U.S. blockchain startup Ripple made a major foray into crypto custody on Thursday, launching new services aimed at helping banks and financial technology firms to store digital assets on behalf of clients.
The San Francisco-based company told CNBC it is debuting a slew of features to enable its banking and fintech clientele to keep and maintain digital tokens — as part of a broader push into custody, a nascent business for Ripple under its recently formed Ripple Custody division.
These features include pre-configured operational and policy settings, integration with Ripple’s XRP Ledger blockchain platform, monitoring of anti-money laundering risks to maintain compliance, and a new user interface that’s easier to use and engage.
The move will help Ripple, which is primarily known for the XRP cryptocurrency and its RippleNet platform, to diversify beyond its core payment settlement business. RippleNet is a messaging platform based on blockchain — the technology that underpins cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin — which lets banks share updates on the status of money movements in a global, distributed network.
Thursday’s development marks Ripple’s first significant move to consolidate its custody products under one brand, Ripple Custody, and take on a slew of companies that already offer products and services in this space, such as Coinbase, Gemini, and Fireblocks.
Custody is a nascent but fast-growing space within the digital asset space. Custodians play a key role in the crypto market, helping clients safeguard private keys, which are the alphanumeric codes required to unlock access to digital assets and authorize transactions.
Custodians don’t just store crypto. They also help with payments and settlements, trading, and ensuring regulatory compliance with global laws governing digital currencies. The crypto custody market is forecast to reach at least $16 trillion by 2030, according to the Boston Consulting Group.
Ripple said that custody is one of the fastest-growing areas for the startup, with Ripple Custody posting customer growth of over 250% year-over-year growth this year and operating in seven countries. It counts the likes of HSBC, the Swiss arm of BBVA, Societe Generale and DBS as clients.
Gambling that a growing number of real-world assets will become tradable as digital tokens in the future, Ripple said it will allow customers of its custody services to tokenize real-world assets — think fiat currencies, commodities like gold and oil or real estate — by using XRP Ledger.
Ripple said that the integration with its XRP Ledger tech would give firms access to its own native decentralized exchange, a platform that helps match buyers and sellers of a range of digital assets without any middlemen involved for faster, low-fee trading.
“With new features, Ripple Custody is expanding its capabilities to better serve high-growth crypto and fintech businesses with secure and scalable digital asset custody,” Aaron Slettehaugh, senior vice president of product at Ripple, said in a statement shared with CNBC on Thursday.
Last year, Ripple acquired Metaco, a firm that helps other entities store and manage their crypto, in a bid to boost its nascent crypto custody business. The company this year also acquired Standard Custody & Trust Company, another crypto custody firm, to further bolster its efforts.
Ripple’s diversification bid comes at a tenuous time for XRP. Last week, the price of the XRP cryptocurrency tumbled sharply after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filed to appeal a 2023 court ruling that the token should not be considered a security when sold to retail investors.
As the largest holder of XRP coins, Ripple has long battled the SEC over allegations that it sold the cryptocurrency in an illegal securities offering. Ripple denies the cryptocurrency should be considered a security.
Capital Area Planning Group’s Malcolm Ethridge, American Century Investments’ Mike Rode and Obermeyer’s Ali Flynn Phillips, join ‘Closing Bell’ to discuss their market outlooks and mega cap stocks.
Thomas Michaud, KBW president and CEO, joins ‘Money Movers’ to discuss what to watch for in Q3 bank earnings, how the Fed’s path for rate cuts could impact the markets, and more.
Workers picket outside a Boeing Co. facility during a strike in Everett, Washington, US, on Monday, Sept. 16, 2024. Boeing Co. factory workers walked off the job for the first time in 16 years, halting manufacturing across the planemaker’s Seattle hub after members of its largest union voted overwhelmingly to reject a contract offer and go on strike.
M. Scott Brauer | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Boeing withdrew a contract offer for 33,000 machinists who have been on strike since mid-September, and said further negotiations “do not make sense at this point.”
The machinists walked off the job on Sept. 13 after overwhelmingly rejecting a tentative labor deal, halting production of most of Boeing’s aircraft, which are made in the Puget Sound area. Boeing later sweetened the offer, increasing pay raises, a ratification bonus and other improvements, which the union turned down, arguing that it was not negotiated.
Talks again broke down this week, meaning the strike will continue. The stoppage will cost Boeing more than $1 billion per month, S&P Global Ratings said Tuesday as it issued a negative outlook for the aerospace giant’s credit ratings.
Stephanie Pope, CEO of Boeing’s commercial aircraft unit, said the company improved contract pay during talks this week but said the union didn’t consider the proposals.
“Instead, the union made non-negotiable demands far in excess of what can be accepted if we are to remain competitive as a business,” Pope said in a staff note.
