Investor Presentation Goldman Sachs US Financial Services Conference - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

investor presentation
SMART_READER_LITE
LIVE PREVIEW

Investor Presentation Goldman Sachs US Financial Services Conference - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Investor Presentation Goldman Sachs US Financial Services Conference December 7, 2016 Disclaimer Forward-Loo ooking State teme ments ts This presentation may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private


slide-1
SLIDE 1

Investor Presentation

Goldman Sachs US Financial Services Conference

December 7, 2016

slide-2
SLIDE 2

Disclaimer

2

Forward-Loo

  • oking State

teme ments ts

This presentation may contain “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 that involve significant risks, assumptions, and uncertainties, including statements relating to the market opportunity and future business prospects of Stifel Financial Corp., as well as Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated and its subsidiaries (collectively, “SF” or the “Company”). These statements can be identified by the use of the words “may,” “will,” “should,” “could,” “would,” “plan,” “potential,” “estimate,” “project,” “believe,” “intend,” “anticipate,” “expect,” and similar expressions. In particular, these statements may refer to our goals, intentions, and expectations, our business plans and growth strategies, our ability to integrate and manage our acquired businesses, estimates of our risks and future costs and benefits, and forecasted demographic and economic trends relating to our industry. You should not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date they were made. We will not update these forward-looking statements, even though our situation may change in the future, unless we are obligated to do so under federal securities laws. Actual results may differ materially and reported results should not be considered as an indication of future performance. Factors that could cause actual results to differ are included in the Company’s annual and quarterly reports and from time to time in other reports filed by the Company with the Securities and Exchange Commission and include, among other things, changes in general economic and business conditions, actions of competitors, regulatory and legal actions, changes in legislation, and technology changes. Use of

  • f Non-GAAP

AP Financi cial Measur ures The Company utilized certain non-GAAP calculations as additional measures to aid in understanding and analyzing the Company’s financial results for the three months and nine months ended September 30, 2016. Specifically, the Company believes that the non-GAAP measures provide useful information by excluding certain items that may not be indicative of the Company’s core operating results and business outlook. The Company believes that these non-GAAP measures will allow for a better evaluation of the operating performance of the business and facilitate a meaningful comparison of the Company’s results in the current period to those in prior and future periods. Reference to these non-GAAP measures should not be considered as a substitute for results that are presented in a manner consistent with GAAP. These non-GAAP measures are provided to enhance investors' overall understanding of the Company’s current financial performance. The non- GAAP financial information should be considered in addition to, not as a substitute for or as being superior to, operating income, cash flows, or other measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with GAAP. These non-GAAP measures primarily exclude expenses which management believes are, in some instances, non-recurring and not representative of ongoing business. Management has not included costs which they believe are duplicative in the analysis below, which is a change from prior periods. A limitation of utilizing these non-GAAP measures is that the GAAP accounting effects of these charges do, in fact, reflect the underlying financial results of the Company’s business and these effects should not be ignored in evaluating and analyzing its financial results. Therefore, the Company believes that GAAP measures and the same respective non-GAAP measures of the Company’s financial performance should be considered together.

slide-3
SLIDE 3

3

Our Strategy

slide-4
SLIDE 4

Strategic Vision

4

To build a premier wealth management and investment banking firm

Global Wealth Management Institutional

Private Client

2,280 financial advisors in nearly 359 branches with more than $200B in client assets

Asset Management

$27B in total assets managed through various strategies

Bank

$11.2B in assets funded by client deposits

Equities Sales + Trading Fixed Income Sales + Trading Investment Banking Research

Experienced sales force with extensive distribution capabilities Comprehensive platform including research, strategy and DCM teams Over 400 professionals with extensive experience across all products and industry verticals Largest research platform with approximately 1,300 U.S. and 290 European stocks covered

slide-5
SLIDE 5

A History of Growth

5

$188 $217 $247 $264 $452 $763 $870 $1,091 $1,382 $1,393 $1,594 $1,973 $2,208 $2,332 $2,550 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016* Net Revenues ($MM)

2005 2005 Legg Mason’s Capital Markets s Division 2008 2008 Butler Wick 2009 2009 56 UBS Private te Client nt Branches s 2010 2010 Thomas s Weisel Partner ners 2007 2007 Ryan Beck Acquisiti tion Stifel Bank & Trust st 2011 2011 Stone ne & Youngber berg 2012 2012 Miller Buckfire 2013 2013 Knight Capital Group’s Fixed Income Divisi sion 2014 2014 De La Rosa, Oriel Securiti ties, s, 1919 Invest stment nt Counse sel, Merchant nt Capita tal 2013 2013 Keefe, Bruyett tte & Woods 2013 2013 Acacia Bank & Ziegler Lotso soff 2015 2015 Barclays ys Wealth th & Investm stment nt Management nt, Sterne ne Agee, Sidoti ti Joint t Ventur ture, Leumi Partner ners s Collaborati tion n Agreement nt 2016 2016 Eaton n Partner ners ISM M Capita tal * 2016 Net Revenue annualized based on YTD16 results and adjustment for 2H16 for impact of the sale of legacy Sterne Agee business

slide-6
SLIDE 6

Driving Shareholder Value Through Deal Integration & Balance Sheet Growth

6

slide-7
SLIDE 7

7

Infrastr tructu ture Build

Balance Sheet Growth

$- $5,000 $10,000 $15,000 $20,000 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 3Q15 4Q15 1Q16 2Q16 3Q16 Illustrative $1,558 $3,167 $4,213 $4,952 $6,966 $9,009 $9,518 $9,359 $13,326 $14,214 $15,386 $17,205 $18,000 Total Assets in Millions

