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Tag: Bank of America Corp

  • The pain for all bank stocks is ‘overdone’, says RBC’s Gerard Cassidy

    The pain for all bank stocks is ‘overdone’, says RBC’s Gerard Cassidy

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    Gerard Cassidy, RBC Capital Markets, joins ‘Closing Bell Overtime’ to talk bank stocks, the bond market and more.

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  • Eight big U.S. bank CEOs to face Senate Banking Committee grilling in December

    Eight big U.S. bank CEOs to face Senate Banking Committee grilling in December

    Chairman Sherrod Brown (D-OH) questions Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Federal Reserve Chairman Powell during a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on the CARES Act, at the Hart Senate Office Building in Washington, DC, September 28, 2021.

    Kevin Dietsch | Pool | Reuters

    Eight CEOs of the largest U.S. banks will face questioning at a Senate Banking Committee hearing in December, according to an announcement obtained by CNBC.

    The Dec. 6 session will feature chief executive officers from JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Bank of New York Mellon, Morgan Stanley, State Street and Wells Fargo.

    The meeting is the third time that Banking Committee Chair Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, will hold an oversight hearing with the heads of the nation’s biggest banks.

    Brown set a combative tone in the hearing announcement, calling out banks for continuing to “make record profits and to reward corporations that raise prices on Americans.”

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    “My commitment as chair of this committee is to always put the Main Street economy – and the workers who power it – at the center of everything we do,” Brown said.

    “Part of that commitment is to hear directly from the biggest banks that hold too much power in the economy,” he said. “It’s our job to hold them accountable to their workers, to their customers, and to the American people.”

    Brown and other Banking Committee members have ramped up oversight efforts in 2023, particularly regarding three banks that failed earlier in the year, Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank and First Republic.

    The failure of First Republic in May was the biggest bank failure in the United States since the 2008 financial crisis. JPMorgan acquired First Republic’s deposits and a substantial majority of its assets.

    In June, the committee advanced legislation authorizing the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to claw back compensation from senior executives of failed banks.

    The bill, known as the RECOUP Act, sailed through committee with a 21-2 vote.

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said he plans to bring the bill to a vote by the full Senate., However, the current debate over a federal funding measure that would avoid a government shutdown has left little time for other bills.

    The high-profile hearing could have political implications for Brown, who is set to run for reelection in 2024 from Ohio, a state that since he last was elected has seen voters increasingly swing Republican.

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  • Consumer spending is stabilizing but still positive, says Bank of America’s Krisberg

    Consumer spending is stabilizing but still positive, says Bank of America’s Krisberg

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    Liz Everett Krisberg, head of Bank of America Institute, joins ‘Squawk Box’ to discuss the recent Bank of America check on the consumer, what higher essential costs means for retailers and clothing makers, and much more.

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  • With the economy holding up, why is the market still so down on America’s banks?

    With the economy holding up, why is the market still so down on America’s banks?

    Regional banking stocks are on pace for their worst year back to 2006, with the long tail of the SVB collapse. But bank stocks had been in rally mode since May, when First Republic was seized by the government and sold to JPMorgan, until bond rating agencies began issuing August warnings and downgrades.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Just how bad off are America’s banks, really?

    Bond rating agencies trash-talked banks all through August, helping drive a near-6% drop in the S&P 500 during the month. But Wall Street equity analysts who cover banks argue that their counterparts on the bond side of the research profession, at Moody’s Investors Service, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings, got it wrong. They point to a period of rising bank stock prices before the bond ratings calls and better-than-expected earnings reports as evidence that things are better than the agencies think.

    While the regional banking sector as tracked by the SPDR S&P Regional Banking Index is down nearly 25% year to date, according to Morningstar — and on pace for the worst year on record back to its inception in 2006, with the long tail of the SVB collapse hard to claw back gains from — bank stocks had been in rally mode from May to July. Regional bank stocks, in particular, gained as much as 35% before the bond warnings and downgrades began. Meanwhile, second-quarter bank earnings beat forecasts by 5%, according to Morgan Stanley.  

    The higher interest rates bond analysts cited hurt profits some, but most banks’ net interest income and margins were higher than a year before. Delinquencies on commercial real estate loans rose, but stayed well below 1% of loans at most institutions, with some of the banks singled out by bond rating agencies reporting no delinquencies at all. The ratings actions pushed the regional bank stock index 10% lower for the month-long period ending Sept. 8, according to Morningstar (the Moody’s bank warning was issued August 7).  

    At stake is not only what bank stocks may do next, but whether banks will be able to fill their role in providing credit to the rest of the economy, said Jill Cetina, associate managing director for U.S. banks at Moody’s. Their medium-term fate will have a lot to do with outside forces, from whether the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates next year to how fast the return-to-work push from employers in recent months gains momentum. Looming over all of this is the question of whether there will be a recession by early 2024 that worsens credit problems and cuts banks’ asset values, as Moody’s Investors Service expects.

    “It’s reasonable to ask, is there a credit contraction in the banking sector?” Cetina said. She pointed to Federal Reserve surveys of bank lending officers that look like pre-recession measures in 2007 and 2000, with many banks raising credit prices and tightening lending standards. “Banks play a key role in shaping macroeconomic outcomes,” she said.

    By any reckoning, the argument about banks is about two things: Interest rates and real estate, specifically office buildings. (Banks also call warehouses and apartment complexes commercial real estate, but their vacancy rates are not historically high). The arguments depend on two assumptions that markets believe less than they did earlier this year.

    The bear case relies heavily on the prospect of a recession, which stock investors and economists think is much less likely than many believed six months ago. Goldman Sachs chief economist Jan Hatzius cut the firm’s estimated U.S. recession odds to 15% on Sept. 4, meaning the bank sees only a baseline risk of a downturn. At Moody’s, while the bond-rating arm expects a U.S. recession next year, the company’s economic consulting unit Moody’s Analytics doesn’t.

    It also turns on an assumption of sustained high interest rates. While debate continues and the Fed’s own commentary continues to express a willingness to raise rates more, many investors now think the Fed will begin to trim the Fed funds rate by spring as inflation fades, according to CME Fedwatch. And while experts such as RXR Realty CEO Scott Rechler and billionaire real estate investor Jeff Greene believe office vacancies will stay high enough to force defaults by more developers, even as employers gain the upper hand against workers who want to continue to work from home, that didn’t show up in second–quarter bank earnings.

