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Tag: JPMorgan Chase & Co

  • CNBC Daily Open: For banks, big profits don’t mean market gains

    CNBC Daily Open: For banks, big profits don’t mean market gains

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    People walk outside of the JPMorgan Chase & Co. Headquarters on June 12, 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

    Lackluster markets
    U.S. stocks
    traded mixed Friday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average the only major index to rise, though all big indexes ended in the green for the week. European markets closed lower after five positive sessions. The benchmark Stoxx 600 index retreated 0.11%, dragged down by telecom stocks after downbeat news from Nokia and Ericsson.

    Biggest bank gets bigger
    JPMorgan Chase’s second-quarter net income surged 67% to $14.5 billion, or $4.75 per share. When excluding its acquisition of First Republic, earnings were $4.37 per share. Revenue grew 34% to hit $42.4 billion, boosted by a 44% jump in net interest income. All figures beat Wall Street’s estimates — and the bank’s own, causing it to raise its expectations for the full year’s net interest income.

    Caged bird
    Twitter’s experiencing negative cash flow because of an approximately 50% drop in advertising revenue and “heavy debt,” Elon Musk said Saturday morning. Musk, who is Twitter’s CTO and executive chairman, told a BBC reporter in April that the company’s “roughly breakeven” and expected to have positive cash flow within the next quarter.

    Thawing Activision Blizzard deal
    Microsoft’s one step closer to acquiring Activision Blizzard. The U.S. Appeals Court on Friday denied the Federal Trade Commission’s motion to stop the $68.7 billion deal, while Britain’s competition regulator said it would consider Microsoft’s proposals to “restructure the transaction.” Meanwhile, Sony’s signed a 10-year agreement with Microsoft to keep Activision’s Call of Duty on the PlayStation console.

    [PRO] Ripple effects
    A judge in the Southern District of New York ruled Thursday that Ripple’s XRP token is “not necessarily a security on its face.” That’s a win not just for Ripple, a crypto company, but the wider industry. CNBC Pro’s Tanaya Macheel explains what the case means for crypto companies like Coinbase.

    The bottom line

    Despite big banks posting solid earnings for their second quarter, they didn’t reap rewards in stock markets Friday.

    Citigroup’s earnings and revenue beat expectations. Its shares sank 4.05%. Likewise, Wells Fargo reported better-than-expected earnings and revenue, and raised its guidance for full-year net interest income. Still, market response was muted. Shares of Wells Fargo slipped 0.34%

    Even JPMorgan, the grand dame of U.S. banks, didn’t manage to rouse investor interest. Its net income soared 67% year over year; its stock inched up 0.6%.

    Why aren’t investors more excited about banks?

    The memory of March’s banking turmoil, I think, still lingers. Higher interest rates may benefit big banks because their deposits are relatively sticky compared with those at regional banks — such as the ill-fated Silicon Valley Bank.

    But high rates are also deepening commercial real estate debt, impeding dealmaking and lowering loan demand — all headwinds for banks, regardless of their size. It’s hard, in other words, to muster enthusiasm over banks when rates are still at historically high levels.

    Another reason for the disinterest in the banking sector, I think, is because stocks are essentially promises of future earnings. And there’s nothing new or exciting that banks can do, really, to generate income.

    In fact, I’d argue that banks are supposed to be boring. No one wants the place where they entrust their money to be exciting. The banks that collapsed this year were all, loosely speaking, deviating from boring banking business: Focusing on tech startups, the crypto industry, or — in the case of Credit Suisse — just straightforwardly plagued by scandals.

    It’s maybe not a bad thing, then, that investors aren’t piling into big banks.

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  • U.S. Virgin Islands seeks at least $190 million from JPMorgan Chase in Jeffrey Epstein case

    U.S. Virgin Islands seeks at least $190 million from JPMorgan Chase in Jeffrey Epstein case

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    The government of the U.S. Virgin Islands in a court filing Friday estimated that it will seek damages of at least $190 million from JPMorgan Chase in a lawsuit accusing the big bank of facilitating sex trafficking by its former long-time customer Jeffrey Epstein.