Ratio

2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 3Q15 4Q15 1Q16 2Q16 3Q16 Illustrative Tier 1 Leverage 32.3% 30.5% 25.6% 21.4% 17.7% 15.4% 16.5% 16.4% 16.6% 11.6% 11.5% 11.8% 9.7% Tier 1 Risk Based Capital 49.4% 40.5% 29.1% 27.4% 26.8% 26.7% 25.0% 29.4% 26.3% 21.3% 20.9% 22.0% 21.4% Risk Weighting Assets Density 64.9% 56.2% 67.3% 62.7% 57.0% 50.7% 58.2% 52.0% 46.6% 49.0% 49.1% 46.2% 46.2%

slide-8
SLIDE 8

Bank Drove Significant Balance Sheet & Revenue Growth

8

Impact of Bank Growth LTM on Consolidated Results

(mil.) 9/30/2015 9/30/2016

Total consolidated assets $9,359 $17,205 Investment securities $2,569 $6,535 Loans $2,589 $5,174 Total deposits $4,117 $9,885 Total equity $2,493 $2,692 Annualized NII $134 $222 Tier 1 Risk Based Capital 29.4% 22.0% Tier 1 Leverage 16.4% 11.8% NIM (Bank) 2.50% 2.40% ROAA (Bank) 1.98% 1.27% ROAE (Bank) 24.9% 18.6% NPAs/Assets 0.03% 0.25%

Bank nk grow

  • wth

th has been n bal alance anced betwee een n loans and nd inv nvestme tments: Loa Loans:

  • Comprised of securities based loans, C&I, and

residential mortgages

  • Focused lending to high net worth retail clients
  • Effective duration of approximately 1.5 years as
  • f 9/30/16

AFS & HTM Inves estme ments ts:

  • 69% of the portfolio is fully guaranteed by a US

GSE or rated AAA as of 9/30/16

  • Portfolio primarily GSE MBS, ABS, and

Corporate bonds

  • Effective duration of approximately 2.1years
slide-9
SLIDE 9

9

Stifel Overview

slide-10
SLIDE 10

Stifel – Premier Investment Bank and Wealth Management Firm

10

Stifel at a Glance GAAP Net Revenue - $2,495 million (Q3’16 LTM) Global Wealth Management (GWM) Net Revenue - $1,503 million (Q3’16 LTM) Institutional Group (IG) Net Revenue - $1,007 million (Q3’16 LTM)

  • Private Client
  • Stifel Bank & Trust
  • Margin and Securities-based Lending
  • Asset Management
  • Equity & Fixed Income Capital Raising
  • M&A Advisory / Restructuring
  • Institutional Equity and Fixed Income Brokerage
  • Independent Research
  • Low leverage (6.4x) (1) (2), $2.7 billion stockholders’ equity (2) and $3.3 billion market capitalization (3)
  • 34% Insider ownership aligns employees' interests with other shareholders (4)
  • Over 7,000 associates(2)
  • Balanced business mix (60% GWM / 40% IG) (2016 YTD net revenues)
  • National presence with nearly 2,300 financial advisors(2)
  • Largest U.S. equity research platform with roughly 1,300 stocks under coverage(3)
  • Broad investment banking and institutional sales and trading capabilities – domestic and international

(1) Assets / equity (as adjusted). (2) As of 9/30/2016. (3) As of 11/28/2016. (4) Insider ownership percentage includes all fully diluted shares, units outstanding and options outstanding, as of 4/11/2016.

slide-11
SLIDE 11

Leading broker-dealer providing wealth management and institutional services to consumers and companies

11

Bulge Bracket Boutique

 Size / scale  Large distribution  Trading  Retail Issues  Lack of focus  Banker turnover  Lack of commitment  Research indifference  Lack of growth investors  Firm focus  Good research  Growth investor access Issues  Financial / firm stability  Trading support  Few with retail

Size / scale

Firm focus

Stability (financial & personnel)

Large distribution

Trading

Outstanding research

Retail

Instit titution tional

Wealth lth Man Managem emen ent

LARGEST provider of U.S. equity research

2nd

nd LARGEST Equity trading platform in the U.S. outside

  • f the Bulge Bracket firms(1)

FULL SE SERVICE investment banking with expertise across products and industry sectors

AC ACCES ESS TO top ten private client platform

#7 Largest st Reta tail il Brok

  • kerage

age Network twork(2)

