Gulf News

Bank profits in US near pre-crisis peak despite the rules

Ten of the biggest lenders together made $30b last quarter in face of tighter regulation­s

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The last time big US banks made so much money, the financial world was heading towards the brink of collapse. This time, it’s stiff regulation that is in danger.

Ten of the nation’s biggest lenders including JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Bank of America together made $30 billion last quarter, just a few hundred million short of the record in the second quarter of 2007, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The achievemen­t comes just as the industry’s long campaign against postcrisis rules finds traction with the Trump administra­tion.

Banks have been decrying regulation­s aimed at curbing risk, blaming them for hurting capital markets and discouragi­ng lending to consumers and companies. President Donald Trump, echoing those complaints, has asked regulators to find ways to ease off. But in this year’s second quarter, banks saw their profits propped up by lending operations even after a surge in revenue from more volatile trading units subsided.

“It shows that the legislatio­n we passed in no way retarded the ability of the banks to make money,” said Barney Frank, the former congressma­n whose name is on the 2010 law tightening industry oversight. Banks are supporting the economy, he said. And “very specifical­ly, it refutes Trump’s claim that we cut into lending. How do banks make record profits if they can’t lend — especially when they’re down in trading?”

The Dodd-Frank Act ushered in sweeping changes that included reining in banks’ ability to bet their own money on market prices, setting up a new system to seize and wind down failing firms, and streamlini­ng derivative­s dealings. Meanwhile, regulators around the world overhauled capital rules, requiring banks to build bigger buffers to absorb losses in an economic downturn. They also unveiled liquidity rules, seeking to ensure lenders have enough cash or easy-to-sell assets to stay afloat if outside funding flees in a panic.

The industry has argued the rules went too far and were piled on without enough considerat­ion for how they’d interact with each other.

JPMorgan Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon said July 14 that banks would have made $2 trillion more in loans in the past five years if the rules had not been so tight. Small businesses are struggling to access capital markets, Dimon said.

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