The union, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, said Tuesday that Boeing refused to improve wages, retirement plans and vacation or sick leave.
Jenny Zeng from Allianz Global Investors discusses whether the PBOC’s stimulus package is enough to sustain the current Chinese market rally, adding that she is watching if the Chinese government will stay ahead of market expectations.
Michael Yoshikami, CEO of Destination Wealth Management, looks ahead to US financial earnings ahead of Friday. He expects lower net interest margins, but fewer defaults.
Newfound optimism on Morgan Stanley helped its stock close Friday’s session at its highest level of the year. Jim Cramer is still unsure what the Club’s next move should be. Morgan Stanley’s persistent underperformance has made the stock one of our thornier positions — so much so that Jim has openly considered dumping it for investment banking rival Goldman Sachs . Dealmaking activity has picked up, but it’s not been enough to fully unlock Morgan Stanley shares. That is in large part because the bank’s wealth management division has failed to impress. Analysts at HSBC see better days ahead for Morgan Stanley and in a note to clients late Thursday upgraded the stock to a buy rating from hold, arguing its “long period of underperformance could be ending.” Among the reasons for the call: A healthy market backdrop should support the financial performance of both its investment banking and wealth management operations, analysts said. They added that negative sentiment around the stock more generally also seems to have bottomed. Shares of Morgan Stanley rose more than 3% Friday, to $107.88 each, helped by both HSBC’s upgrade and better-than-expected jobs data , which lifted the entire banking sector higher, including fellow portfolio name Wells Fargo . Morgan Stanley ended Friday within a dollar of its all-time closing high of $108.73 reached back in February 2022. Still, the stock is up only 15.7% year to date and 36.4% over the past 12 months, lagging behind the KBW Bank Index , which has climbed 19.4% and 52.6%, respectively, over those timeframes. For its part, Goldman Sachs has jumped 28.4% so far in 2024 and 60.5% in the past year. Friday’s positive developments are welcome news – but not enough to add clarity on our path forward for Morgan Stanley. We’re maintaining our hold-equivalent 2 rating on the stock. “Candidly, I think that [Morgan Stanley] is not priced for a good IPO market and [Goldman Sachs] is,” Jim said Friday. “The reason for that is because I think that people believe the wealth advisory business isn’t doing as well as it can be and the E-Trade buy seems to not be working out,” Jim said, referring to Morgan Stanley’s $13 billion acquisition of the brokerage firm in 2020. “We still do not have answers for that so I can’t say that we are going to upgrade.” However, there’s hope Morgan Stanley’s stock can climb higher if its sizable investment banking business continues its recovery. In order for that to happen, there must be a more meaningful resurgence in initial public offerings (IPO) and mergers and acquisitions (M & A) after more than two downbeat years for both dealmaking markets. Banks like Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs have long relied on fee-based revenues from deals. The more activity there is, the more fees available for them to collect. The nascent rebound has already showed up in Morgan Stanley’s results. In the second quarter, revenue for the firm’s investment banking segment surged 51% year over year. Meanwhile, advisory and equity underwriting fees both increased 30% and 56%, respectively, over the same period. The environment for deals is not back to normal just yet, though. During an industry conference in September, Morgan Stanley co-president Dan Simkowitz said that M & A and IPOs will likely remain below trend through year-end. To be sure, the executive also forecasted that this activity would accelerate in 2025 as the Federal Reserve’s interest rate-cutting efforts ripple through the economy. Morgan Stanley’s wealth management franchise — a major growth priority for the bank — is a lingering concern after a miss on revenues last quarter, which caused the stock to briefly sink. Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs beat analysts’ expectations for revenues in wealth. Morgan Stanley’s quarterly results on Oct. 17 will provide an important look at whether this challenged part of its business is showing any reason for optimism. For the time being, the Club is taking a wait-and-see approach with Morgan Stanley stock. If there is a surge in IPO and M & A activity that HSBC forecasted, Morgan Stanley is well-positioned to benefit. “If we get deals, [Morgan Stanley] will be a good place to be,” Jim said. (Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust is long MS, WFC. See here for a full list of the stocks.) 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.
Bing Guan | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Newfound optimism on Morgan Stanley helped its stock close Friday’s session at its highest level of the year. Jim Cramer is still unsure what the Club’s next move should be.
A Spirit commercial airliner prepares to land at San Diego International Airport in San Diego, California, U.S., January 18, 2024.
Mike Blake | Reuters
Spirit Airlines shares tumbled to a record low on Friday after a report that it’s exploring Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. The carrier faces a deadline this month to renegotiate more than $1 billion in debt.
A bankruptcy filing would mark a dramatic turn for the carrier with its iconic yellow planes that caters to budget-conscious travelers.