Rank Firm Brok

  • kers

ers 1 16,069 2 Bank of America Merrill Lynch 15,856 3 Wells Fargo Securities 15,086 4 UBS 7,087 5 Raymond James 7,146 6 Stifel el 2,280 80 7 RBC Capital Markets 2,000 8 Oppenheimer & Co 1,177 9 JPMorgan 2,560 Morgan Stanley Wealth Management

(1) Based on 2015 U.S. trading volume per Bloomberg. (2) Source: SIFMA and publicly available information for U.S. brokerage networks. Includes investment banks only.

slide-12
SLIDE 12

Well-diversified, Low Risk Business Model with Balanced Retail and Institutional Exposure

12

Unburdened by capital constraints

Low leverage business model and conservative risk management

Limited balance sheet risk

Stable wealth management business is augmented by profitable and growing institutional business

Drive revenue synergies by leveraging the wealth management and institutional business

Net t Revenues

2015 2016 YTD

Non-GA GAAP AP Operatin rating g Contri ribution tion

2015 2016 YTD

Bala alanced d busine ness model el fa facilit itat ates growth

  • wth in al

all mark rket et envi nvironments

Note: Net revenues and operating contribution percentages excludes the Other segment.

slide-13
SLIDE 13

A Stable Track Record Through Multiple Business Cycles

13

Non-GAAP Net t Revenues ($MM)(1) (2) Non-GAAP Net t Income

  • me ($MM)(1)(2)

Total tal Equity ty ($MM) (1

(1)(2)

Total tal Client Asse sets ts(1

(1) ) (3) ($BN)

Book Value Per Share(1) (4)

$452 $763 $870 $1,091 $1,384 $1,417 $1,594 $1,978 $2,213 $2,332 $1,914 $2,550 $0 $500 $1,000 $1,500 $2,000 $2,500 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 $40 $67 $73 $76 $125 $114 $145 $185 $210 $193 $150 $200 $0 $50 $100 $150 $200 $250 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 $220 $425 $593 $873 $1,254 $1,302 $1,495 $2,059 $2,320 $2,492 $2,692 $0 $400 $800 $1,200 $1,600 $2,000 $2,400 $2,800 $3,200 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 $35 $59 $53 $94 $114 $122 $138 $166 $187 $220 $234 $0 $50 $100 $150 $200 $250 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 $8.23 $12.24 $15.12 $19.24 $24.42 $25.10 $27.24 $32.30 $35.00 $37.19 $40.65 $0 $10 $20 $30 $40 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016

(1) CAGR reflects years 2006 through Q3’16 YTD Annualized, (2) 2016 results based on annualized 3QTD results (3) Excludes impact of sale of Sterne Agee Independent Contractor & Correspondent Clearing businesses (4) Book Value Per Share adjusted for April 2011 three-for-two stock split (2006-2010).

slide-14
SLIDE 14

14

Global Wealth Management

slide-15
SLIDE 15

Global Wealth Management (GWM)

15

Provides Securities Brokerage Services and Stifel Bank Products

Overview iew Natio ional al Presen ence

Grown from 600+ financial advisors in 2005 to nearly 2,300 financial advisors currently

Proven organic growth and acquirer of private client business

Strategy of recruiting experienced advisors with established client relationships

Expanding U.S. footprint

Net t Revenues(1) ($ ($MM MM) Operat atin ing g Contributio tion(1) ($MM MM)

$231 $441 $471 $596 $843 $908 $992 $1,117 $1,233 $1,377 $1,156 $1,541 $0 $400 $800 $1,200 $1,600 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 $50 $96 $98 $104 $194 $235 $267 $300 $347 $382 $307 $409 $0 $50 $100 $150 $200 $250 $300 $350 $400 $450 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016

(1) Full year 2016 net revenue and operating contribution based on 3QTD annualized results and adjust for impact to 4Q16 due to sale of legacy Sterne Agee businesses.

slide-16
SLIDE 16

Building Scale and Capabilities into a $1.5B Revenue Segment

16

Priv ivate e Clien ent Asset et Ma Managem gemen ent Ba Bank 56 UBS Branches

  • Private Client – 350 financial advisors and support
  • Revenue production has exceeded expectations
  • October 2009
  • Private Client – 75 financial advisors
  • Public Finance
  • December 2008
  • Private Client – 400 financial advisors
  • Capital Markets
  • February 2007
  • Asset Management
  • Over $4 billion in assets
  • November 2013
  • Customized investment advisory and trust services
  • November 2014
  • ~100 advisors managing over $20B in AUM
  • December 2015
  • ~130 advisors managing ~ $10B in AUM
  • June 2015
  • Bank holding company
  • Grown assets from ~ $100M to $7.3B
  • April 2007
  • One-branch community bank; 95% of loan portfolio sold in

3Q15

  • October 2013
slide-17
SLIDE 17

GWM - Private Client Group

17

Key Operating Metrics

Accoun unts(1

(1)

Financial nancial Advisor

  • rs(1

(1)