    The Virgin Islands also said it wants an order requiring JPMorgan to take a series of steps to protect young women and girls from other predators in the future.

    “These sets of recommendations aim to address the same core problem: JPMorgan’s knowledge of
    and failure to report Epstein’s trafficking because it lacked the economic incentive and motivation
    to place compliance with the law and prevention of trafficking ahead of its own profits,” the filing in U.S. District Court in Manhattan says.

    The American territory also said it will seek further compensatory damages specifically for victims of Epstein beyond the nearly $300 million JPMorgan agreed to pay victims last month to settle a lawsuit by one of his accusers. The filing did not give an amount for those additional damages from the bank, which has staunchly denied any wrongdoing.

    The new filing came in response to a request last week by Judge Jed Rakoff that the territory detail the damages it seeks in the case as it heads toward a scheduled Oct. 23 trial.

    The Virgin Islands’ suit accuses JPMorgan of benefiting from Epstein’s trafficking of young women to be abused by him and others during the 15 years he was a client of the bank, which is the largest in the United States.

    The complaint alleges JPMorgan allowed Epstein to keep many millions of dollars in accounts at the bank, which he used to fund his trafficking of women, despite multiple red flags about him raised by bank employees over the years.

    “We are pursuing this enforcement action because JPMorgan Chase’s institutional failure enabled Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking, and JPMorgan Chase must make significant changes to detect, report and stop human trafficking,” said U.S. Virgin Islands Attorney General Ariel Smith in a statement Friday.

    “Financial penalties, as well as conduct changes, are important to make sure that JPMorgan Chase knows the cost of putting its own profits ahead of public safety,” said Smith.

    She said that if the Virgin Islands wins its suit, it will uses the monetary damages it receives “to support efforts to strengthen, inform, and expand local law enforcement and enhance the Virgin Islands’ services for victims of human trafficking and other victims of crime.”

    A JPMorgan spokeswoman, when asked for comment about the filing, indicated for what appears to be the first time that the bank’s attorneys have discussed a possible settlement of the lawsuit with lawyers for the Virgin Islands, which would avoid a trial.

    “This document does not reflect the nature of settlement conversations,” said the spokeswoman, Patricia Wexler. ” As for the USVI’s misdirected damages theories, they are not well founded and are being challenged by JPM in court.”

    It is common in civil litigation for cases to be settled without trial.

    The filing says the Virgin Islands wants at least $150 million in civil penalties alone. The filing also says that it wants JPMorgan to disgorge at least another $40 million in fees that Epstein generated for the bank, and that JPMorgan received from “many ultra-high net worth clients” he referred to the bank.

    Those people, the filing said, included Google co-founder Sergey Brin, Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Lex Wexner, the founder of Limited Brands, and the billionaire Glenn Dubin.

    A spokesperson for Gates contacted CNBC after this article first was published, and in an email, “Mr. Gates was never a client of JP Morgan.”

    In addition to the monetary damages, the Virgin Islands also is asking JPMorgan be compelled “to implement new policies, including separating its business and compliance functions and designating an independent compliance consultant, to prevent human trafficking,” according to a press release by Smith’s office.

    JPMorgan in its own court filings has accused the Virgin Islands itself of being “complicit in the crimes of Jeffrey Epstein.”

    The bank alleges Epstein gave high-ranking officials there money, advice and favors in exchange for looking the other way when he trafficked young women to be abused there.

    Epstein had a residence on a private island in the territory, where accusers say he and other people sexually abused them.

    Last month in the same court where the Virgin Islands is suing the bank JPMorgan agreed, without admitting wrongdoing, to pay $290 million to victims of Epstein to settle a suit by one of his accusers.

    In May, Deutsche Bank agreed to pay Epstein victims $75 million to settle a separate lawsuit by an accuser who accused that back of abetting his sex trafficking of her and others. Deutsche Bank took on Epstein as a customer after JPMorgan severed ties with him in 2013, years after bank employees first voiced concerns about him.

    Deutsche Bank previously agreed to pay New York state’s Department of Financial Services a $150 million penalty for failure to detect or prevent millions of dollars of suspicious transactions related to Epstein, which included “payments to Russian models and to numerous women with Eastern European surnames,” the filing Friday by the Virgin Islands noted.

