you handle the crisis, what are you able to do to help us from either investment operations outsourcing, Mike hinted earlier, integrated trading solutions. And so all those things in the long run, should be helpful in moving away and just like the asset management business and moving away from just talking about investment performance here, moving away from just talking about pricing and more value added, in the short run, there were concessions that we agreed to as we do every year and those played through early in the year. And so -- but in the longer run, we're hoping that these conversations are more about capabilities and about service quality are going to reduce those -- the frequency of and severity of the -- of pricing discussions, but we're always going to have...

Mike Mayo -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Sorry, but the word concession. The word concessions kind of sticks out in my mind, I -- so is there a magnitude of a concessions, do they come back or they just -- how does that work?

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

I think it still comes back to the 1.5% to 2% a year of kind of price compression.

Mike Mayo -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Yeah.

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

So I don't -- the word concession maybe is a little different, but repricing, that's just the kind of thing that we've seen pretty consistently and I don't know if Jason that the business is talking about that picking up or accelerating at all.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

And Mike, I would just add, so we have large relationships that are good, but those client relationships have grown, meaning the assets have grown, just like we talked about when their fees are tied to a bit on those assets that we're either custodian and administrating, whatever it may be, they tend to then go up over time and then the client looked at it and says, hey, I'd like to take a look at the pricing on this because your fees have gone up because our assets have gone up and yet from a work perspective, you maybe doing more, but not as much as our asset growth.

And so, that's the exercise if you're not able to come to an agreement then a client can say, we're going to take it out for a rebid and then in that process, then as a result, they are likely to get more aggressive pricing on it. Now again, we try to minimize when it has to go through that full process, but I think that's the nature for very large institutions like that.

I would also say on new business, just to be clear, price is a factor of course and we lose business on pricing at times. And so it's not as though we price to win, we price to win at a profitable margin for us and have models to be able to determine what are the resources required and therefore, where can we price it and if we can't get there with either where we think it is or you just find out through a process you lost and the reason why you lost is your pricing was not aggressive enough relative to the ultimate effect.

Mike Mayo -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Thank you.

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sure.

Operator

And next, we have Gerard Cassidy with RBC.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Hey, Gerard.

Gerard Cassidy -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Good morning, everyone. I got a big picture question and -- where you're able to track. Your balance sheet and the deposits, Jason, you mentioned that I think moving forward [Technical Issues] question [Technical Issues] what do you think normal is [Technical Issues] more than the sizing, how's the base, you mentioned, customers have much more liquidity because of certain [Technical Issues] and we all know that. [Technical Issues] $7[Phonetic] trillion, what do you think your normal size and being, do you happen or maybe you have [Technical Issues] seem to get there, is it 22, 23, any color?

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Gerard, it's Mike. One, I just first -- just clarify your question it's around -- as you started it, bigger picture question, but with all these factors going on, what is your expectation for a normal -- the normal side, I'll call it, for the balance sheet, is that what you're getting at?

Gerard Cassidy -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Yes. Yeah, that's correct.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Okay, OK. Let me make one comment and then, since you led in with big picture that allows me to answer it without all the details that Jason can provide. But I would say, as much as you might say, boy, there has been a lot of monetary policy across the globe and that has elevated besides of your balance sheet. And so would you expect that to kind of come out of the system and see your balance sheet go back down, so do you have clinical excess deposits right now? My perspective on it is, we're into a very long-term period for this type of monetary policy. And so, I don't know how to define normal, but as far as the liquidity that our clients have right now and what they're doing with it, be it on our balance sheet, in the fund, I think there's going to be a lot of liquidity in the marketplace for some time period. Now, it ebbs and flows as far as our client and our balance sheet and funds. But just in general, I think the water level is higher and I think it will remain higher for some time period. Jason, I don't know if you want to add?

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

As this is the only thing just to, maybe book-ended is that if you go back a year ago, deposits were kind of mid '80s billings. And if you think about, you knew that your deposits are today in the one teens. And so I would use those as the bookends, but I think Mike's comments reflect it's probably near the higher end of that bookend.

Gerard Cassidy -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Yeah. And then, just to come back to the processing area that you've been very vividly explaining what happened. You mentioned processing areas occur over time planning and to -- you need to processing, in processes whichever year of course. The actual, the revenue execution, was it upsized execution you owned into your normal processing services cost and outsized cost? And then, the second, was it the cost in its -- in the execution have temporary could it be to figure it out?

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. So, Gerard, again, I -- just because your line is cutting in and out a little bit, but I think I have the question. The first one, you're trying to get your arms around the size of the loss. And the two things I would say, one is that it was a large corporate action. So size-wise in the marketplace, it was a large corporate action and our clients were active in that particular corporate action. So that was one aspect of the size. It was large for the market. It wasn't necessarily any larger for us vis-a-vis anybody else. It just happened to be a large corporate action.