Total Client Assets(1)

(1) ($

($MM) MM) Branch anches(1

(1)

735 1,163 1,315 1,885 1,935 1,987 2,041 2,077 2,103 2,291 2,280 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 2,500 3,000 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 111 148 196 272 285 291 307 317 330 361 359 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 213,973 340,235 375,165 607,661 635,842 654,625 681,818 703,663 728,444 793,795 797,968 100,000 200,000 300,000 400,000 500,000 600,000 700,000 800,000 900,000 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 35,446 59,299 52,733 93,845 113,585 122,466 137,855 165,570 186,558 219,900 234,490 50,000 100,000 150,000 200,000 250,000 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016

(1) Excludes Legacy Sterne Agee Independent Contractor Business.

slide-18
SLIDE 18

GWM – Stifel Bank & Trust

18

Acquired FirstService Bank, a St. Louis-based, Missouri- chartered commercial bank, in April 2007

Stifel Financial became a bank holding company and financial services holding company

Substantial Balance sheet growth with low-risk assets

Funded by Stifel Nicolaus client deposits

Maintain high levels of liquidity

Overview iew Key y Stati tatistic tics (000s) (4)

(4)

Total assets $11,207,000 Total deposits 9,885,000 Total equity 740,000 ROAA 1.3% ROAE 18.6% Tier 1 Risk Based Capital 13.7% Tier 1 Leverage 7.5% NPAs/Assets 0.3%

Inves estmen ment Portfo tfoli lio(2) Loa Loan Por

  • rtfoli

lio(3) (Gro ross) Interest Earnin ings Assets ts(1)

1% 1% 51% 51% 48% 48% Cash Investment Securities Loans Receivable 42% 42% 16% 16% 1% 1% 38% 38% 3% 3% ABS Corporates Munis Agency MBS CMBS 31% 31% 36% 36% 30% 30% 2% 1% 1% Securities-based lending Commercial and industrial Residential real estate Commercial real estate Other³ Note: Data as of 9/30/16. (1) Average interest earning assets for quarter ended 9/30/16. (2) Non-agency MBS makes up less than 1% of Investment Portfolio. (3) Other includes construction and land, consumer loans, and home equity lines of credit. (4) NPAs include: nonaccrual loans, restructured loans, loans 90+ days past due, and other real estate owned.

slide-19
SLIDE 19

Growing Asset Management Capabilities

19

Asset Management Subsidiaries¹ with $27.2 Billion in Client Assets

¹Stifel affiliated asset managers with greater than $1 billion in client assets as of 9/30/2016 included in table on slide EquityCompass Strategies is a research and investment advisory unit of Choice Financial Partners, Inc. (“Choice”). Choice and Ziegler Capital Management, LLC (“ZCM”) are wholly-owned subsidiaries and affiliated SEC Registered Investment Advisers of Stifel Financial Corp. (“Stifel”). 1919ic is an SEC Registered Investment Adviser and indirect subsidiary of Stifel. 1919 IC&T is an OCC-regulated national trust company that is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Stifel. Washington Crossing Advisors is a Stifel investment advisory program. Assets Under Management represents the aggregate fair value of all discretionary and non-discretionary assets, including fee-paying and non-fee-paying portfolios. Assets Under Advisement represent advisory-only assets where the firm provides a model portfolio and does not have trading authority over the assets.

Assets $11.6 Billion $10.7 Billion $2.6 Billion $1.4 Billion Chicago Baltimore

  • St. Louis

Cincinnati Milwaukee New York New York Philadelphia San Francisco Offices Baltimore Florham Park, NJ

slide-20
SLIDE 20

20

Institutional Group

slide-21
SLIDE 21

Institutional Group

21

Net t Revenues ($MM)(3)(4) Fix ixed ed Income

  • me Broker

rokerage age + Inves estmen ment Ba Banking2) Overview iew Equit ity Brok roker erage e + I Inves estment ment Ba Bankin ing(2)

Provides securities brokerage, trading, research, underwriting and corporate advisory services

Largest provider of U.S. Equity Research

2nd largest Equity trading platform in the U.S. outside of the Bulge Bracket(1)

Full-service Investment Bank

Comprehensive Fixed Income platform

$455 $559 $587 $668 $626 $507 $605 $861 $997 $976 $761 $1,014 $0 $300 $600 $900 $1,200 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016

$401 $494 $412 $419 $425 $329 $357 $576 $675 $571 $430 $574 $0 $200 $400 $600 $800 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 $18 $54 $65 $175 $249 $201 $179 $247 $285 $322 $404 $331 $441 $0 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016

(1) Based on 2015 U.S. trading volume per Bloomberg. (2) 2016 Revenues based on 3QTD annualized results (3) Includes Thomas Weisel historical investment banking revenues for years 2006 through September 30, 2010. (4) 2012 includes realized and unrealized gains on the Company’s investment in Knight Capital Group, Inc. of $39.0 million.