Profitable and punctual before the pandemic, Spirit’s no-frills service became a punchline for late-night comedians and a thorn in the side of big network carriers, enticing customers with double-digit fares and fees for everything else from seat assignments to carry-on luggage.
But big airlines soon successfully copied much of that business model with their lowest bare-bones fares. And a federal judge at the start of the year blocked Spirit’s planned acquisition by JetBlue Airways on antitrust grounds, halting what both carriers argued was a key avenue to compete with larger rivals. The scuttled dealleft Spirit on its own to struggle with a Pratt & Whitney engine recall, shifting consumer travel patterns and higher costs.
After the JetBlue deal fell apart, Spirit said in January that it was looking at options to refinance its debt.
Spirit has $1.1 billion in loyalty-program backed debt that is due next September. It has until Oct. 21 to refinance or extend those secured notes.
The carrier has been losing money since 2020 and has reported disappointing results this year, including a nearly $193 million loss in the second quarter. The company has spent much of this year scrambling to cut costs, including furloughing pilots, slashing flights and deferring Airbus jetliner orders.
Spirit reduced its November and December capacity growth plans by about 17%, Barclays airline analyst Brandon Oglenski said earlier this week.
“As we’ve said, Spirit has been implementing a comprehensive plan to help us better compete, strengthen our balance sheet, and return to profitability,” CEO Ted Christie said in a note to staff on Friday. “We remain engaged in productive conversations with our bondholders, and we’re focused on securing the best outcome for the business as quickly as possible.”
A Spirit spokesman declined to comment on a the Wall Street Journal report that the carrier is considering a bankruptcy filing. Spirit adviser Perella Weinberg Partners declined to comment.
Spirit’s stock price dropped more than 24% Friday to a record low of $1.69. Shares are down nearly 90% so far this year.
Shares of Frontier Airlines, which originally planned to merge with fellow budget airline Spirit before JetBlue swooped in in 2022, surged 16% on Friday. Shares of other airlines also rallied.
Feroze Azeez from Anand Rathi Wealth, discusses the issues barring the financial deployment of household savings in India, as well as some of the long-term challenges that Indian banks could face.
Great news for Club stocks Wells Fargo and Morgan Stanley : The rebound in investment banking isn’t over yet. The catalyst? Dealmaking is expected to continue to rise as the Federal Reserve delivers more interest rate cuts. This should, in turn, boost revenues for a key business within both Wall Street firms. We’ll find out to what extent when Wells Fargo reports earnings on Oct. 11 and Morgan Stanley delivers quarterly results on Oct. 16. Lower borrowing costs tend to spur mergers and acquisitions (M & A) and initial public offerings (IPO), which means more business for the banks. Recent numbers from consulting firm KPMG and financial data provider S & P Global Market Intelligence indicate a solid pickup in activity for M & A and IPOs already. So far in 2024, mergers and acquisitions transaction values and money raised from initial public offerings are largely outperforming all of last year’s lackluster activity. U.S. mergers and acquisitions rose 37% to $1.3 trillion in the first nine months of 2024 compared to the same period a year ago, according to KPMG, citing data through Sept. 15. Global M & A transaction values so far this year of roughly $2 trillion have already beat 2023’s total of $1.6 trillion, according to S & P Global data captured on Oct. 1. The IPO market has improved, too. According to KPMG, public offerings listed in the U.S. raised $28.3 billion during the first nine months of 2024. That’s up 50% year over year. All of this bodes well for the kind of advisory and underwriting fees that investment banks can charge to facilitate these deals. To be sure, M & A and IPO values are still down significantly from their Covid peaks in 2021 after the Fed delivered two emergency rate cuts in March 2020 that took the cost of borrowing to near zero. Rates remained that way until March 2022 when central bankers started their tightening cycle to fight inflation. The Fed hiked rates 11 times over 18 months before cutting rates by 50 basis points last month. Speaking at a National Association for Business Economics event in Nashville, Tennessee, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said Monday that he expects an additional 50 basis points worth of rate cuts this year — 25 in November and 25 in December. The market is not quite ready to take Powell at his word. As of Tuesday, the CME FedWatch tool was putting roughly 66% odds on a 50 basis point cut in December. Rebecca Brokmeier, group head of KPMG’s investment banking platform, sees “an increase in new deals in the market in the fourth calendar quarter and expects this trend to continue as we move into 2025” while the Fed continues to lower rates. Brokmeier told CNBC Tuesday that a lot of this activity is expected to be driven by private equity, which is “more reliant on low interest rates for transactions than corporations and have record levels of dry powder to deploy as well as long-held assets that must be exited in order to return cash to their investors.” MS YTD mountain Morgan Stanley (MS) year-to-date performance For Morgan Stanley, a resurgence in its investment banking division is crucial to our investment thesis and why we stuck with it. Following nearly two downbeat years, we saw reason to be