Bangkok Post

MIXED PICTURE

US banks report uneven quarterly results, challenged by global trade uncertaint­y.

- JOHN BIERS

NEW YORK: Large US banks reported mixed quarterly results on Tuesday, challenged by a shifting interest rate landscape and uncertaint­y about global trade but bolstered in some cases by strong consumer activity.

The biggest US bank by assets, JPMorgan Chase & Co, scored higher profits due to robust consumer lending even as chief executive Jamie Dimon offered a subdued outlook on the US economy, due in part to lingering worries about an economic slowdown due to the trade war.

Earnings also rose at Citigroup Inc but profits fell sharply at Goldman Sachs Group Inc amid a drop in key advisory services and at Wells Fargo & Co, which was hit by higher legal costs as it continues to try to pivot from a series of scandals and regulatory issues.

Executives say the United States continues to enjoy a strong employment picture but that some clients are holding back investment­s in light of uncertaint­y over trade.

Other big internatio­nal wildcards include the grinding Brexit negotiatio­ns and ongoing civil unrest in Hong Kong.

“There’s a fair amount of uncertaint­y on trade and a host of other issues,” said Citigroup chief financial officer Mark Mason.

He said last week’s partial trade deal between the United States and China was “an important step” but that the two sides needed to keep negotiatin­g “so that the cautious sentiment can ease a bit.”

JPMorgan reported profits of $9.1 billion, up 8.4% from the year-ago period. Revenues were $29.3 billion, up 7.3%.

The increase in profits comes as large banks manage a shift in monetary policy by the US Federal Reserve that has dampened the industry’s profits outlook somewhat.

Lower interest rates typically weigh on earnings at banks, which earn profits from the margin between their loans and deposits.

On the upside, JPMorgan scored higher revenues in home lending as mortgage costs for consumers eased. The company also reported another increase in credit cards and auto lending.

“US economic growth has slowed slightly,” Dimon said.

“The consumer remains healthy, with growth in wages and spending combined with strong balance sheets and low unemployme­nt levels,” he added.

“This is being offset by weakening business sentiment and capital expenditur­es mostly driven by increasing­ly complex geopolitic­al risks, including tensions in global trade.”

At Goldman Sachs, third-quarter profits were $1.8 billion, down 26.9% from the year-ago period. Revenues were $8.3 billion, down 5.6%.

The investment bank suffered a drop in financial advisory and equity and debt underwriti­ng revenues but won an increase in trading businesses that have been a headwind in recent quarters.

Analysts pressed Goldman executives for evidence the company’s investment­s in its consumer lending business will pay off.

Since launching its Marcus consumer banking business three years ago, Goldman has amassed $55 billion in consumer deposits.

Executives said that they were pleased with the August launch of a credit card with Apple but said it was too soon to release details.

“We’re focused on proving ourselves over time,” said Goldman chief executive David Solomon, who likened the gradual build-out of consumer lending to earlier ventures.

Goldman has also begun talks with US authoritie­s to settle probes involving 1MDB, a scandal-plagued Malaysia sovereign wealth fund.

The bank has increased its estimate of the potential liability in the case by $300 million to $2.9 billion, according to chief financial officer Stephen Scherr.

Wells Fargo also suffered a significan­t drop in profits, which came in at $4.6 billion, down 23.3%. Revenues edged up slightly to $22 billion.

Results were dented by $1.6 billion in litigation costs connected to a fake accounts scandal that has weighed on the bank since late 2016.

Wells Fargo announced late last month that it named Charles Scharf as its new chief executive to begin later this month.

At Citigroup, net income was up 6.3% at $4.9 billion on a one% rise in revenues to $18.6 billion.

 ?? AFP ?? This file photo shows JPMorgan Chase & Co’s headquarte­rs in New York.
AFP This file photo shows JPMorgan Chase & Co’s headquarte­rs in New York.

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