slide-22
SLIDE 22

Equiti ties Fixed ixed Income Inv nvestmen ent Ba Banking

Building Scale and Capabilities into a $1.0B Revenue Segment

22

  • Growth Focused Investment Banking, Research, Sales and Trading
  • July 2010
  • Core of our Institutional sales, trading and research group
  • December 2005

Knight ght

  • Fixed Income IB, Sales and Trading, Private Client
  • October 2011
  • Fixed Income Sales and Trading – U.S. & Europe, Fixed Income Research
  • July 2013
  • California-based investment bank and bond underwriter
  • April 2014
  • Expands Public Finance in Southeast
  • December 2014
  • Highly complementary fixed income platforms
  • June 2015
  • Enhances European debt capital markets capabilities
  • February 2016
  • FIG Investment Banking/FIG Sales and Trading / Research
  • February 2013
  • Restructuring advisory
  • December 2012
  • UK-based full service investment bank
  • July 2014
  • One of the largest, global fund placement and advisory firms
  • January 2016
slide-23
SLIDE 23

Institutional Group – Investment Banking

23

Accomplished U.S. Equity Underwriting Franchise – All Equity Transactions

Bookr krun Equit ity Deals ls Since 2010 All ll Manage aged Equit ity Deals ls Since 2010

($ in billions) # of $ Rank Firm Deals Volume 1 Bank of America Merrill Lynch 1,341 $156.8 2 JPMorgan 1,326 $177.1 3 Morgan Stanley 1,198 $173.0 4 Citi 1,176 $157.9 5 Barclays 1,022 $137.7 6 Goldman Sachs 1,012 $163.3 7 Credit Suisse 1,003 $128.1 8 Deutsche Bank 859 $96.9 9 Wells Fargo Securities 823 $63.8 10 UBS 582 $56.7 11 RBC Capital Markets 530 $40.3 12 Jefferies LLC 517 $28.2 13 Stifel / KBW 364 $17.3 14 Raymond James & Associates 255 $11.6 15 Piper Jaffray & Co 249 $9.8 16 Cowen & Company LLC 237 $8.3 17 Leerink Partners LLC 176 $7.8 18 Roth Capital Partners 154 $2.6 19 BMO Capital Markets 150 $9.2 19 Robert W Baird & Co 148 $5.8 21 KeyBanc Capital Markets 106 $6.3 21 Aegis Capital Corp 106 $1.4 23 William Blair & Co LLC 96 $3.6 24 Sandler O'Neill & Partners 87 $6.3 25 Canaccord Genuity Corp 81 $3.1 ($ in billions) # of $ Rank Firm Deals Volume 1 JPMorgan 1,469 $827.6 2 Bank of America Merrill Lynch 1,463 $819.4 3 Citi 1,334 $802.7 4 Morgan Stanley 1,304 $780.4 5 Barclays 1,205 $674.7 6 Credit Suisse 1,196 $673.8 7 Wells Fargo Securities 1,163 $599.8 8 Goldman Sachs 1,104 $699.7 9 Deutsche Bank 1,071 $633.0 10 Stifel / KBW 1,053 $329.8 11 RBC Capital Markets 1,046 $494.1 12 UBS 800 $440.5 13 Raymond James & Associates 774 $325.9 14 Piper Jaffray & Co 657 $252.9 15 Jefferies LLC 618 $144.1 16 Robert W Baird & Co 578 $157.7 17 JMP Securities LLC 506 $93.0 18 Cowen & Company LLC 494 $95.1 18 Oppenheimer & Co Inc 491 $120.5 20 KeyBanc Capital Markets 461 $196.7 21 William Blair & Co LLC 456 $116.4 22 BMO Capital Markets 418 $159.3 23 Canaccord Genuity Corp 380 $49.5 24 SunTrust Robinson Humphrey 362 $175.2 25 Ladenburg Thalmann & Co 321 $45.2

Source: Dealogic. Rank eligible SEC registered IPOs and Follow-On offerings since 2010. Includes demutualizations. As of 10/31/16. Overlapping deals between Stifel and its acquired firms have been removed. Note: $ Volume represents full credit to underwriter for All Managed Equity Deals and apportioned credit to bookrunner for Bookrun Equity Deals. Bold font indicates middle-market firms.

slide-24
SLIDE 24

Institutional Group – Research

24

Largest U.S. Equity Research Platform U.S. . Equity Res esearch h Cov

  • ver

erage age (1) Cov

  • verage

e Ba Balanced ed Acro cross Al All l Market ket Caps (1) Stifel fel Res esearch rch Highl hligh ights ts

Companies Under Coverage Firm Overall Mid Cap Small Cap Stifel/KBW 1,282 455 422 JPMorgan 1,115 414 177 BofA Merrill Lynch 1,056 400 130 Wells Fargo 1,012 370 192 Jefferies 968 336 221 Citi 917 313 138 Goldman Sachs 910 298 77 Morgan Stanley 907 300 109 Raymond James 907 331 266 Barclays 889 294 108 Deutsche Bank 855 281 128 Credit Suisse 804 273 138 RBC Capital Markets 803 270 120 UBS 734 209 90 Piper Jaffray 666 234 226 Robert W. Baird & Co 666 244 137 Cowen 633 187 189 Suntrust Robinson Humphrey 606 237 145 William Blair & Co 590 228 168 Morningstar 556 124 18 Evercore 529 127 50 BMO Capital Markets 525 155 76 Keybanc 508 243 105 Macquarie 454 160 75 Oppenheimer 453 141 111