optimistic about Morgan Stanley’s IB business last quarter, which was out in July. IB segment revenue jumped 51%. Breaking IB down further, advisory and equity underwriting fees both surged 30% and 56%, respectively, from the prior year. Last month, however, Jim Cramer criticized the stock’s underperformance , adding that he was considering exiting Morgan Stanley and swapping in investment banking rival Goldman Sachs , where he used to work during his days on Wall Street. Part of that underperformance came after co-president Dan Simkowitz said that M & A and IPOs will remain below trend for the rest of 2024 at an industry conference. To be sure, he also predicted that this activity would accelerate in 2025 as the Fed lowers rates. “Morgan Stanley is in no man’s land, too low to sell and too high to buy. That means wait, which is exactly what we are doing,” Jim said during the Club’s Monthly Meeting on Sept. 12, two days after Simkowitz’s comments. “It might be time to say goodbye and pick up some of the much better run Goldman Sachs.” A week later, Morgan Stanley stock rose on the Fed rate cut, and the Club settled for trimming the position . Morgan Stanley has diversified its portfolio and moved more heavily into wealth management in recent years to reduce its exposure to the volatility of the IB business. So, it remains to be seen how investment banking performance fits into the whole profit picture. WFC YTD mountain Wells Fargo (WFC) year-to-date Morgan Stanley’s IB business is much larger than Wells Fargo’s. However, Wells Fargo, known for its roots as a traditional money center bank, has been working diligently to build out its dealmaking side of the shop. It’s kind of the opposite of Morgan Stanley. Wells Fargo, which has a strong wealth management franchise, is branching out to take a slice of the IB pie. Wells has made a series of senior-level hires in recent years to expand its corporate and investment banking (CIB) division. This helps the bank rely less on interest-based incomes from its consumer lending business, which have been long at the mercy of the Fed’s monetary policy decisions. We’ve seen positive signs already, as CIB revenue jumped 38% year over year in the July quarter. “We continued to see growth in our fee-based revenue offsetting an expected decline in net interest income,” Wells Fargo CEO Charlie Scharf said during the July 12 earnings call. “The investments we have been making allowed us to take advantage of the market activity in the quarter with strong performance in investment advisory, trading and investment banking fees.” In another positive development in Scharf’s bid to clean up the bank’s past missteps and get regulatory permission to expand, Bloomberg News reported last week that Wells Fargo submitted a third-party review of its risk and control overhauls to the Fed in an effort to get the central bank-mandated $1.95 trillion asset cap removed. The restriction was put in place by the Fed in 2018 after a series of scandals under previous leadership. (Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust is long WFC, MS. See here for a full list of the stocks.) 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.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks during a news conference following the September meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee at the William McChesney Martin Jr. Federal Reserve Board Building on September 18, 2024 in Washington, DC.
A MLB store in the Myeongdong shopping district in Seoul, South Korea, on Saturday, March 9, 2024.
Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images
SINGAPORE — Asia-Pacific markets opened lower Wednesday morning, following a poor start to the trading month on Wall Street that saw major indexes fall amid rising Middle East tensions.
Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 opened down 0.2%, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 started the trading day lower by 1.5%. South Korea’s Kospi fell 1% at the open, while the small-cap Kosdaq was down 0.8%.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index futures were at 20,768, lower than the HSI’s last close of 21,133.68. Markets in Mainland China were closed Wednesday and will remain closed for the rest of the week due to the Golden Week holiday.
Traders in Asia were assessing data on consumer inflation out of South Korea. The country’s consumer price index rose 1.6% in September from a year earlier, data showed Wednesday morning, missing expectations by economists polled by Reuters who expected a rate of 1.9%.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Iran’s missile attacks had failed and vowed retaliation. “Iran made a big mistake tonight — and it will pay for it,” he said, according to NBC News, adding “the regime in Iran does not understand our determination to defend ourselves and our determination to retaliate against our enemies.”
—CNBC’s Brian Evans and Alex Harring contributed to this report.
BARCELONA, SPAIN – MARCH 01: A view of the MasterCard company logo on their stand during the Mobile World Congress on March 1, 2017 in Barcelona, Spain. (Photo by Joan Cros Garcia/Corbis via Getty Images)
Mastercard said Tuesday that it’s agreed to acquire Minna Technologies, a software firm that makes it easier for consumers to manage their subscriptions.
The move comes as Mastercard and its primary payment network rival Visa are rapidly attempting to expand beyond their core credit and debit card businesses into technology services, such as cybersecurity, fraud prevention, and pay-by-bank payments.
Mastercard declined to disclose financial details of the transaction which is currently subject to a regulatory review.