    “I don’t necessarily think what they said is not true– it’s just less true than in May,” said CFRA Research bank stock analyst Alexander Yokum. “Expectations have improved over the last few months.” 

    March’s bank failures were about interest rates. The rise in rates since the Fed’s first post-Covid boost to the Fed funds rate in March 2022 had left banks with trillions of dollars of bonds written at lower rates before last year, whose value fell as rates rose. That opened precarious holes in the balance sheets of some banks, and fatal ones for banks that failed. Coupled with commercial real estate, higher funding costs create “layers” of risk going forward, Cetina said. “They’re both a problem, and they are happening at the same time,” she said.

    The Fed stepped in with a short-term solution for banks’ funding issues, extending more than $100 billion in financing under a program called the Bank Term Funding Program, designed to help banks close the gap between the book value of their securities, mostly U.S. Treasuries, and their market value in a new, higher interest-rate market. That lets banks act as if their capital is not impaired, when it is, said veteran analyst and Fed critic Dick Bove of Odeon Capital.

    “If the capital is not there, the bank can’t put more money out there” in loans, Bove said. “People say they understand that, but they don’t.” 

    Interest rate effects on bank profits

    The jump in rates threatens the net interest income that is the source of bank profits and their long-term lending capacity, the bond rating agencies said. Indeed, interest income fell at most banks in the second quarter – compared to the first quarter – and Yokum says it will fall more in the third quarter. So did net interest margin –  the difference between the rates banks pay for funds, usually deposits, and what they collect on loans and other assets. 

    But the drops were small enough that banks made up the lost income elsewhere. The average regional bank stock rose 8% after earnings, Morgan Stanley said, with banks beating profit forecasts by an average of 5%. Most banks reported before the bond agencies acted.

    Moody's downgrade of U.S. banks ‘surprising,’ says top banking analyst Gerard Cassidy

    Bulls point out that while interest rates began to bite at bank profits in the second quarter, the impact so far has been minor for most, and several banks said that higher interest rates have boosted profits over the past year. At most banks, both net interest income and net interest margins did better in the second quarter than in the second quarter of 2022, making rising rates helpful to bank profits overall. Morgan Stanley analysts Manan Gosalia and Betsy Graseck said most banks, even regional banks thought to be most vulnerable to depositors fleeing as rates rise, also added deposits in the quarter. That stems fears they would boost rates sharply to keep customers. 

    Not all banks felt much pressure on deposit rates: Wells Fargo said its average was 1.13% in the second quarter; at Bank of America it was just 1.24%. 

    Credit quality is on the decline

    Credit quality is getting a little worse, but still better than pre-pandemic levels at most institutions, Yokum said. Even the office sector still is showing few signs of serious problems. Moody’s calls banks’ current credit quality “solid but unsustainable.”

    Take Valley National Bancorp, a New Jersey institution whose rating S&P cut in mid-August. Or Commerce Bancshares, cut by Moody’s. Or Zions Bancorporation, a target of low ratings from both stock and bond analysts.

    Valley has $50 billion in loans on its balance sheet, and $27.8 billion of them are in commercial real estate, according to the bank, a much higher proportion than the 7% at Bank of America. But only 10% of Valley’s commercial real estate loans, less than 6% of its total loans, are to office buildings. 

    Valley has had stumbles in office lending, to be sure. It disclosed that its total non-performing assets were $256 million at the end of June. But that remains only about half of 1% of its total loan book. Chargeoffs of loans the bank thinks won’t be fully repaid fell in the quarter, and the company’s $460 million in loan loss reserves is nearly double the amount of all its troubled loans. 

    Similarly, Zions’ $2 billion office portfolio, part of a commercial real estate exposure that is more than a quarter of the bank’s assets, doesn’t have a single delinquent loan, according to the bank’s second-quarter report. Neither did Commerce.

    “Zions’ chargeoffs were .09 of 1% of total assets,” said Yokum, who doesn’t follow Commerce or Valley. “Not alarming.” 

    Many banks argue that bears overstate real-estate lending problems by overlooking how few of their real estate loans are to office buildings. With hotel and warehouse occupancy high, they’re selling the idea that only their office portfolio is at serious risk, and that the office loans are too small to threaten banks’ health. At KeyCorp, whose shares have dropped 36% this year and which S&P downgraded, office loans are 0.8% of the bank’s total.

    Bank delinquencies rose in the last quarter, but remain lower than a year ago.

    “We have limited office exposure with … almost no delinquencies,” Fifth Third Bancorp chief financial officer James Leonard said on the bank’s earnings call. “We continue to watch office closely and believe the overall impact on Fifth Third will be limited.”

    Two big questions about banks finding a bottom

    There are two big unanswered questions about banks and real estate. Eight months into a year where nearly a quarter of office building mortgages are expected to mature and need refinancing at today’s higher rates, chargeoffs — while getting more common — are still less than 1% of loans at nearly every major bank. Is a surge coming, or are banks delaying a reckoning with short-term financing, hoping for rates to fall or occupancy to rise? 

    And, when will more workers go back to the office, relieving pressure on companies to stop paying for space they don’t really use?

    The share of U.S. workers working from home at least part of the week has stabilized at around 20-25%, below its peak of 47% in 2021 but well above the pre-pandemic 2.6%, Goldman’s Hatzius wrote in an Aug. 28 report. With CEOs as prominent as Amazon’s Andy Jassy becoming more forceful about return to office, Goldman says online job postings are down to only 15% of new positions allowing work from home. Even Zoom Communications, maker of video-conferencing software, is making staffers return to the office two days a week. Hatzius estimates remaining part-time WFH will add 3 percentage points to office building vacancy rates by 2030. But that impact will be lessened by a near-halting in new construction, he wrote.

    Findings like these have some market players speculating that a bottom may be near. 

    Manhattan real estate attorney Trevor Adler says he’s seeing an uptick, with public sector tenants like Empire State Development signing long-term leases. ESD took 117,000 square feet in Midtown in July, he said. 

    “To have that kind of deal in July is not typical,” said Adler, a partner at Stroock & Stroock & Lavan. “That work is keeping me busy, educational, hospital and charity.”