    Epstein, who had been a friend to former Presidents Donald Trump and Bill Clinton, as well as Prince Andrew of Great Britain, pleaded guilty in 2008 to a Florida state charge of soliciting sex from an underage girl. He served 13 months in jail, but spent much of that time on work release each day.

    Epstein, then 66, killed himself in a federal jail in New York in August 2019, a month after he was arrested on federal child sex trafficking charges.

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  • Watch CNBC’s full interview with Victoria Greene and Scott Wren

    Watch CNBC’s full interview with Victoria Greene and Scott Wren

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    Victoria Greene, G Squared Private Wealth and Scott Wren, Wells Fargo Investment Institute Senior Global Market Strategist, join CNBC’s Leslie Picker and ‘Closing Bell Overtime’ to talk the day’s market action.

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  • Moody’s Ana Arsov breaks down today’s bank earnings

    Moody’s Ana Arsov breaks down today’s bank earnings

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    Ana Arsov, Moody managing director, joins 'Closing Bell' to discuss the three banks that reported earnings Friday.

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  • Dimon says private equity giants are ‘dancing in the streets’ over tougher bank rules

    Dimon says private equity giants are ‘dancing in the streets’ over tougher bank rules

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    Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, testifies during the Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearing titled Annual Oversight of the Nations Largest Banks, in Hart Building on Sept. 22, 2022.

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

    JPMorgan Chase executives warned Friday that tougher regulations in the wake of a trio of bank failures this year would raise costs for consumers and businesses, while forcing lenders to exit some businesses entirely.

    When asked by Wells Fargo analyst Mike Mayo about the impact of changes proposed by Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr in a speech earlier this week, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said that other financial players could end up winners.

    “This is great news for hedge funds, private equity, private credit, Apollo, Blackstone,” Dimon said, naming two of the largest private equity players. “They’re dancing in the streets.”

    Blackstone and Apollo didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment on Dimon’s remarks.

    Banks face requirements to hold more capital as a cushion against risky activities from both U.S. and international regulators. Authorities are proposing higher capital requirements for banks with at least $100 billion in assets after the sudden collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in March. But that also coincides with a long-awaited set of international rules spurred by the 2008 financial crisis referred to as the Basel III endgame.

    Rise of the shadow banks

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  • UBS analyst Erika Najarian: There’s still a lot of ‘PTSD’ from the latest bank failures

    UBS analyst Erika Najarian: There’s still a lot of ‘PTSD’ from the latest bank failures

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    Erika Najarian, UBS equity research analyst, joins ‘Squawk on the Street’ to discuss the bank stocks as JPMorgan, Wells Fargo and Citigroup posted better-than-expected second-quarter earnings.

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  • JPMorgan Chase beats analysts’ estimates on higher rates, interest income

    JPMorgan Chase beats analysts’ estimates on higher rates, interest income

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    CNBC's Joe Kernen and Melissa Lee break down the company's Q2 earnings results.

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  • Delta executives say they’re not seeing the drop in airfares that the government reports

    Delta executives say they’re not seeing the drop in airfares that the government reports

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    Delta Air Lines executives say they’re not seeing the drop in average airfares that federal officials believe are contributing to lower inflation.

    The Labor Department’s latest consumer price index this week showed average airfares falling 8% from May to June on a seasonally adjusted basis.

    “We’re not seeing the same, and it’s a different data point than what we have,” Delta President Glen Hauenstein said on the airline’s second-quarter earnings call. He dismissed the Labor Department’s methodology as a “ample of a sample.”

    Delta Air Lines is reporting record profit and revenue in the second quarter, as summer travelers pack planes and head off on vacation.

    Officials say a Delta flight landed roughly but safely at the Charlotte Douglas International Airport on Wednesday without its front landing gear extended.

    A consumer class action lawsuit filed Tuesday claims Delta Air Lines inaccurately billed itself as the world’s “first carbon-neutral airline” and should pay damages.

    Analysts agreed with Delta’s assessment. JPMorgan’s Jamie Baker said the government figure excludes corporate and most premium travel and is drawn heavily from discount-airline service. He blamed the CPI number for causing airline stocks to fall Wednesday, when the Labor Department report came out.