 Largest provider of U.S. Equity Research  Largest provider of U.S. Small Cap Research²  #1 U.S. provider of Financial Services coverage  Only firm ranked in the Top 12 each year for the last

ten years in the Wall Street Journal’s “Best on the Street” Survey

Small Cap 33% Mid Cap 35% Large Cap 32%

(1) Source: StarMine rankings as of 10/31/16. Overall coverage includes only companies with a rating & domiciled in the U.S. Does not include Closed End Funds. Small Cap includes market caps less than $1 billion; Mid Cap includes market caps less than $5 billion. (2) Small Cap includes market caps less than $1 billion. Note: Bold font indicates middle-market firms.

slide-25
SLIDE 25

Institutional Group – Equity Sales and Trading

25

Powerful Platform Spanning North America and Europe

Instit titution tional Equit ity Sales Equit ity Tra radin ing Extensive e Dis istributio tion Networ

  • rk

Relationships with over 3,500 institutional accounts globally

Active daily market maker in over 3,700 stocks

Traded over 7.4 billion shares in YTD 2016

Complete coverage of North America and Europe for North American listed equities

Major liquidity provider to largest equity money management complexes

Multi-execution venues: high-touch, algorithms, program trading, and direct market access

Dedicated convertible sales, trading, and research desk

34 sales traders located in

Baltimore, New York, Boston, Dallas, San Francisco, and London

12 position traders covering each major industry

10 specialized traders focused on: Option Trading

Profitable model with advantages of scale

84 person sales force, commission-based

Experts in small and mid cap growth and value

Team-based sales model with 2 - 4 coverage sales people per account

Team leaders have an average of 15 years experience

Offices in all major institutional markets in North America & Europe

Accounts range from large mutual funds to small industry-focused investors

Managed over 732 non-deal roadshow days in 2015

Extensive experience with traditional and overnight corporate finance transactions

slide-26
SLIDE 26

Institutional Group – Fixed Income Capital Markets

26

Strong Fixed Income Brokerage Capabilities

Overview iew Client Dis istri tribution tion (1)(2) Platf latform

  • rm & Pro

roducts cts

Comprehensive platform

88 traders with annual client trade volume approaching $500 billion

57-person Fixed Income Research and Strategy Group

Widespread distribution

More than 240 Institutional sales professionals covering

  • ver 11,650 accounts

49 institutional fixed income offices nationwide

International offices in London, Zurich and Madrid

Customer-driven

Focus on long-only money managers and income funds, depositories, and hedge funds

Consistency of execution

Identification of relative value through asset class/security selection

US Government and Agency Securities

Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS)

Whole Loans

Government-Guaranteed Loans

Asset-Backed Securities (ABS)

Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS)

Certificates of Deposit

High Yield and Distressed Credit

Loan Trading Group

Aircraft Finance & Credit Solutions

Hybrid Securities

Emerging Markets

Structured Products

Investment Grade Credit

Municipal Sales and Trading and Public Finance

UK Sales and Trading (former Knight Capital team)

(1) Client Distribution is as of 8/10/2016 (2) Other category includes: Credit Union, Corporation, Hedge Fund, Pension Fund, Trust Company, Foundation, Endowment, University & Non-Profit.

Broker/Dealer 7% Corporation 1% Credit Union 1% Money Manager 58% Government 3% Bank or thrift 17% Hedge Fund 3% Insurance Company 7% Trust Company 1% Other 2%

slide-27
SLIDE 27

Institutional Group – Public Finance

27

Overview iew

 Stifel has ranked in the top ten nationally

for senior managed negotiated underwritings for the past five years, and Stifel has ranked #1 nationally for senior managed K-12 negotiated underwritings for 2015.

 Stifel’s Public Finance Group ranked #1

in municipal negotiated issues in 2015

 Total of 26 Public Finance offices  Nearly 150 Public Finance professionals  Specialty sectors:

 Education  Local Government/Municipal  Healthcare  Public-Private Partnerships/Development  Housing

Source: Thomson Reuters: SDC (True Economics to Book) Ranked by number of transactions.

slide-28
SLIDE 28

28

Financial Information

slide-29
SLIDE 29

3rd Quarter Highlights

29

  • Completed sale of legacy Sterne Agee Clearing and Independent Broker Businesses
  • Announced the acquisition of City Securities