    Others argue that the slow rate of foreclosures is normal early in what they believe is a long-term crisis. 

    “Crises happen slowly, then all at once,” said Ben Miller, CEO of Washington-based Fundrise, an online platform for real estate investment, pointing out that several years elapsed between early warnings and the depth of the late-2000s home mortgage crisis.  

    Banks have been encouraged by the Fed and other bank regulators to give previously-solvent borrowers extensions or other workouts, Miller said. Regulators argue that this guidance, released in June, simply restated previous policy.

    The primary way the Fed can defuse upcoming foreclosures is to lower rates, so developers can refinance office buildings and stay profitable, Miller said. 

    “If we end up higher for longer, the banks have a huge problem,” Miller said. “If high rates are transitory, it gets the bank to a normalized rate environment and there’s no problem.”

    Officials at the Fed declined comment. 

    The takeaway may be that banks’ problems are big enough to contain earnings for a few quarters, while not threatening their solvency, Yokum said. At Standard & Poor’s, analysts emphasized that 90% of U.S. banks have stable outlooks, even as it downgraded five banks. “Stability in the U.S. banking sector has improved significantly in recent months,” analysts led by Brendan Browne wrote.

    “I do expect net interest margins to fall in the third quarter, and for credit quality to get worse, but I expect them both to be manageable,” Yokum said. “And both are well built into the stock prices.”

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  • Stock market’s 2023 run may hit roadblock after August’s energy-led boost to U.S. CPI

    Stock market’s 2023 run may hit roadblock after August’s energy-led boost to U.S. CPI

    August was a hot month and it wasn’t just about the weather. Financial markets are now bracing for what’s likely to be a rebound in headline U.S. inflation next week, fueled by higher energy prices.

    Barclays
    BARC,
    +0.18%
    ,
    BofA Securities
    BAC,
    +0.62%
    ,
    and TD Securities expect August’s consumer price index to reflect a 0.6% monthly rise, up from the 0.2% monthly readings seen in July and in June. In addition, they put the annual CPI inflation rate at 3.6% or 3.7% for last month, which compares with the 3.2% and 3% figures reported respectively for the prior two months.

    While Federal Reserve policy makers and analysts are loath to read too much into one report, August’s CPI has the potential to disrupt expectations that getting back to the central bank’s 2% target will be easy. Inflation has instead been nudging back up since June, with the likely rebound in August being regarded as primarily driven by the energy sector. What now remains to be seen is how much longer energy prices will remain elevated and whether they’ll begin to feed into narrower measures of inflation that matter most to the Fed.

    Read: Stock-market investors just got reminded that the inflation fight isn’t over

    “We’re going to see a spike in gas prices and other commodity prices driven by supply cuts, which means headline CPI goes back up,” said Alex Pelle, a U.S. economist for Mizuho Securities in New York. Via phone on Friday, Pelle said that prospects for a hotter August CPI report have already been factored in by financial markets, with all three major U.S. stock indexes heading for weekly losses.

    How investors react to next Wednesday’s data will likely come down to whether the rebound in headline figures is seen as “a one-off” or something that gets repeated, and “what that means for the bottoming off of inflation,” Pelle said. “The equity market is going to have some trouble in the fourth quarter after a pretty impressive first half. Earnings expectations are still pretty high, but the macro-driven backdrop is challenging.”

    Rising energy prices in August have already spilled into the month of September, with gasoline reaching the highest seasonal level in more than a decade this week. Voluntary production cuts by Saudi Arabia and Russia are a major contributing factor curtailing the supply of crude oil into year-end, and Goldman Sachs has warned that oil could climb above $100 a barrel.

    In financial markets, there’s one group of traders which is telegraphing that the final mile of the road toward 2% inflation won’t be smooth.

    Traders of derivatives-like instruments known as fixings anticipate that the next five CPI reports, including August’s, will produce annual headline inflation rates above 3%. Though policy makers care more about core readings that strip out volatile food and energy prices, they’re aware of how much headline figures can impact the public’s expectations.


    Source: Bloomberg. The maturity column reflects the month and year of upcoming CPI reports. The forwards column reflects the year-ago period from which the year-over-year rate is based.

    At BofA Securities, U.S. economist Stephen Juneau said August’s CPI won’t necessarily change his firm’s view that inflation is likely to move lower next year and fall back to the Fed’s target without the need for a recession. BofA Securities expects just one more Fed rate hike in November and will maintain that view if August’s CPI report comes in as he expects, Juneau said via phone.

    After stripping out volatile food and energy items, BofA Securities, along with Barclays and TD Securities, expects August’s core CPI readings to come in at 0.2% month-over-month — matching June and July’s levels — and to fall to 4.3% on an annual basis.

    Based on core measures, August’s report wouldn’t “change the narrative all that much: Everything points to a moderation in price growth,” Pelle said. “There’s a reason why food and energy are typically excluded,” and “we don’t want to put too much stock into one month.”

    As of Friday afternoon, all three major U.S. stock indexes were headed higher, with the S&P 500 attempting to snap a three-day losing streak. Dow industrials
    DJIA,
    the S&P 500
    SPX
    and Nasdaq Composite
    COMP
    were respectively on track for weekly losses of 0.7%, 1.2%, and 1.7%. They’re still up for the year by more than 4%, 16% and 31%.

    Meanwhile, Treasury yields turned were little changed on Friday as fed funds futures traders priced in a 93% chance of no action by the Fed at its next policy meeting in less than two weeks, and a more-than-50% likelihood of the same for November and December — which would leave the Fed’s main policy rate target between 5.25%-5.5%.

    “There is a risk that investors are too complacent about the inflation report,” said Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at Annex Wealth Management in Elm Grove, Wis. “We might not get to 2% inflation as quickly as many hope.”

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  • Wall Street is concerned about what’s on bank’s balance sheets, says Eugene Profit

    Wall Street is concerned about what’s on bank’s balance sheets, says Eugene Profit

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    Victoria Greene, G Squared Private Wealth CIO and Eugene Profit, Profit Investments CEO, join ‘Closing Bell Overtime’ to talk Goldman Sachs quarterly results, the financials sector and what lies ahead for banks.

