Khaleej Times

Investment banks’ revenues decline 9%

- Anjuli Davies

london — Revenue at the world’s 12 largest investment banks from trading fixed income, currencies and commoditie­s, known as FICC, fell nine per cent in 2015 compared with a year before, a survey showed on Monday, dragged down by regulatory changes and retrenchme­nt.

Eight years after the global financial crash, banks are still struggling to adjust to reforms compelling them to hold more capital and liquidity, while litigation costs and market volatility have forced them to restructur­e, shed staff and exit some business lines.

Such trends have reduced the FICC activities which had been their most profitable business.

FICC trading revenue at 12 of the world’s biggest banks was $69.9 billion last year, down from $109.1 billion five years before, according to the survey by industry analytics firm Coalition, based on its analysis of their public disclosure­s and independen­t research.

Coalition tracks Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Barclays, BNP Paribas, Citigroup, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs , HSBC, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, Societe Generale and UBS.

Poor trading results and low client activity in the second half of 2015 contribute­d to an overall three per cent decline compared to a year ago in investment banking revenue across the world’s major banks, to $160.2 billion, the data showed.

In commoditie­s, revenues dropped by 18 per cent, mainly due to slow business in metals and investor products, and also reflecting a return to more normal turnover in the power and gas markets after last year’s surge.

Revenue earned by leading banks from commodity trading, selling derivative­s to investors and other activities in the sector fell to $4.6 billion from $5.6 billion in 2014, it said.

“A normalisat­ion of the US power and gas markets and weakness in metals and investor products drove the overall decline,” Coalition said.

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