    Delta executives seemed far more willing to accept the Labor Department’s calculation that average fares last month were 19% lower than they were in June of last year.

    CEO Ed Bastian said it is important to remember that at this time last year, many people were just beginning to travel after two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, but airlines weren’t yet fully staffed. As a result, demand was far stronger than supply.

    “People didn’t care where they were going or how much they spent. They just wanted to go someplace,” he said. “We were seeing fares up 30%, 40%, 50%” for some domestic flights. “That’s obviously not sustainable.”

    The Labor Department’s monthly CPI report indicated that lower prices for airline tickets, gasoline and used cars in June helped produce the lowest inflation since early 2021 — 3% compared with a year earlier.

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  • JPMorgan Chase beats analysts’ estimates on higher rates, interest income

    JPMorgan Chase beats analysts’ estimates on higher rates, interest income

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    Jamie Dimon, chairman and chief executive officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co., at the US Capitol for a lunch meeting with the New Democrat Coalition in Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, June 6, 2023. 

    Nathan Howard | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    JPMorgan Chase reported second-quarter results before the opening bell Friday.

    Here’s what the company reported compared with what Wall Street was expecting, based on a survey of analysts by Refinitiv:

    • Earnings: $4.37 adjusted vs. $4 per share
    • Revenue: $42.4 billion vs. $38.96 billion

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    JPMorgan has been a standout recently on several fronts. Whether it’s about deposits, funding costs or net interest income — all hot-button topics since the regional banking crisis began in March — the bank has outperformed smaller peers.

    That’s helped shares of the bank climb 11% so far this year, compared with the 16% decline of the KBW Bank Index. When JPMorgan last reported results in April, its shares had their biggest earnings-day increase in two decades.

    This time around, JPMorgan will have the benefit of owning First Republic after its U.S.-brokered takeover in early May.

    The acquisition, which added roughly $203 billion in loans and securities and $92 billion in deposits, may help cushion JPMorgan against some of the headwinds faced by the industry. Banks are losing low-cost deposits as customers find higher-yielding places to park their cash, causing the industry’s funding costs to rise.

    That’s pressuring the industry’s profit margins. Last month, several regional banks disclosed lower-than-expected interest revenue, and analysts expect more banks to do the same in coming weeks. On top of that, banks are expected to disclose a slowdown in loan growth and rising costs related to commercial real estate debt, all of which squeeze banks’ bottom lines.

    Lenders have begun setting aside more loan-loss provisions on expectations for a slowing economy this year. JPMorgan is expected to post a $2.72 billion provision for credit losses, according to the StreetAccount estimate.

    The bank won’t be able to sidestep downturns faced in other areas, namely, the slowdown in trading and investment banking activity. In May, JPMorgan said revenue from those Wall Street activities was headed for a 15% decline from a year earlier.

    Finally, analysts will want to hear what JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon has to say about the health of the economy and his expectations for banking regulation and consolidation.

    Wells Fargo and Citigroup are scheduled to release results later Friday, while Bank of America and Morgan Stanley report Tuesday. Goldman Sachs discloses results Wednesday.

    This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

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  • Bank earnings estimates could edge up after Friday’s reports, says Goldman Sachs’ Richard Ramsden

    Bank earnings estimates could edge up after Friday’s reports, says Goldman Sachs’ Richard Ramsden

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    Richard Ramsden, Goldman Sachs analyst, joins ‘Closing Bell Overtime’ to talk bank earnings, the impact of the credit crunch on commercial real estate and more.

    04:23

    Thu, Jul 13 20234:30 PM EDT

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  • Wells Fargo’s Mike Mayo breaks down what to expect from bank earnings

    Wells Fargo’s Mike Mayo breaks down what to expect from bank earnings

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    Mike Mayo, Wells Fargo managing director, joins ‘Closing Bell’ to discuss bank earnings as JPMorgan, Citigroup and Wells Fargo all report tomorrow.