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  • Bank of America: Asian buybacks just hit a 20-year high — and these stocks are a buying opportunity

    Bank of America: Asian buybacks just hit a 20-year high — and these stocks are a buying opportunity

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  • CNBC Daily Open: Jackson Hole fears overshadow Nvidia

    CNBC Daily Open: Jackson Hole fears overshadow Nvidia

    Jerome Powell, chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve, right, walks the grounds at the Jackson Hole economic symposium in Moran, Wyoming, US, on Thursday, Aug. 24, 2023.

    David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    This report is from today’s CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    What you need to know today

    Rally fizzles out
    U.S. stocks closed lower Thursday as an earlier Nvidia-sparked rally fizzled out, while Treasury yields climbed higher. The pan-European Stoxx 600 tumbled 0.4%, ending three consecutive days of gains. Separately, Turkey hiked interest rates from 17.5% to 25%, more than the expected 20%. The lira jumped on the news.

    Muted response to Nvidia
    Nvidia shares inched up just 0.1% Thursday, paring earlier gains of as much as 8% when it touched a record high of $502. That’s despite the company reporting an astounding earnings beat after the bell Wednesday. Nvidia’s results scared investors away from competitors as well: Shares of AMD slumped 7%, while that of Intel sank 4.1%.

    Dog days of August
    August is living up to its reputation as a horrid month for stocks. The S&P 500 is down more than 3% so far, on pace to snap a five-month winning streak, while the Nasdaq Composite is headed for its biggest one-month loss since December. Low trading volumes, economic weakness in China and high Treasury yields are all contributing to the August sell-off, writes CNBC’s Fred Imbert.

    Building BRICS
    The BRICS coalition — which comprises Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — extended invitations to six nations. Argentina, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates will join BRICS on Jan. 1, 2024. A total of 23 countries, including the six set to join the coalition, have formally applied for membership.

    [PRO] A single-stock ETF play
    Exchange-traded funds typically track a basket of stocks belonging to a specific sector, like banks or semiconductors. This ETF, however, consists of just one stock — and aims to deliver a 1.5-times return on a daily basis. What’s more, it’s had a return of more than 400% year to date.

    The bottom line

    Even Nvidia’s blockbuster earnings couldn’t quell investor anxiety over Jackson Hole.

    Nvidia shares rose just 0.1% despite reporting a 422% year-over-year surge in net income. Perhaps investors, bursting with enthusiasm over the chipmaker, had already priced in the record revenue. Perhaps investors wanted to cash out early after Nvidia’s shares hit a record high earlier in the day — investors have been bracing for a bad August, and an even worse September, which is historically the worst month for stocks. Or perhaps investors were worried about Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s speech at Jackson Hole.

    (To be clear, analysts still think Nvidia’s shares will pop in the long run. Rosenblatt increased its price target from $800 to $1,100, a new high among Wall Street analysts and an implied 133% upside from Thursday’s close. Big Wall Street banks like Goldman Sachs, Citi and Bank of America were more conservative than that, but still hiked their targets for Nvidia.)

    Last year, the S&P 500 lost 2% in the five trading days before Powell’s Jackson Hole speech, and stumbled 5.5% in the five after, according to DataTrek Research. This time, investors are “worried about what [Powell] might say around r-star and embracing, high new normal rates,” said Krishna Guha, head of global policy and central bank strategy for Evercore ISI. R-star is the value at which interest rates neither stimulate nor restrict the economy. In other words, investors are concerned the Fed might not cut interest rates that much even after inflation subsides.

    History, then, repeated itself. One day before Powell’s speech, stocks fell sharply. The S&P retreated 1.5% and the Nasdaq shed 1.87%, the biggest one-day loss since Aug. 2 for both indexes. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 1.08%, its worst day since March. Technology stocks, because of their sensitivity to interest rates, were the biggest losers of the day: Amazon lost 2.7% and Apple dropped 2.6%. With just one week left before August draws to a close, it seems market sentiment isn’t likely to change soon, even with earth-shattering reports like Nvidia’s.

    CNBC’s Jeff Cox contributed to this report

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  • House Republicans subpoena Citibank over info shared with FBI after Jan. 6

    House Republicans subpoena Citibank over info shared with FBI after Jan. 6

    Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, conducts the House Judiciary Committee hearing on the “Report of Special Counsel John Durham,” in Rayburn Building on Wednesday, June 21, 2023.

    Tom Williams | CQ-Roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images

    WASHINGTON — House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan issued a subpoena to Citibank on Thursday, demanding information about whether the bank gave law enforcement information about customer transactions in the days surrounding the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

    The subpoena, obtained exclusively by CNBC, came after Jordan previously requested that several financial institutions, including Citibank, provide the information voluntarily. They include Bank of America, J.P. Morgan, PNC, Truist, U.S. Bank and Wells Fargo.

    Citibank was the only bank that had not voluntarily complied with the committee’s request, according to a source familiar with the investigation.

    The bank’s lawyers told the committee it would only do under a subpoena, according to Jordan. A Citibank spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment from CNBC.

    The wider probe into whether banks turned over data to the government to assist in the investigation and prosecution of Jan. 6 rioters was sparked by an FBI whistleblower, who disclosed that Bank of America had voluntarily provided a list of people who made transactions with a BofA credit or debit card in the Washington area between Jan. 5 and Jan. 7, 2021.

    BofA did not deny the whistleblower’s allegation, telling Fox News earlier this year that that the bank “follows all applicable laws” to “narrowly respond to law enforcement requests.”

    Now the committee wants to know if other banks did the same.

    Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

    WATCH: House committee investigating Jan. 6 riots release never-before-seen footage of insurrection

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  • CNBC Daily Open: More trouble ahead for U.S. banks

    CNBC Daily Open: More trouble ahead for U.S. banks

    Spencer Platt | Getty Images

    This report is from today’s CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    What you need to know today

    Beset by worries
    Major U.S. indexes tumbled, weighed down by losses in financial stocks and worries over China’s faltering economy. Asia-Pacific markets followed Wall Street and fell Wednesday. Most regional indexes lost at least 1%. A silver lining: Japanese business’ sentiment climbed in July, alongside the country’s stronger-than-expected economic growth.