And then second, as far as a timing perspective, the air, just to be clear, was identified within minutes of having being made and so, it's not -- and then it was ultimately remediated as soon as we could practically do it. So we did not carry a risk position, I'll call it for an extended time period that just got worse because we thought markets were going to change or anything like that. Is there, obviously, unfortunate situation, we're very disappointed about it, but we look to mitigate the potential costs as soon as practical and we were able to do that.

Gerard Cassidy -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Amazing Mike. Thank you.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Sure.

Operator

And moving on we have Rob Wildhack with Autonomous Research.

Robert Wildhack -- Autonomous Research -- Analyst

Good morning, guys. Mike, you started to touch on it a little bit in the last third the call here. In the past, you've emphasized scalability, in your opening remarks today, you emphasized tech solutions. So I was hoping you could give us an update on the progress you've made here on these priorities and where you think that they're the best opportunities to increase scalability and up your tech solutions going forward.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

I think that, Rob, the expectation would be that I would say it's all in our asset servicing business and the processes and operations around that, which is certainly from a dollar perspective, that's the largest opportunity. And it's one, as you mentioned, we've been pursuing that and the point here is, we'll only continue to do it, and if you did say within 2020 and everything that's happened, has that affected the pace? I would say it has and some of it is I would say the fortunate circumstances of seeing the model operate differently and seeing new opportunities for scalability within the business model.

So more remote work is definitely a part of that and frankly, managing the processes is different in a remote environment than it is in a facilities in person-based model. And so we've had to adapt and as we've acknowledged, there have been changes and risks that come with that, but also I'm saying there is also some opportunity where we see to get more scalability. But then the other aspect to my response is going to be that in areas where it's already relatively scalable, so for example in wealth management, as that business becomes more digital that becomes even more scalable as well.

The point being that, and again, we've seen an acceleration of that in this environment as well, because as much as we will always offer the highest level of service for our clients and that's our market positioning, that's a differentiator for it, the nature of that has changed over time and has only accelerated.

Being more specific, clients need to and want to be able to do more things on their own through mobile or other digital devices and that's great. So instead of necessarily calling someone here to get something done, they can just go to their phone and get it done. Well, that changes the scalability of that activity because they can -- we can have as much volume of that as you can imagine, but it doesn't increase the resources or certainly, at the same rate. So we see it as I say, kind of across the company and it's just a matter of continuing to execute.

Robert Wildhack -- Autonomous Research -- Analyst

Okay, that's great. Thanks, Mike.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Sure.

Operator

All right. Moving on we'll take our final question from Brian Kleinhanzl with KBW.

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Brian.

Brian Kleinhanzl -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. -- Analyst

Hi. Thanks, guys. Yeah, I just have one quick question, I mean, at this point. When you think about the pipeline, and I know it's a mix of different lines that are in there and different processes that you're onboarding, but we think that the onboarding process underneath this operating environment as you're going to have to work with today, how much longer is the onboarding process as to you could make about how to lag these revenues in this current environment versus what it will have been previously? Thanks.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Sure. So as Jason mentioned, we did have a, call it deferral in the transitions, particularly in the second quarter and then we picked back up, transitions pick back up in the third quarter, particularly, toward the end of the quarter and yet he has also said we have a high level of business that has been won that needs to be transitioned. And you've identified one of the aspects of how that has changed the cadence or sequencing of those transitions because some of them are much easier to do in a virtual environment.

So if you think about, I'll call it custody-type mandates, there's a lot of activity that's required, but that happens or can happen, a lot of it frankly, it was already I would call it very digital or it could be done virtually, whereas if you think about broader and IOO, investment office outsourcing mandates, those are more difficult to do, they involve more people. And so, when those people are remote whether there are that -- the client's or ours or there is some requirements for us to be hiring people to be able to take on that business that does take longer to implement and to get transitioned. And then there's all types of mandates I would say that are in between there. And we're moving on them.

So you heard some of the fund administration wins that we've had in the 40 times space, which has been great, but it does take a little bit longer given the nature of that activity that you're taking on.

Brian Kleinhanzl -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. -- Analyst

Okay.

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Operator, any other questions?

Operator

No, sir. That was the final question and that does conclude our Q&A session. So I'll turn the floor back to you for any additional or closing remarks, sir.

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Thanks, everyone, for joining us. We'll talk to you in 90 days.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 104 minutes

Call participants:

Mark Bette -- Director, Investor Relations

Michael G. O'Grady -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Jason J. Tyler -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Ken Usdin -- Jefferies Financial Group -- Analyst

Glenn Schorr -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Alex Blostein -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Betsy Graseck -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Mike Carrier -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Brian Bedell -- Deutsche Bank AG -- Analyst

Vivek Juneja -- J.P. Morgan Chase -- Analyst

Brennan Hawken -- UBS Securities -- Analyst

James Mitchell -- Seaport Global Securities LLC -- Analyst

Steven Chubak -- Wolfe Research, LLC -- Analyst

Mike Mayo -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Gerard Cassidy -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Robert Wildhack -- Autonomous Research -- Analyst

Brian Kleinhanzl -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. -- Analyst

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