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  • The American banking landscape is on the cusp of a seismic shift. Expect more pain to come

    The American banking landscape is on the cusp of a seismic shift. Expect more pain to come

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    The whirlwind weekend in late April that saw the country’s biggest bank take over its most troubled regional lender marked the end of one wave of problems — and the start of another.

    After emerging with the winning bid for First Republic, a lender to rich coastal families that had $229 billion in assets, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon delivered the soothing words craved by investors after weeks of stomach-churning volatility: “This part of the crisis is over.”

    But even as the dust settles from a string of government seizures of failed midsized banks, the forces that sparked the regional banking crisis in March are still at play.

    Rising interest rates will deepen losses on securities held by banks and motivate savers to pull cash from accounts, squeezing the main way these companies make money. Losses on commercial real estate and other loans have just begun to register for banks, further shrinking their bottom lines. Regulators will turn their sights on midsized institutions after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank exposed supervisory lapses.  

    What is coming will likely be the most significant shift in the American banking landscape since the 2008 financial crisis. Many of the country’s 4,672 lenders will be forced into the arms of stronger banks over the next few years, either by market forces or regulators, according to a dozen executives, advisors and investment bankers who spoke with CNBC.

    “You’re going to have a massive wave of M&A among smaller banks because they need to get bigger,” said the co-president of a top six U.S. bank who declined to be identified speaking candidly about industry consolidation. “We’re the only country in the world that has this many banks.”

    How’d we get here?

    To understand the roots of the regional bank crisis, it helps to look back to the turmoil of 2008, caused by irresponsible lending that fueled a housing bubble whose collapse nearly toppled the global economy.

    The aftermath of that earlier crisis brought scrutiny on the world’s biggest banks, which needed bailouts to avert disaster. As a result, it was ultimately institutions with $250 billion or more in assets that saw the most changes, including annual stress tests and stiffer rules governing how much loss-absorbing capital they had to keep on their balance sheets.

    Non-giant banks, meanwhile, were viewed as safer and skirted by with less federal oversight. In the years after 2008, regional and small banks often traded for a premium to their bigger peers, and banks that showed steady growth by catering to wealthy homeowners or startup investors, like First Republic and SVB, were rewarded with rising stock prices. But while they were less complex than the giant banks, they were not necessarily less risky.

    The sudden collapse of SVB in March showed how quickly a bank could unravel, dispelling one of the core assumptions of the industry: the so-called stickiness of deposits. Low interest rates and bond-purchasing programs that defined the post-2008 years flooded banks with a cheap source of funding and lulled depositors into leaving cash parked at accounts that paid negligible rates.

    “For at least 15 years, banks have been awash in deposits and with low rates, it cost them nothing,” said Brian Graham, a banking veteran and co-founder of advisory firm Klaros Group. “That’s clearly changed.”

    ‘Under stress’

    After 10 straight rate hikes and with banks making headline news again this year, depositors have moved funds in search of higher yields or greater perceived safety. Now it’s the too-big to-fail-banks, with their implicit government backstop, that are seen as the safest places to park money. Big bank stocks have outperformed regionals. JPMorgan shares are up 7.6% this year, while the KBW Regional Banking Index is down more than 20%.

    That illustrates one of the lessons of March’s tumult. Online tools have made moving money easier, and social media platforms have led to coordinated fears over lenders. Deposits that in the past were considered “sticky,” or unlikely to move, have suddenly become slippery. The industry’s funding is more expensive as a result, especially for smaller banks with a higher percentage of uninsured deposits. But even the megabanks have been forced to pay higher rates to retain deposits.

    Some of those pressures will be visible as regional banks disclose second-quarter results this month. Banks including Zions and KeyCorp told investors last month that interest revenue was coming in lower than expected, and Deutsche Bank analyst Matt O’Connor warned that regional banks may begin slashing dividend payouts.

    JPMorgan kicks off bank earnings Friday.

    “The fundamental issue with the regional banking system is the underlying business model is under stress,” said incoming Lazard CEO Peter Orszag. “Some of these banks will survive by being the buyer rather than the target. We could see over time fewer, larger regionals.”

    Walking wounded

    Compounding the industry’s dilemma is the expectation that regulators will tighten oversight of banks, particularly those in the $100 billion to $250 billion asset range, which is where First Republic and SVB slotted.