    Potential banking downgrade
    Fitch Ratings warned it may downgrade the U.S. banking industry’s credit rating from AA- to A+. Since individual banks cannot be rated higher than the industry, major banks like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America would be cut to an A+ rating — with a trickle-down effect for smaller banks — if the downgrades happens. Fitch’s warning comes as Moody’s downgraded 10 banks last week.

    Higher risk of corporate defaults
    There’s a higher chance corporate debt in emerging markets might default, according to JPMorgan. The bank raised its forecast for high-yield defaults in Asia from 4.1% to 10% — but that figure drops to just 1% if China property is excluded. That’s a sign of how severe the contagion risk is if Country Garden, the beleaguered Chinese property developer, defaults.

    U.S. consumer strong as ever
    U.S. consumer spending in July remained healthy, according to data from the Commerce Department. Seasonally adjusted retail sales rose 0.7% for the month; economists were expecting 0.4%. Excluding autos, sales rose 1% against a 0.4% forecast. Both figures were the best monthly gains since January, reinforcing sentiment that the consumer can continue supporting economic growth.

    [PRO] Stocks are still ‘overvalued’
    Despite the sell-off in stocks the last two weeks, U.S. markets have rallied so much this year that stocks are still “overvalued and overextended,” according to Morningstar’s chief U.S. market strategist. It’s a good time to sell these six stocks to lock in profits — and buy five cheap ones, he said.

    The bottom line

    Financial stocks had a bad day.

    After Fitch warned that it might downgrade the banking industry’s credit rating, shares of big U.S. banks fell. Bank of America lost 3.2%, JPMorgan declined 2.55% and Wells Fargo slid 2.31%.

    Regional banks weren’t spared the slaughter, either. The SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF fell 3.33% after Minneapolis Federal Reserve President Neel Kashkari spoke in favor of “significantly further” capital requirements for banks with more than $100 billion in assets. Kashkari also emphasized that if inflation rebounds, rates might have to go higher and “pressures [in regional banks] could flare up again.”

    But not everyone’s worried about Fitch’s warning. “The U.S. bank system is overall sound,” said Eric Diton, president and managing director at The Wealth Alliance.

    “All Fitch was saying was: ‘If we did downgrade the sector again, that would lead us to have to downgrade a lot of the individual banks,'” Diton said. “Maybe they will, maybe they won’t.”

    Banking doldrums aside, there were two bright spots in the initial public offering arena. Shares of VinFast, a Vietnamese electric vehicle company, surged from $10 per share to $22 in its debut on the Nasdaq; prices continued rising throughout the day to close at $37.

    Meanwhile, Cava shares jumped 9.44% in extended trading after its first earnings report since its IPO in June. Taken together, they suggest that the IPO market is returning to health.

    Still, major indexes couldn’t shrug off worries over banks and China. The S&P 500 slipped 1.16%, ending the day below its 50-day moving average for the first time since March — possibly heralding the start of a continued slide. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 1.02%, breaking its three-day winning streak. The Nasdaq Composite fell 1.14%.

    If indexes continue sliding, that’d be their third consecutive losing week. Investors are hoping it’s a brief summer spell, a moment of correction that will end as the weather turns.

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  • CNBC Daily Open: More obstacles for U.S. banks

    CNBC Daily Open: More obstacles for U.S. banks

    A woman walks past JPMorgan Chase & Co’s international headquarters on Park Avenue in New York.

    Andrew Burton | Reuters

    This report is from today’s CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    What you need to know today

    Beset by worries
    Major U.S. indexes tumbled, weighed down by losses in financial stocks and worries over China’s faltering economy. European markets mostly fell as well. The pan-European Stoxx 600 index lost 0.93%, but Italy’s FTSE MIB added 0.57% — the only major bourse to end the day in the green.

    Potential banking downgrade
    Fitch Ratings warned it may downgrade the U.S. banking industry’s credit rating from AA- to A+. Since individual banks cannot be rated higher than the industry, major banks like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America would be cut to an A+ rating — with a trickle-down effect for smaller banks — if the downgrades happens. Fitch’s warning comes as Moody’s downgraded 10 banks last week.

    U.S. consumer strong as ever
    U.S. consumer spending in July remained healthy, according to data from the Commerce Department. Seasonally adjusted retail sales rose 0.7% for the month; economists were expecting 0.4%. Excluding autos, sales rose 1% against a 0.4% forecast. Both figures were the best monthly gains since January, reinforcing sentiment that the consumer can continue supporting economic growth.

    Rate hike to strengthen ruble
    Russia’s central bank jacked up interest rates by 3.5 percentage points to 12% at an emergency meeting Tuesday. The bank’s attempting to stop a sudden slide in the Russian ruble, which slumped to nearly 102 against the U.S. dollar Monday. The ruble has since climbed back to around 98.5 as of publication time.

    [PRO] Overconfident investors
    The stock market rally during the first half of this year has made investors overconfident, according to a Bank of America survey. That’s bad — because the “strong tailwind” propelling stocks forwards is fading fast, a BofA analyst wrote in a summary of the survey.

    The bottom line

    Financial stocks had a bad day.

    After Fitch warned that it might downgrade the banking industry’s credit rating, shares of big U.S. banks fell. Bank of America lost 3.2%, JPMorgan declined 2.55% and Wells Fargo slid 2.31%.

    Regional banks weren’t spared the slaughter, either. The SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF fell 3.33% after Minneapolis Federal Reserve President Neel Kashkari spoke in favor of “significantly further” capital requirements for banks with more than $100 billion in assets. Kashkari also emphasized that if inflation rebounds, rates might have to go higher and “pressures [in regional banks] could flare up again.”

    But not everyone’s worried about Fitch’s warning. “The U.S. bank system is overall sound,” said Eric Diton, president and managing director at The Wealth Alliance.

    “All Fitch was saying was: ‘If we did downgrade the sector again, that would lead us to have to downgrade a lot of the individual banks,'” Diton said. “Maybe they will, maybe they won’t.”

    Banking doldrums aside, there were two bright spots in the initial public offering arena. Shares of VinFast, a Vietnamese electric vehicle company, surged from $10 per share to $22 in its debut on the Nasdaq; prices continued rising throughout the day to close at $37.

    Meanwhile, Cava shares jumped around 8% in extended trading after its first earnings report since its IPO in June. Taken together, they suggest that the IPO market is returning to health.