Financial Highlights Non-GAAP (000s, except per share data) 3Q16 3Q15 2Q16 3Q16 U.S. GAAP Net revenues $641,986 $591,575 $652,143 $645,767 Compensation ratio 67.6% 68.3% 70.5% 62.5% Non-compensation ratio 28.0% 27.9% 27.0% 23.5% Pre-tax operating margin 4.4% 3.8% 2.4% 14.0% Net income $17,814 $17,179 $9,771 $54,719 Preferred dividend $1,563 $1,563 Net income available to common shareholders $16,251 $17,179 $9,771 $53,156 Earnings per diluted share available to common shareholders $0.21 $0.22 $0.13 $0.69 Three Months Ended

slide-30
SLIDE 30

Merger Related Expenses & Duplicative Expenses

30

Actual b (in $000s) 2015A 9/30/2016 12/31/2016E 2016E 2017E Total Total

Acquisitions

Barclays $12,854 $29,715 $4,900 $86,347 $15,500 $114,701 $115,000 Sterne Agee $102,037 $13,610 $44,401 $146,438 $126,500 Other $46,391 $3,340 $4,400 $20,579 $2,600 $69,570 $69,570 Total Deal Costs (pre-tax) $161,282 $46,665 $9,300 $151,327 $18,100 $330,709 $311,070 Initial Estimate Three Months

Merger-Related Duplicative Total 2015 $91,085 $70,197 $161,282 2016 $114,435 $36,892 $151,327 Adjusted Non-GAAP Merger-Related Charges *Other Acquisition expense estimates are updated quarterly

slide-31
SLIDE 31

Brokerage & Investment Banking Revenue

31 Global Wealth Mangement: (000s) 3Q16 3Q15 % Change 2Q16 % Change Global Wealth Mangement brokerage revenue $165,476 $169,319

  • 2.3% $172,178
  • 3.9%

Institutional brokerage: Equity 51,004 59,769

  • 14.7%

55,008

  • 7.3%

Fixed income 71,794 60,588 18.5% 81,344

  • 11.7%

Total institutional brokerage 122,798 120,357 2.0% 136,352

  • 9.9%

Total brokerage revenue $288,274 $289,676

  • 0.5% $308,530
  • 6.6%

Three Months Ended Investment banking: (000s) 3Q16 3Q15 % Change 2Q16 % Change Investment banking: Capital raising: Equity $32,546 $36,615

  • 11.2%

$37,638

  • 13.6%

Fixed income 25,931 32,382

  • 19.8%

28,774

  • 9.7%

Total capital raising 58,477 68,997

  • 15.2%

66,412

  • 11.9%

Advisory fees: 86,322 49,756 73.5% 66,713 29.4% Total investment banking $144,799 $118,753 21.9% $133,125 8.8% Three Months Ended

slide-32
SLIDE 32

GAAP to Non-GAAP Reconciliation

Three months ended September 30, 2016

32

GAAP Results Three months ended (000s) 09/30/16 Total GAAP Compensation & benefits expense $434,236 GAAP comp. ratio 67.6% Total GAAP non-compensation expense $179,768 GAAP non-comp. ratio 28.0% GAAP pre-tax margin 4.4% Adjusted Non-GAAP Results Three months ended (000s) 09/30/16 Total Adjusted Non-GAAP Compensation & benefits expense $403,553 Adjusted Non-GAAP comp. ratio 62.5% Total adjusted Non-GAAP non-compensation expense $151,989 Adjusted Non-GAAP non-comp. ratio 23.5% Adjusted Non-GAAP pre-tax margin 14.0% GAAP to Non-GAAP Reconciliation for Third Quarter 2016 (000s) 09/30/16 GAAP Net Income $17,814 Preferred Dividend 1,563 Net Income available to common Shareholders $16,251 Non-GAAP Adjustments Acquistion-Related 46,665 Litigation-Related Matters 11,796 Write-off of Debt Issuance & Other Acquisition-Related 3,781 Write-off of Debt Issuance & Other Acquisition-Related 3,781 Total Non-GAAP Adjustments 62,242 Provision for Income Taxes (25,337) Non-GAAP Net Income Available to Common Shareholders $53,156

slide-33
SLIDE 33

Balance Sheet & Net Interest Margin

33

Net Interest Income Drivers:

  • Total assets increased to $17.2 bil. up 12%

sequentially & 84% Y/Y

  • Average interest earning assets increased to

$12.2 bil. up 13% sequentially & 93% Y/Y

  • NIM increased to 178 bps , up 7 bps sequentially

but down 16 bps Y/Y.

  • NIM at Stifel Bank of 240 bps increased 5bps

sequentially but declined 9 bps Y/Y

  • Firm-wide NII of $55.5 mil. increased 14%

sequentially and 65.3% Y/Y.

  • Book value per share was $40.65

Share Repurchases

  • The firm repurchased 600K shares in 3Q16
  • 7.4 mil. shares remaining on current

authorization.