    “There’s going to be a lot more costs coming down the pipe that’s going to depress returns and pressure earnings,” said Chris Wolfe, a Fitch banking analyst who previously worked at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

    “Higher fixed costs require greater scale, whether you’re in steel manufacturing or banking,” he said. “The incentives for banks to get bigger have just gone up materially.”

    Half of the country’s banks will likely be swallowed by competitors in the next decade, said Wolfe.

    While SVB and First Republic saw the greatest exodus of deposits in March, other banks were wounded in that chaotic period, according to a top investment banker who advises financial institutions. Most banks saw a drop in first-quarter deposits below about 10%, but those that lost more than that may be troubled, the banker said.

    “If you happen to be one of the banks that lost 10% to 20% of deposits, you’ve got problems,” said the banker, who declined to be identified speaking about potential clients. “You’ve got to either go raise capital and bleed your balance sheet or you’ve got to sell yourself” to alleviate the pressure.

    A third option is to simply wait until the bonds that are underwater eventually mature and roll off banks’ balance sheets – or until falling interest rates ease the losses.

    But that could take years to play out, and it exposes banks to the risk that something else goes wrong, such as rising defaults on office loans. That could put some banks into a precarious position of not having enough capital.

    ‘False calm’

    In the meantime, banks are already seeking to unload assets and businesses to boost capital, according to another veteran financials banker and former Goldman Sachs partner. They are weighing sales of payments, asset management and fintech operations, this banker said.

    “A fair number of them are looking at their balance sheet and trying to figure out, `What do I have that I can sell and get an attractive price for’?” the banker said.

    Banks are in a bind, however, because the market isn’t open for fresh sales of lenders’ stock, despite their depressed valuations, according to Lazard’s Orszag. Institutional investors are staying away because further rate increases could cause another leg down for the sector, he said.

    Orszag referred to the last few weeks as a “false calm” that could be shattered when banks post second-quarter results. The industry still faces the risk that the negative feedback loop of falling stock prices and deposit runs could return, he said.

    “All you need is one or two banks to say, ‘Deposits are down another 20%’ and all of a sudden, you will be back to similar scenarios,” Orszag said. “Pounding on equity prices, which then feeds into deposit flight, which then feeds back on the equity prices.”

    Deals on the horizon

    It will take perhaps a year or longer for mergers to ramp up, multiple bankers said. That’s because acquirers would absorb hits to their own capital when taking over competitors with underwater bonds. Executives are also looking for the “all clear” signal from regulators on consolidation after several deals have been scuttled in recent years.

    While Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has signaled an openness to bank mergers, recent remarks from the Justice Department indicate greater deal scrutiny on antitrust concerns, and influential lawmakers including Sen. Elizabeth Warren oppose more banking consolidation.

    When the logjam does break, deals will likely cluster in several brackets as banks seek to optimize their size in the new regime.

    Banks that once benefited from being below $250 billion in assets may find those advantages gone, leading to more deals among midsized lenders. Other deals will create bulked-up entities below the $100 billion and $10 billion asset levels, which are likely regulatory thresholds, according to Klaros co-founder Graham.

    Bigger banks have more resources to adhere to coming regulations and consumers’ technology demands, advantages that have helped financial giants including JPMorgan steadily grow earnings despite higher capital requirements. Still, the process isn’t likely to be a comfortable one for sellers.

    But distress for one bank means opportunity for another. Amalgamated Bank, a New York-based institution with $7.8 billion in assets that caters to unions and nonprofits, will consider acquisitions after its stock price recovers, according to CFO Jason Darby.

    “Once our currency returns to a place where we feel it’s more appropriate, we’ll take a look at our ability to roll up,” Darby said. “I do think you’ll see more and more banks raising their hands and saying, `We’re looking for strategic partners’ as the future unfolds.”