The payments giant said that the deal, along with other initiatives it’s committed to around subscriptions, will allow it to give consumers a way to access all their subscriptions in a single view — whether inside your banking app or a central “hub.”
Minna Technologies, which is based in Gothenburg, Sweden, develops technology that helps consumers manage subscriptions within their banking apps and websites, regardless of which payment method they used for their subscriptions.
The company said it works with some of the world’s largest financial institutions in the world today. It already counts Mastercard as a key partner as well as its rival Visa.
“These teams and technologies will add to the broader set of tools that help manage the merchant-consumer relationship and minimize any disruption in their experience,” Mastercard said in a blog post Tuesday.
Consumers today often have tons of subscriptions to manage across multiple services such as Netflix, Amazon and Disney Plus. Owning multiple subscriptions can make it difficult to cancel them as consumers can end up losing track of which subscriptions they’re paying for and when.
Mastercard noted that this can have a negative impact on merchants because consumers who aren’t able to easily cancel their subscriptions end up calling on their banks to request a block on payments being taken.
According to Juniper Research data, there are 6.8 billion subscriptions globally, a number that’s expected to jump to 9.3 billion by 2028.
Financial services incumbents such as Mastercard have been rapidly growing their product suite to remain competitive with emerging fintech players that are offering more convenient, digitally native ways to manage consumers’ money management needs.
In 2020, Mastercard acquired Finicity, a U.S. fintech firm that enables third parties — such as fintechs or other banks — to gain access to consumers’ banking information and make payments on their behalf.
Earlier this year, the company announced that by 2030, it would tokenize all cards issued on its network in Europe — in other words, as a consumer, you wouldn’t need to enter your card details manually anymore and would only have to use your thumbprint to authenticate your identity when you pay.
Visa, meanwhile, is also trying to remain competitive with fintech challengers. Last month, the company launched a new service called Visa A2A, which makes it easier for consumers to set up and manage direct debits — payments which are taken directly from your bank account rather than by card.
Every weekday the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer holds a “Morning Meeting” livestream at 10:20 a.m. ET. Here’s a recap of Friday’s key moments. 1. Wall Street was mixed Friday but still heading for solid weekly gains. The 10-year Treasury yield dipped, but the S & P 500 was little changed after the August reading of the Federal Reserve’s favorite inflation gauge came in tame. Headline and core PCE were getting closer to the Fed’s 2% inflation target. Next Friday, investors get the September jobs report, the latest look at the health of the second part of the central bank’s dual mandate: the labor market. The economic data between now and the Fed’s meeting on Nov. 6-7 will be key to how much further interest rates will be cut. 2. Shares of Best Buy rose more than 2% on Friday after JPMorgan added the stock to its analyst focus list. The analysts have had a buy-equivalent rating on the stock since February, which is around when we started buying. Looking back, that was a good call with shares up 30% year to date. JPMorgan sees value because investors are underappreciating the AI-powered personal computer cycle and the potential for TVs and appliances to inflect as housing improves. Other housing plays in our portfolio include Stanley Black & Decker and Home Depot . 3. Wells Fargo shares were slightly lower Friday, one day after popping 5% on an encouraging Bloomberg News report about the Fed-mandated asset cap, which was put in place at the bank in 2018. Bloomberg reported that Wells Fargo submitted a third-party review of its risk and control overhauls to the Fed for sign-off to remove the cap. Despite Thursday’s gains, Wells Fargo shares are having a tough month. The bank delivers quarterly earnings on Oct. 11. Our other financial name, Morgan Stanley , reports Oct. 16. (Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust is long BBY, WFC. See here for a full list of the stocks.) 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.
JPMorgan Chase CEO and Chairman Jamie Dimon gestures as he speaks during the U.S. Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee oversight hearing on Wall Street firms, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on Dec. 6, 2023.
Evelyn Hockstein | Reuters
Buried in a roughly 200-page quarterly filing from JPMorgan Chase last month were eight words that underscore how contentious the bank’s relationship with the government has become.
The lender disclosed that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau could punish JPMorgan for its role in Zelle, the giant peer-to-peer digital payments network. The bank is accused of failing to kick criminal accounts off its platform and failing to compensate some scam victims, according to people who declined to be identified speaking about an ongoing investigation.
In response, JPMorgan issued a thinly veiled threat: “The firm is evaluating next steps, including litigation.”
The prospect of a bank suing its regulator would’ve been unheard of in an earlier era, according to policy experts, mostly because corporations used to fear provoking their overseers. That was especially the case for the American banking industry, which needed hundreds of billions of dollars in taxpayer bailouts to survive after irresponsible lending and trading activities caused the 2008 financial crisis, those experts say.
But a combination of factors in the intervening years has created an environment where banks and their regulators have never been farther apart.
