The banks rounded out a mixed earnings season and most of the major U.S.
financial institutions such as JPMorgan, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, Morgan
Stanley, and Goldman Sachs, have already reported their Q4 financial
results. In this earnings season, the primary focus extends beyond the
quarterly figures themselves to the management’s insights on the 2024
outlook and the return to revenue growth.
2023 marked by the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank, First
Republic, and Credit Suisse as interest rates reached their highest levels
in 40 years. Despite the banking crisis, financial metrics for the major
U.S. were robust.
JPMorgan, the largest U.S. bank by assets and often considered a bellwether
for the rest of the market, was the standout performer in the banking
sector this earnings season. Despite a 15% decline in Q4 profits from the
prior year to $9.3 billion, JPMorgan achieved a record-breaking annual
profit of $49.6 billion.
Overall, the top five banks reported a 21.2% decline in earnings compared
to the same period in 2022, with a combined net income of $19.73 billion.
Credit costs witnessed a widespread increase across all banks and revenue
growth has been mixed.
Most of the top five banks see net interest income, which is a key profit
metric that shows the difference between what the bank earns from lending
and the interest it pays out on deposits, improving in the second half of
2024, when the expected Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts would begin to
improve their bottom lines.
The five biggest banks on Wall Street are of the view that the U.S. economy
is likely to avoid a recession, but that would depend on the timing and
frequency of interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. Most banks see a
recovery in deal and IPO markets in 2024, which should be bullish for
stocks.
Source: TradingView, SPDR Select Sector Fund – Financial (XLF)
The banking sector can benefit from the Federal Reserve interest rate cuts,
as the cost of funding declines, while the value of their long-term lending
increases, enhancing their financial performance. However, the market’s
expectation of six rate cuts, in contrast to the Fed’s projection of three,
could significantly impact bank profits and the broader economic growth.
While the labour market resilience, continued economic growth albeit at a
slower pace, and decreasing inflation support the notion of a «slow
landing,» any deviation from the expected Federal Reserve actions may pose
challenges for banks in generating profits, especially in global mergers
and acquisitions, housing, and consumer lending.
As U.S. equity markets trade near record highs and our long-term outlook on
the S&P 500 is around 5,300, the banks may play a pivotal role in
extending the previous year’s rally. The main risks the banking sector
faces is a significant slowdown of the economy, lower provisioning, a rise
in non-performing loans, sticky inflation, and a delay in the expected
interest rate cuts.