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  • Wall Street analysts think these 5 bank stocks will do well in the second half

    Wall Street analysts think these 5 bank stocks will do well in the second half

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  • ‘Commitment to the buyback is being viewed constructively’ at Morgan Stanley: Wolfe’s Steven Chubak

    ‘Commitment to the buyback is being viewed constructively’ at Morgan Stanley: Wolfe’s Steven Chubak

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    Steven Chubak, Wolfe Research, joins CNBC’s Leslie Picker and Mike Santoli on ‘Closing Bell Overtime’ to talk breaking news concerning bank capital allocation plans.

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  • Watch CNBC’s full interview with Wolfe’s Steven Chubak

    Watch CNBC’s full interview with Wolfe’s Steven Chubak

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    Steven Chubak, Wolfe Research, joins CNBC’s Leslie Picker and Mike Santoli on ‘Closing Bell Overtime’ to talk breaking news concerning bank capital allocation plans.

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  • JPMorgan, Wells Fargo and Morgan Stanley to boost dividends after clearing Fed stress test

    JPMorgan, Wells Fargo and Morgan Stanley to boost dividends after clearing Fed stress test

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    Jamie Dimon, CEO, JP Morgan Chase, during Jim Cramer interview, Feb. 23, 2023.

    CNBC

    Large U.S banks including JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and Morgan Stanley said Friday they plan to raise their quarterly dividends after clearing the Federal Reserve’s annual stress test.

    JPMorgan plans to boost its payout to $1.05 a share from $1 a share starting in the third quarter, subject to board approval, the New York-based bank said in a statement.

    “The Federal Reserve’s 2023 stress test results show that banks are resilient – even while withstanding severe shocks – and continue to serve as a pillar of strength to the financial system and broader economy,” JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said in the release. “The Board’s intended dividend increase represents a sustainable and modestly higher level of capital distribution to our shareholders.”

    On Wednesday, the Fed released results from its annual exercise and said that all 23 banks that participated cleared the regulatory hurdle. The test dictates how much capital banks can return to shareholders via buybacks and dividends. In this year’s exam, the banks underwent a “severe global recession” with unemployment surging to 10%, a 40% decline in commercial real estate values and a 38% drop in housing prices.

    After they cleared the test, Wells Fargo said it will increase its dividend to 35 cents a share from 30 cents a share, and Morgan Stanley said it would boost its payout to 85 cents a share from 77.5 cents a share.

    Goldman Sachs announced the largest per share boost among big banks, taking its dividend to $2.75 a share from $2.50 a share.

    Small Citi

    Meanwhile, Citigroup said it would boost its quarterly payout to 53 cents a share from 51 cents a share, the smallest increase among its peers.

    That’s likely because while JPMorgan and Goldman surprised analysts this week with better-than-expected results that allowed for smaller capital buffers, Citigroup was among banks that saw their buffers increase after the stress test.

    “While we would have clearly preferred not to see an increase in our stress capital buffer, these results still demonstrate Citi’s financial resilience through all economic environments,” Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser said in her company’s release.

    All of the big banks held back on announcing specific plans to boost share repurchases. For instance, JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley each said they could buy back shares using previously-announced repurchase plans; Wells Fargo said it had the “capacity to repurchase common stock” over the next year.

    Analysts have said that banks would likely be more conservative with their capital-return plans this year. That’s because the finalization of international banking regulations is expected to boost the levels of capital the biggest global firms like JPMorgan would need to maintain.

    There are other reasons for banks to hold onto capital: Regional banks may also be held to higher standards as part of regulators’ response to the Silicon Valley Bank collapse in March, and a potential recession could boost future loan losses for the industry.

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  • Better valuations are ahead for bank stocks following stress test results: Christopher Marinac

    Better valuations are ahead for bank stocks following stress test results: Christopher Marinac

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    Christopher Marinac, Janney Montgomery Scott director of research, joins ‘Fast Money’ to discuss the results of the Federal Reserve’s banking stress test and what that means for bank stocks moving forward.

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  • All 23 stress tested banks stayed above the Fed’s minimum capital requierments

    All 23 stress tested banks stayed above the Fed’s minimum capital requierments

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    Charles Lieberman, Advisors Capital Management CIO and Bruce Harting, Wedbush managing director, join ‘Closing Bell Overtime’ to discuss the banking sector, the latest banking data from the Federal Reserve, and more.