    Still, major indexes couldn’t shrug off worries over banks and China. The S&P 500 slipped 1.16%, ending the day below its 50-day moving average for the first time since March — possibly heralding the start of a continued slide. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 1.02%, breaking its three-day winning streak. The Nasdaq Composite fell 1.14%.

    If indexes continue sliding, that’d be their third consecutive losing week. Investors are hoping it’s a brief summer spell, a moment of correction that will end as the weather turns.

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  • Jim Cramer sees a ‘new king’ in trucking and perhaps a ‘golden age’ for natural gas

    Jim Cramer sees a ‘new king’ in trucking and perhaps a ‘golden age’ for natural gas

    Morgan Stanley’s decision Tuesday to boost its price target on XPO Logistics (XPO) to $65 a share, from $45, could signal a “new king” in the trucking-and-logistics industry, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said — even though he’s long been partial to Old Dominion (ODFL).

    Shares of XPO were trading down around 1% Tuesday morning, at roughly $72.80 a share.

    Meanwhile, Cramer also said Tuesday that we could be in a “golden age of natural gas,” on the heels of the Investing Club’s move last week to add to its position in oil-and-gas producer Coterra Energy (CTRA).

    (See here for a full list of the stocks in Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust.)

    As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust’s portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade.

    THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY, TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER.  NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB.  NO SPECIFIC OUTCOME OR PROFIT IS GUARANTEED.

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  • Fitch warns it may be forced to downgrade dozens of banks, including JPMorgan Chase

    Fitch warns it may be forced to downgrade dozens of banks, including JPMorgan Chase

    A sign for the financial agency Fitch Ratings on a building at the Canary Wharf business and shopping district in London, U.K., on Thursday, March 1, 2012.

    Matt Lloyd | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    A Fitch Ratings analyst warned that the U.S. banking industry has inched closer to another source of turbulence — the risk of sweeping rating downgrades on dozens of U.S. banks that could even include the likes of JPMorgan Chase.

    The ratings agency cut its assessment of the industry’s health in June, a move that analyst Chris Wolfe said went largely unnoticed because it didn’t trigger downgrades on banks.

    But another one-notch downgrade of the industry’s score, to A+ from AA-, would force Fitch to reevaluate ratings on each of the more than 70 U.S. banks it covers, Wolfe told CNBC in an exclusive interview at the firm’s New York headquarters.

    “If we were to move it to A+, then that would recalibrate all our financial measures and would probably translate into negative rating actions,” Wolfe said.

    The credit rating firms relied upon by bond investors have roiled markets lately with their actions. Last week, Moody’s downgraded 10 small and midsized banks and warned that cuts could come for another 17 lenders, including larger institutions like Truist and U.S. Bank. Earlier this month, Fitch downgraded the U.S. long-term credit rating because of political dysfunction and growing debt loads, a move that was derided by business leaders including JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon.

    This time, Fitch is intent on signaling to the market that bank downgrades, while not a foregone conclusion, are a real risk, said Wolfe.

    The firm’s June action took the industry’s “operating environment” score to AA- from AA because of pressure on the country’s credit rating, regulatory gaps exposed by the March regional bank failures and uncertainty around interest rates.

    The problem created by another downgrade to A+ is that the industry’s score would then be lower than some of its top-rated lenders. The country’s two largest banks by assets, JPMorgan and Bank of America, would likely be cut to A+ from AA- in this scenario, since banks can’t be rated higher than the environment in which they operate.

    And if top institutions like JPMorgan are cut, then Fitch would be forced to at least consider downgrades on all their peers’ ratings, according to Wolfe. That could potentially push some weaker lenders closer to non-investment grade status.

    Hard decisions

    For instance, Miami Lakes, Florida-based BankUnited, at BBB, is already at the lower bounds of what investors consider investment grade. If the firm, which has a negative outlook, falls another notch, it would be perilously close to a non-investment grade rating.

    Wolfe said he didn’t want to speculate on the timing of this potential move or its impact to lower-rated firms.

    “We’d have some decisions to make, both on an absolute and relative basis,” Wolfe said. “On an absolute basis, there might be some BBB- banks where we’ve already discounted a lot of things and maybe they could hold onto their rating.”

    JPMorgan declined to comment for this article, while Bank of America and BankUnited didn’t immediately respond to messages seeking comment.

    Rates, defaults

    In terms of what could push Fitch to downgrade the industry, the biggest factor is the path of interest rates determined by the Federal Reserve. Some market forecasters have said the Fed may already be done raising rates and could cut them next year, but that isn’t a foregone conclusion. Higher rates for longer than expected would pressure the industry’s profit margins.

    “What we don’t know is, where does the Fed stop? Because that is going to be a very important input into what it means for the banking system,” he said.

    A related issue is if the industry’s loan defaults rise beyond what Fitch considers a historically normal level of losses, said Wolfe. Defaults tend to rise in a rate-hiking environment, and Fitch has expressed concern on the impact of office loan defaults on smaller banks.

    “That shouldn’t be shocking or alarming,” he said. “But if we’re exceeding [normalized losses], that’s what maybe tips us over.”

    The impact of such broad downgrades is hard to predict.

    In the wake of the recent Moody’s cuts, Morgan Stanley analysts said that downgraded banks would have to pay investors more to buy their bonds, which further compresses profit margins. They even expressed concerns some banks could get locked out of debt markets entirely. Downgrades could also trigger unwelcome provisions in lending agreements or other complex contracts.

    “It’s not inevitable that it goes down,” Wolfe said. “We could be at AA- for the next 10 years. But if it goes down, there will be consequences.”

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  • Moody’s downgrade creates buying opportunities in financials, says DCLA’s Sarat Sethi

    Moody’s downgrade creates buying opportunities in financials, says DCLA’s Sarat Sethi

    Share

    Josh Brown, Bryn Talkington, Stephanie Link, and Sarat Sethi join ‘Halftime Report’ to discuss Moody’s credit rating cut, long term investment opportunities in financials and regional banks struggling to grow lending.