Trade groups say that in the aftermath of the financial crisis, banks became easy targets for populist attacks from Democrat-led regulatory agencies. Those on the side of regulators point out that banks and their lobbyists increasingly lean on courts in Republican-dominated districts to fend off reform and protect billions of dollars in fees at the expense of consumers.
“If you go back 15 or 20 years, the view was it’s not particularly smart to antagonize your regulator, that litigating all this stuff is just kicking the hornet’s nest,” said Tobin Marcus, head of U.S. policy at Wolfe Research.
“The disparity between how ambitious [President Joe] Biden’s regulators have been and how conservative the courts are, at least a subset of the courts, is historically wide,” Marcus said. “That’s created so many opportunities for successful industry litigation against regulatory proposals.”
Those forces collided this year, which started out as one of the most consequential for bank regulation since the post-2008 reforms that curbed Wall Street risk-taking, introduced annual stress tests and created the industry’s lead antagonist, the CFPB.
In the final months of the Biden administration, efforts from a half-dozen government agencies were meant to slash fees on credit card late payments, debit transactions and overdrafts, among other proposals. The industry’s biggest threat was the Basel Endgame, a sweeping plan to force big banks to hold tens of billions of dollars more in capital for activities like trading and lending.
“The industry is facing an onslaught of regulatory and potential legislative change,” Marianne Lake, head of JPMorgan’s consumer bank, warned investors in May.
JPMorgan’s disclosure about the CFPB probe into Zelle comes after years of grilling by Democrat lawmakers over financial crimes on the platform. Zelle was launched in 2017 by a bank-owned firm called Early Warning Services in response to the threat from peer-to-peer networks including PayPal.
The vast majority of Zelle activity is uneventful; of the $806 billion that flowed across the network last year, only $166 million in transactions was disputed as fraud by customers of JPMorgan, Bank of America and Wells Fargo, the three biggest players on the platform.
But the three banks collectively reimbursed just 38% of those claims, according to a July Senate report that looked at disputed unauthorized transactions.
Banks are typically on the hook to reimburse fraudulent Zelle payments that the customer didn’t give permission for, but usually don’t refund losses if the customer is duped into authorizing the payment by a scammer, according to the Electronic Fund Transfer Act.
A JPMorgan payments executive told lawmakers in July that the bank actually reimburses 100% of unauthorized transactions; the discrepancy in the Senate report’s findings is because bank personnel often determine that customers have authorized the transactions.
Amid the scrutiny, the bank began warning Zelle users on the Chase app to “Stay safe from scams” and added disclosures that customers won’t likely be refunded for bogus transactions.
The company, which has grown to become the largest and most profitable American bank in history under CEO Jamie Dimon, is at the fore of several other skirmishes with regulators.
Thanks to his reputation guiding JPMorgan through the 2008 crisis and last year’s regional banking upheaval, Dimon may be one of few CEOs with the standing to openly criticize regulators. That was highlighted this year when Dimon led a campaign, both public and behind closed doors, to weaken the Basel proposal.
In May, at JPMorgan’s investor day, Dimon’s deputies made the case that Basel and other regulations would end up harming consumers instead of protecting them.
The cumulative effect of pending regulation would boost the cost of mortgages by at least $500 a year and credit card rates by 2%; it would also force banks to charge two-thirds of consumers for checking accounts, according to JPMorgan.
The message: banks won’t just eat the extra costs from regulation, but instead pass them on to consumers.
While all of these battles are ongoing, the financial industry has racked up several victories so far.
Some contend the threat of litigation helped convince the Federal Reserve to offer a new Basel Endgame proposal this month that roughly cuts in half the extra capital that the largest institutions would be forced to hold, among other industry-friendly changes.
It’s not even clear if the watered-down version of the proposal, a long-in-the-making response to the 2008 crisis, will ever be implemented because it won’t be finalized until well after U.S. elections.
If Republican candidate Donald Trump wins, the rules might be further weakened or killed outright, and even under a Kamala Harris administration, the industry could fight the regulation in court.
That’s been banks’ approach to the CFPB credit card rule, which aimed to cap late fees at $8 per incident and was set to go into effect in May.
A last-ditch effort from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and bank trade groups successfully delayed its implementation when Judge Mark Pittman of the Northern District of Texas sided with the industry, granting a freeze of the rule.
A key playbook for banks has been to file cases in conservative jurisdictions where they are likely to prevail, according to Lori Yue, a Columbia Business School associate professor who has studied the interplay between corporations and the judicial system.
The Northern District of Texas feeds into the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, which is “well-known for its friendliness to industry lawsuits against regulators,” Yue said.
“Venue-shopping like this has become well-established corporate strategy,” Yue said. “The financial industry has been particularly active this year in suing regulators.”
Since 2017, nearly two-thirds of the lawsuits filed by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce challenging federal regulations have been in courts under the 5th Circuit, according to an analysis by Accountable US.