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  • Watch CNBC’s full interview with Charles Lieberman and Bruce Harting

    Watch CNBC’s full interview with Charles Lieberman and Bruce Harting

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    Charles Lieberman, Advisors Capital Management CIO and Bruce Harting, Wedbush managing director, join ‘Closing Bell Overtime’ to discuss the banking sector, the latest banking data from the Federal Reserve, and more.

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    Wed, Jun 28 20235:32 PM EDT

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  • Federal Reserve says 23 biggest banks weathered severe recession scenario in stress test

    Federal Reserve says 23 biggest banks weathered severe recession scenario in stress test

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    Michael Barr, Vice Chair for Supervision at the Federal Reserve, testifies about recent bank failures during a US Senate Committee on Banking, House and Urban Affairs hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, May 18, 2023.

    Saul Loeb | AFP | Getty Images

    All 23 of the U.S. banks included in the Federal Reserve’s annual stress test weathered a severe recession scenario while continuing to lend to consumers and corporations, the regulator said Wednesday.

    The banks were able to maintain minimum capital levels, despite $541 billion in projected losses for the group, while continuing to provide credit to the economy in the hypothetical recession, the Fed said in a release.

    Begun in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, which was caused in part by irresponsible banks, the Fed’s annual stress test dictates how much capital the industry can return to shareholders via buybacks and dividends. In this year’s exam, the banks underwent a “severe global recession” with unemployment surging to 10%, a 40% decline in commercial real estate values and a 38% drop in housing prices.

    Banks are the focus of heightened scrutiny in the weeks following the collapse of three midsized banks earlier this year. But smaller banks avoid the Fed’s test entirely. The test examines giants including JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo, international banks with large U.S. operations, and the biggest regional players including PNC and Truist.

    As a result, clearing the stress test hurdle isn’t the “all clear” signal its been in previous years. Still expected in coming months are increased regulations on regional banks because of the recent failures, as well as tighter international standards likely to boost capital requirements for the country’s largest banks.  

    “Today’s results confirm that the banking system remains strong and resilient,” Michael Barr, vice chair for supervision at the Fed, said in the release. “At the same time, this stress test is only one way to measure that strength. We should remain humble about how risks can arise and continue our work to ensure that banks are resilient to a range of economic scenarios, market shocks, and other stresses.”

    Goldman’s credit card losses

    Losses on loans made up 78% of the $541 billion in projected losses, with most of the rest coming from trading losses at Wall Street firms, the Fed said. The rate of total loan losses varied considerably across the banks, from a low of 1.3% at Charles Schwab to 14.7% at Capital One.

    Credit cards were easily the most problematic loan product in the exam. The average loss rate for cards in the group was 17.4%; the next-worst average loss rate was for commercial real estate loans at 8.8%.

    Among card lenders, Goldman Sachsportfolio posted a nearly 25% loss rate in the hypothetical downturn — the highest for any single loan category across the 23 banks— followed by Capital One’s 22% rate. Mounting losses in Goldman’s consumer division in recent years, driven by provisioning for credit-card loans, forced CEO David Solomon to pivot away from his retail banking strategy.

    Regional banks pinched?

    The group saw their total capital levels drop from 12.4% to 10.1% during the hypothetical recession. But that average obscured larger hits to capital — which provides a cushion for loan losses — seen at banks that have greater exposure to commercial real estate and credit-card loans.

    Regional banks including U.S. Bank, Truist, Citizens, M&T and card-centric Capital One had the lowest stressed capital levels in the exam, hovering between 6% and 8%. While still above current standards, those relatively low levels could be a factor if coming regulation forces the industry to hold higher levels of capital.

    Big banks generally performed better than regional and card-centric firms, Jefferies analyst Ken Usdin wrote Wednesday in a research note. Capital One, Citigroup, Citizens and Truist could see the biggest increases in required capital buffers after the exam, he wrote.

    Banks are expected to disclose updated plans for buybacks and dividends Friday after the close of regular trading. Given uncertainties about upcoming regulation and the risks of an actual recession arriving in the next year, analysts have said banks are likely to be relatively conservative with their capital plans.

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