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  • Wells Fargo, Bank of America to pay FDIC up to $3.7 billion combined for bank failure special assessment

    Wells Fargo, Bank of America to pay FDIC up to $3.7 billion combined for bank failure special assessment

    Wells Fargo & Co.
    WFC,
    -1.56%

    said it will pay up to $1.8 billion to the Federal Deposit Insurance Co.’s deposit insurance fund as part of the government’s special assessment following the regional-bank crisis earlier this year. Wells Fargo said it will expense the entire amount upon the FDIC’s finalization of the rule. “The proposed rule may be changed prior to finalization and any changes may affect the timing or amount of the special assessment,” Wells Fargo said in a filing late Tuesday. Bank of America Corp.
    BAC,
    -1.49%

    estimated its cost for the same effort would be $1.9 billion, according to a Monday filing.

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  • Goldman Sachs misses on profit after hits from GreenSky, real estate

    Goldman Sachs misses on profit after hits from GreenSky, real estate

    Goldman Sachs on Wednesday posted profit below analysts’ expectations amid write-downs tied to commercial real estate and the sale of its GreenSky lending unit.

    Here’s what the company reported:

    • Earnings: $3.08 a share vs. $3.18 a share Refinitiv estimate
    • Revenue: $10.9 billion, vs. $10.84 billion estimate

    Second-quarter profit fell 58% to $1.22 billion, or $3.08 a share, on steep declines in trading and investment banking and losses related to GreenSky and legacy investments, which sapped about $3.95 from per share earnings. Revenue fell 8% to $10.9 billion.

    The company disclosed a $504 million impairment tied to GreenSky and $485 million in real estate write-downs. Those charges flowed through its operating expenses line, which grew 12% to $8.54 billion.

    Shares of the bank climbed less than 1%.

    Goldman CEO David Solomon faces a tough environment for his most important businesses as a slump in investment banking and trading activity drags on. On top of that, Goldman had warned investors of write-downs on commercial real estate and impairments tied to its planned sale of fintech unit GreenSky.

    Unlike more diversified rivals, Goldman gets the majority of its revenue from volatile Wall Street activities, including trading and investment banking. That can lead to outsized returns during boom times and underperformance when markets don’t cooperate.

    Exacerbating the situation, Solomon has spent the past few quarters retrenching from his ill-fated push into consumer banking, which has triggered expenses tied to shrinking the business.

    “This quarter reflects continued strategic execution of our goals,” Solomon said in the earnings release. “I remain fully confident that continued execution will enable us to deliver on our through-the-cycle return targets and create significant value for shareholders.”

    The bank put up a paltry 4.4% return on average tangible common shareholder equity in the quarter, a key performance metric. That is far below both its own target of at least 15% and competitors’ results including JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley, which put up returns of 25% and 12.1% respectively.

    Trading and investment banking have been weak lately because of subdued activity and IPOs amid the Federal Reserve’s interest rate increases. But rival JPMorgan posted better-than-expected trading and banking results last week, saying that activity improved late in the quarter, and that raised hopes that Goldman might exceed expectations.

    Goldman’s results “reflect the limitations of a business mix that relies more heavily on investment banking and principal investments,” David Fanger of Moody’s Investors Service said in an e-mailed statement. “When client activity remains weak and higher interest rates are pressuring valuations, earnings decline more than at a bank with higher recurring revenues.”

    Fixed income trading revenue fell 26% to $2.71 billion, just under the $2.78 billion estimate of analysts surveyed by FactSet. Equities trading revenue was essentially unchanged from a year earlier at $2.97 billion, topping the $2.42 billion estimate.  

    Investment banking fees fell 20% to $1.43 billion, just below the $1.49 billion estimate.

    Asset and wealth management revenue fell 4% to $3.05 billion as the firm booked losses in equity investments and lower incentive fees.

    Analysts will likely ask Solomon about updates to his plan to exit consumer banking. Goldman has reportedly been in discussions to offload its Apple Card business to American Express, but it’s unclear how far those talks have advanced.

    Goldman shares have dipped nearly 2% this year before Wednesday, compared with the approximately 18% decline of the KBW Bank Index.

    On Friday, JPMorgan, Citigroup and Wells Fargo each posted earnings that topped analysts’ expectations amid higher interest rates. Tuesday, Bank of America and Morgan Stanley also reported results that exceeded forecasts.

    How Goldman Sachs failed at consumer banking

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  • CNBC Daily Open: Investment banking’s coming back

    CNBC Daily Open: Investment banking’s coming back

    A man walks by the Bank of America headquarters on July 18, 2023 in New York.

    Eduardo Munoz | View Press | Getty Images

    This report is from today’s CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    What you need to know today

    Market momentum
    All major U.S. indexes
    advanced Tuesday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average had its seventh consecutive day of gains as investors digested better-than-expected corporate earnings. Asia-Pacific markets were mixed Wednesday. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index slid 1.2%, extending its losses of over 2% yesterday, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 0.78% even as business sentiment in the country fell in July.

    Microsoft 365 + $30
    Microsoft shares popped around 4% to hit an all-time high after the company announced pricing for its new artificial intelligence service. Named Copilot, the service costs an additional $30 per month, on top of the base Microsoft 365 subscription for Office products. Microsoft also announced its Bing Chat can now respond to images.

    Banking boom
    Morgan Stanley’s shares jumped 6.45% after the bank reported better-than-expected second-quarter earnings and revenue. Revenue climbed 2% to $13.46 billion, boosted by a 16% increase in wealth management revenue. Meanwhile, investors pushed Bank of America shares up 4.42% on the bank’s earnings and revenue beat for the second quarter. Both figures were also higher year on year.

    I’m feeling unlucky
    Google is cutting internet access for some employees to reduce the risk of cyberattacks, CNBC has learned. Employees chosen to participate in the new pilot program will only be able to access Google-owned websites, and will also be restricted from administrative permissions like installing software. “Googlers are frequent targets of attacks,” one internal description viewed by CNBC stated.

    [PRO] Predictions for the global market
    The U.S. stock market has rallied this year, but the picture across the world is more varied. CNBC Pro asked 15 market strategists to predict how global stock markets will end the year. Find out which country has the best chance of beating its U.S. counterpart, according to strategists.

    The bottom line

    In another sign the U.S. economy is more resilient than anticipated, banks have had a good showing this earnings season.

    Yes, big banks like JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and Bank of America are supposed to benefit from the higher interest rates that felled regional banks like Silicon Valley Bank and First Republic.

    But investment banking activity — which slowed as higher rates first kicked in last year — is seeing signs of a revival.