(in millions, except ratios)

3Q15 4Q15 1Q16 2Q16 3Q16

Total Assets

$9,359 $13,326 $14,214 $15,386 $17,205

Total Equity

$2,493 $2,492 $2,417 $2,491 $2,692

Debt to Equity

21.4% 33.4% 34.1% 32.4% 32.2%

Tier 1 Leverage Ratio

16.5% 16.6% 11.6% 11.5% 11.8%

Tier 1 Risk Based Capital Ratio

29.4% 26.3% 21.3% 20.9% 22.0%

Capital Structure

1.00% 1.50% 2.00% 2.50% 3.00% $0 $2,000 $4,000 $6,000 $8,000 $10,000 $12,000 $14,000 3Q15 4Q15 1Q16 2Q16 3Q16 NIM

  • Avg. I

IEA ( (mil mil.)

Net Interest Income Drivers

  • Avg. Non-Bank IEA
  • Avg. Bank IEA

NIM Bank NIM

slide-34
SLIDE 34

34

Segment Results

slide-35
SLIDE 35

Global Wealth Management

35

  • Net revenue in the GWM segment was $390 mil.,

up 1% sequentially & 9% Y/Y

  • Brokerage revenue declined 4%

sequentially & 2% Y/Y

  • Ex. Sterne IBC & Clearing, Brokerage

revenue increased 4% sequentially

  • Net interest income increased 18%

sequentially & 76% Y/Y

  • 2,280 total FAs down 1% sequentially*
  • $234.5 bil. in client AUA, up 3.8%

sequentially*

  • Compensation ratio was 55.2% down 140 bps

sequentially & 190 bps Y/Y

  • Non-comp. ratio was 17.0% up 80 bps sequentially

& 130 bps Y/Y

  • Pre-tax margin was 27.8% up 60 bps sequentially

& Y/Y.

* Total FA and client AUA on 6/30/2016 exclude 540 independent contractor FAs and $11.5 bil. of AUA, that were part of the legacy Sterne Agee business sold to INTL FCStone

  • n July 1, 2016

$80 $85 $90 $95 $100 $105 $110 $115 22% 23% 24% 25% 26% 27% 28% 29% 3Q15 4Q15 1Q16 2Q16 3Q16

Pre-tax Contribution (mil.) Pre-tax Margin

GWM Pre-tax Margin & Contribution

Pre-tax Contribution Pre-tax Margin $0 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 3Q15 4Q15 1Q16 2Q16 3Q16 Net R Revenue ( (mil mil)

GWM Net t Revenue

Investment Banking & Other Net Interest Asset Management & Service Fees Brokerage

slide-36
SLIDE 36

36

Stifel Bank & Trust

Stifel Bank (mil. except for %'s) 3Q16 3Q15 2Q16 Assets: Investments $5,377 $1,750 207% $4,580 17% Mortgage Loans 1,819 272 569% 1,242 46% Commercial Loans 1,824 1,261 45% 1,684 8% Securities Based Loans 1,452 1,004 45% 1,419 2% Consumer 93 22 323% 36 158% Total Loans, net $5,174 $2,526 105% 105% $4,338 19% 19% Loans Held for Sale 217 180 21% 251

  • 14%

Total Assets $11,207 $4,619 143% 143% $9,431 19% 19% Liabilities: Deposits $9,885 $4,117 140% 140% $7,881 25% 25% Credit Metrics Non-performing assets ($s) 28 2 1300% 35

  • 20%

Non-performing assets (%s) 0.25% 0.03% 733% 0.37%

  • 32%

Allowance as a percentage of loans 0.76% 1.13%

  • 33%

0.86%

  • 12%

Net Interest Margin 2.40% 2.50%

  • 4%

2.35% 2% % Change % Change

slide-37
SLIDE 37

Institutional Group

37

  • Total net revenue of $259 mil. decreased 1%

sequentially but increased 11% Y/Y

  • Investment banking revenue of $133 mil.

increased 7% sequentially & 22% Y/Y

  • Equity underwriting of $21 mil. decreased

23% sequentially & 33% Y/Y

  • Debt underwriting of $25 mil. decreased

12% sequentially & 11% Y/Y

  • Advisory revenue of $86 mil. increased 28%

sequentially & 76% Y/Y

  • Brokerage revenue of $123 mil. decreased 10%

sequentially but increased 2% Y/Y

  • Fixed income brokerage revenue of $72
  • mil. was down 12% sequentially but

increased 19% Y/Y

  • Equity brokerage revenue of $51 mil. was

down 7% sequentially & 15% Y/Y

  • Pre-tax margin was 17.4% up 120 bps sequentially &

630 bps Y/Y.

  • Pre-tax Contribution increased by 6% sequentially and

74% Y/Y

$0 $50 $100 $150 $200 $250 $300 3Q15 4Q15 1Q16 2Q16 3Q16 GAAP Net Revenue (mil.)

Instit tituti tion

  • nal Gro

roup p Net Reven enue

Brokerage Capital Raising Advisory Fees Other

$0 $10 $20 $30 $40 $50 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 3Q15 4Q15 1Q16 2Q16 3Q16

Pre-tax Contribution (mil.)

Pre-ax M Margin in

Institutional Group Pre-tax Margin & Contribution

Pre-tax Contribution Pre-tax Margin