Industries dominated by a few large players — from banks to airlines, pharmaceutical companies and energy firms — tend to have well-funded trade organizations that are more likely to resist regulators, Yue added.
The polarized environment, where weakened federal agencies are undermined by conservative courts, ultimately preserves the advantages of the largest corporations, according to Brian Graham, co-founder of bank consulting firm Klaros.
“It’s really bad in the long run, because it locks in place whatever the regulations have been, while the reality is that the world is changing,” Graham said. “It’s what happens when you can’t adopt new regulations because you’re terrified that you’ll get sued.”
— With data visualizations by CNBC’s Gabriel Cortes.
Billionaire hedge fund founder David Tepper said his big bet after the Federal Reserve’s rate cut was to buy Chinese stocks. “I thought that what the Fed did last week would lead to China easing, and I didn’t know that they were going to bring out the big guns like they did,” Tepper told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Thursday. “And I think there’s a whole shift.” “We got a little bit longer, more Chinese stocks,” Tepper continued. “And so, I have limits, historic limits. I probably said a long time ago, I don’t go above 10% or 15%. Well, that’s probably not true anymore.” In fact, the founder of Appaloosa Management said he may have doubled his limit to China equities, saying he bought more of “everything” such as large-cap tech giants Alibaba and Baidu after the U.S. lowered interest rates earlier this month. “It’s everything. Now, I would love to see a pullback, okay,” he said. “I will have another newfound limit, okay, in a pullback.” Tepper has grown optimistic on the China market this month after state media on Thursday afternoon said Chinese President Xi Jinping and other top leaders affirmed the government’s efforts to stimulate the economy. That comes after China earlier this week unveiled interest rate cuts , as well as other measures to support the property market. “They promised to do more and more and more. Okay? And that’s very strange language, especially for, you know, any central banker, but especially over there,” Tepper said. “And last night, you know, we heard that they were going to have some kind of meeting, but they kind of blew away expectations on the fiscal stimulus.” FXI 1D mountain iShares China Large-Cap ETF The iShares China Large-Cap ETF (FXI) rallied 6.8% in the premarket following Tepper’s comments, extending its gains from a winning session for Chinese and Hong Kong stocks. Tepper also noted the Chinese market is cheaper than U.S. equities. “You’re sitting there with single multiple P/Es with double-digit growth rates for the big stocks that trade over here,” Tepper said. “That’s kind of versus what, you know, the 20-plus on the S & P.” As part of a China play, Tepper said that he would buy Wynn Resorts and Las Vegas Sands . The casino stocks popped more than 6% and 7%, respectively. To be sure, rising geopolitical concerns including further tariffs between the U.S. and China have spooked many investors away from the China market. However, Tepper dismissed those risks. “My counter bet is that I don’t care,” he said.
The U.S. Justice Department on Tuesday sued Visa, the world’s biggest payments network, saying it propped up an illegal monopoly over debit payments by imposing “exclusionary” agreements on partners and smothering upstart firms.
Visa’s moves over the years have resulted in American consumers and merchants paying billions of dollars in additional fees, according to the DOJ, which filed a civil antitrust suit in New York for “monopolization” and other unlawful conduct.
“We allege that Visa has unlawfully amassed the power to extract fees that far exceed what it could charge in a competitive market,” Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a DOJ release.
“Merchants and banks pass along those costs to consumers, either by raising prices or reducing quality or service,” Garland said. “As a result, Visa’s unlawful conduct affects not just the price of one thing — but the price of nearly everything.”
Visa and its smaller rival Mastercard have surged over the past two decades, reaching a combined market cap of roughly $1 trillion, as consumers tapped credit and debit cards for store purchases and e-commerce instead of paper money. They are essentially toll collectors, shuffling payments between banks operating for the merchants and for cardholders.
Visa called the DOJ suit “meritless.”
“Anyone who has bought something online, or checked out at a store, knows there is an ever-expanding universe of companies offering new ways to pay for goods and services,” said Visa general counsel Julie Rottenberg.
“Today’s lawsuit ignores the reality that Visa is just one of many competitors in a debit space that is growing, with entrants who are thriving,” Rottenberg said. “We are proud of the payments network we have built, the innovation we advance, and the economic opportunity we enable.”
More than 60% of debit transactions in the U.S. run over Visa rails, helping it charge more than $7 billion annually in processing fees, according to the DOJ complaint.
The payment networks’ decades-old dominance has increasingly attracted attention from regulators and retailers.
In 2020, the DOJ filed an antitrust suit to block Visa from acquiring fintech company Plaid. The companies initially said they would fight the action, but soon abandoned the $5.3 billion takeover.