    JPMorgan’s investment banking revenue beat estimates. As Octavio Marenzi, CEO of consultancy Opimas, put it, “investment banking, which has been a problem child over the past year or so, is starting to show signs of life.”

    Indeed, investment banking fees for Bank of America increased 7% to $1.2 billion.

    And while Morgan Stanley didn’t do so well on the investment banking front, CEO James Gorman said he believes “we are very, very close” to the end of rate hikes. That would give the banking sector more stable ground on which to operate and rebuild.

    Regional banks weren’t left out of the surge of optimism in the sector, either. Charles Schwab, which had struggled since the banking turmoil in March, also saw better-than-expected earnings and revenue last quarter. Investors cheered and gave the bank’s shares a 12.57% bump.

    More tellingly, the SPDR Regional Banking ETF added 4.22% to hit $45.73, its best day of gains since June 6, and the most expensive it’s been since early March, prior to the failure of several regional banks.

    Broader indexes closed higher as well. The S&P 500 rose 0.71%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 1.06% and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.76%.

    Goldman Sachs reports later today, wrapping up earnings from big banks. Even if Goldman beats estimates, keep in mind that analysts aren’t expecting much from the investment bank for the second quarter because of several of its own missteps.

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  • CNBC Daily Open: Investment banking sees signs of life

    CNBC Daily Open: Investment banking sees signs of life

    A woman exits the Bank of America headquarters on July 18, 2023 in New York.

    Eduardo Munoz Alvarez | View Press | Getty Images

    This report is from today’s CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    What you need to know today

    Positive market momentum
    All major U.S. indexes
    advanced Tuesday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average had its seventh consecutive day of gains as investors digested better-than-expected corporate earnings. European markets traded higher as well. The benchmark Stoxx 600 index added 0.6% as British grocery delivery firm Ocado surged almost 20%.

    Microsoft 365 + $30
    Microsoft shares popped around 4% to hit an all-time high after the company announced pricing for its new artificial intelligence service. Named Copilot, the service costs an additional $30 per month, on top of the base Microsoft 365 subscription for Office products. Microsoft also announced its Bing Chat can now respond to images.

    The other Morgan
    Morgan Stanley’s shares jumped 6.45% after the bank reported better-than-expected second-quarter earnings and revenue. Revenue climbed 2% to $13.46 billion, boosted by a 16% increase in wealth management revenue. Profits declined 13% to $2.18 billion from a year earlier, but investors took comfort in CEO James Gorman’s comments that the upcoming quarter looks “more constructive.”

    Banking on Bank of America
    Investors pushed Bank of America shares up 4.42% on the bank’s earnings and revenue beat for the second quarter. Both figures were also higher year on year. Profit rose 19% to $7.41 billion while revenue increased 11% to $25.33 billion, helped by a 14% jump in net interest income.

    [PRO] Cautious fund managers
    In the past days, we’ve heard about how the S&P 500 may hit a record high this year amid a perpetually postponed recession. But fund managers are still cautious, according to the latest Bank of America Global Fund Manager Survey. This is how managers are allocating their investments, and the assets they are worried about.

    The bottom line

    In another sign the U.S. economy is more resilient than anticipated, banks have had a good showing this earnings season.

    Yes, big banks like JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and Bank of America are supposed to benefit from the higher interest rates that felled regional banks like Silicon Valley Bank and First Republic.

    But investment banking activity — which slowed as higher rates first kicked in last year — is seeing signs of a revival.

    JPMorgan’s investment banking revenue beat estimates. As Octavio Marenzi, CEO of consultancy Opimas, put it, “investment banking, which has been a problem child over the past year or so, is starting to show signs of life.”

    Indeed, investment banking fees for Bank of America increased 7% to $1.2 billion.

    And while Morgan Stanley didn’t do so well on the investment banking front, CEO James Gorman said he believes “we are very, very close” to the end of rate hikes. That would give the banking sector more stable ground on which to operate and rebuild.

    Regional banks weren’t left out of the surge of optimism in the sector, either. Charles Schwab, which had struggled since the banking turmoil in March, also saw better-than-expected earnings and revenue last quarter. Investors cheered and gave the bank’s shares a 12.57% bump.

    More tellingly, the SPDR Regional Banking ETF added 4.22% to hit $45.73, its best day of gains since June 6, and the most expensive it’s been since early March, prior to the failure of several regional banks.

    Broader indexes closed higher as well. The S&P 500 rose 0.71%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 1.06% and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.76%.

    Goldman Sachs reports later today, wrapping up earnings from big banks.

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  • We shouldn’t be relying on the consumer to fuel banking growth, says Fmr. FDIC Chair Sheila Bair

    We shouldn’t be relying on the consumer to fuel banking growth, says Fmr. FDIC Chair Sheila Bair

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    Sheila Bair, former FDIC Chair, joins ‘Fast Money’ to talk the financials sector, whether more bank failures are on the horizon and more.

    06:00

    Tue, Jul 18 20236:24 PM EDT

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  • U.S. stocks finish higher as Dow industrials book longest winning streak since March 2021 after better-than-expected corporate earnings

    U.S. stocks finish higher as Dow industrials book longest winning streak since March 2021 after better-than-expected corporate earnings

    U.S. stock indexes ended higher on Tuesday with the Dow Jones Industrial Average settling at the highest level in 15 months after quarterly results from Bank of America Corp.
    BAC,
    +4.42%

    and Morgan Stanley
    MS,
    +6.45%

    bolstered bank stocks, while shares of Microsoft Corp.
    MSFT,
    +3.98%

    spiked to its record high, buoying the technology sector. The Dow industrials
    DJIA,
    +1.06%

    advanced 366 points, or 1.1%, to end at 34,951, its highest closing level since April 21, 2022. The S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.71%

    was up 0.7%, while the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    +0.76%

    jumped 0.8%. Bank of America Corp.’s second-quarter earnings beat Wall Street expectations, sending the megabank’s stock up by more than 4.4% on Tuesday, while Morgan Stanley’s shares rallied 6.5% after its quarterly profit dropped but beat analyst expectations. Exchange-traded funds that buy bank stocks jumped on Tuesday with the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF
    KRE,
    +4.22%

    logging its best daily performance since June 6, according to FactSet data.

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