In March, Visa and Mastercard agreed to limit their fees and let merchants charge customers for using credit cards, a deal retailers said was worth $30 billion in savings over a half decade. A federal judge later rejected the settlement, saying the networks could afford to pay for a “substantially greater” deal.
In its complaint, the DOJ said Visa threatens merchants and their banks with punitive rates if they route a “meaningful share” of debit transactions to competitors, helping maintain Visa’s network moat. The contracts help insulate three-quarters of Visa’s debit volume from fair competition, the DOJ said.
“Visa wields its dominance, enormous scale, and centrality to the debit ecosystem to impose a web of exclusionary agreements on merchants and banks,” the DOJ said in its release. “These agreements penalize Visa’s customers who route transactions to a different debit network or alternative payment system.”
Furthermore, when faced with threats, Visa “engaged in a deliberate and reinforcing course of conduct to cut off competition and prevent rivals from gaining the scale, share, and data necessary to compete,” the DOJ said.
The moves also tamped down innovation, according to the DOJ. Visa pays competitors hundreds of millions of dollars annually “to blunt the risk they develop innovative new technologies that could advance the industry but would otherwise threaten Visa’s monopoly profits,” according to the complaint.
Visa has agreements with tech players including Apple, PayPal and Square, turning them from potential rivals to partners in a way that hurts the public, the DOJ said.
For instance, Visa chose to sign an agreement with a predecessor to the Cash App product to ensure that the company, later rebranded Block, did not create a bigger threat to Visa’s debit rails.
A Visa manager was quoted as saying “we’ve got Square on a short leash and our deal structure was meant to protect against disintermediation,” according to the complaint.
Visa has an agreement with Apple in which the tech giant says it will not directly compete with the payment network “such as creating payment functionality that relies primarily on non-Visa payment processes,” the complaint alleged.
The DOJ asked for the courts to prevent Visa from a range of anticompetitive practices, including fee structures or service bundles that discourage new entrants.
The move comes in the waning months of President Joe Biden‘s administration, in which regulators including the Federal Trade Commission and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau have sued middlemen for drug prices and pushed back against so-called junk fees.
In February, credit card lender Capital One announced its acquisition of Discover Financial, a $35.3 billion deal predicated in part on Capital One’s ability to bolster Discover’s also-ran payments network, a distant No. 4 behind Visa, Mastercard and American Express.
Capital One said once the deal is closed, it will switch all its debit card volume and a growing share of credit card volume to Discover over time, making it a more viable competitor to Visa and Mastercard.
Every weekday the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer holds a “Morning Meeting” livestream at 10:20 a.m. ET. Here’s a recap of Monday’s key moments. 1. Stocks opened higher Monday in a continuation of last week’s momentum, which saw all major indexes gain more than 1%. The Dow closed Friday at a record while the S & P 500 did so Thursday . The strength followed the Federal Reserve’s half-percentage point interest rate cut Wednesday. Health care, a classic defensive sector, is underperforming Monday as investors grow more confident in the possibility of a soft landing for the U.S. economy. Meanwhile, technology — and the semiconductor industry, more specifically — are having a mixed day as Wall Street weighs reports around Intel . In addition to last week’s reports that Qualcomm has discussed buying Intel, Bloomberg News said private equity giant Apollo Global Management has approached the struggling chipmaker with an multibillion investment offer. 2. Despite a slight dip in the S & P 500 Friday, the S & P Short Range Oscillator moved further into overbought territory at 7.3%. A session prior, Jim Cramer’s trusted momentum indicator was at 6.68%. We want to see some market choppiness to work off the overbought reading — as a reminder, anything above 4% on the Oscillator is considered overbought. In this environment, we prefer to raise cash rather than buying stocks. That helps explain why we trimmed Morgan Stanley last week during the post-Fed rate cut rally. Another reason for offloading some shares is the possibility of switching to a different financial stock such as Goldman Sachs , a move Jim has been considering for some time now. 3. Wall Street’s early checks for Apple ‘s new iPhone 16, which hit stores Friday, remain all over the place. Barclays concluded there’s muted demand across both Pro and base models due to shorter lead times compared with last year. Conversely, JPMorgan observed expanding lead times mid-week, suggesting “healthy demand” overall, though lead times were a little softer versus last year on higher-end Pro and Pro Max models. Citigroup analysts also reported an increase in delivery times for the base and Pro models. Director of Portfolio Analysis Jeff Marks advised investors to minimize the noise. “If you’re trying to trade it on every headline, you would have missed such a fantastic move,” Jeff said, alluding to our “own it, don’t trade it” mantra. Additionally, last week T-Mobile’s CEO told Jim in an interview that initial demand for the iPhone 16 looked good relative to the iPhone 15 a year ago. (Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust is long AAPL, MS. See here for a full list of the stocks.) 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.