Big U.S. banks' second quarter profits to tumble on higher bad loan
reserves
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[July 11, 2022] By
David Henry
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Second quarter profits
at big U.S. banks are expected to fall sharply from a year earlier on
increased loan loss reserves, as the pandemic recovery gives way to a
possible recession.
Analysts expect JPMorgan Chase & Co will report a 25% drop in profit on
Thursday, while Citigroup Inc and Wells Fargo & Co will show 38% and 42%
profit declines, respectively on Friday, according to Refinitiv I/B/E/S
data.
Bank of America Corp, which like its peers has big consumer and business
lending franchises, is expected to show a 29% drop in profit when it
reports on July 18.
The plunge in profit stems from lenders adding to their reserves for
expected loan losses, a reversal from a year earlier when they benefited
from reducing those cushions as anticipated pandemic losses failed to
materialize and the economy strengthened.
"Its going to be a shaky quarter for the sector," said Jason Ware, chief
investment officer for Albion Financial Group, which owns shares of
JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley.
Investors will want to hear executives' insights into the health of the
economy and if borrowers are "more shaky now," Ware said.
Banks must factor the economic outlook into loan loss reserves under an
accounting standard which took effect in January 2020.
While data on Friday showed the U.S. economy added more jobs than
expected in June, it could still be on the verge of a recession. Gross
domestic product contracted in the first quarter, with tepid consumer
spending and manufacturing readings in the last two weeks.
TIME TO BUILD UP
Last month, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon warned of an economic "hurricane,"
while Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman has said there is a 50% chance of
a recession.
"The banks are going to have to build up their reserves," said Gerard
Cassidy, a bank analyst at RBC Capital Markets.
JPMorgan, Citi, Wells Fargo and Bank of America, the country's largest
four lenders, could record $3.5 billion of loss provisions compared with
$6.2 billion of benefits last year when they released reserves, Cassidy
estimated.
As a result, the banks' bottom lines will look worse than their
underlying businesses. Pre-provision, pre-tax profits for the big four
will be down only 7%, according to estimates by analysts led by Jason
Goldberg at Barclays.
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Workers are seen in at Citibank offices in the Canary Wharf
financial district in London, Britain, November 17, 2017. Picture
taken November 17, 2017. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo
To be sure, banks are also adding to reserves for additional loans they have
been making as companies have started to borrow more and consumers have been
using credit cards to travel and eat out again. And actual loan losses and
delinquency rates are still near record lows.
But bank executives have said more loans will go bad. Analysts will press the
banks for clues on the timing and magnitude and how much they might eventually
offset gains in net interest income - the difference between banks' cost of
funds and the interest they receive.
Net interest income growth is the highest it has been in a decade, powered by
loan growth and higher interest rates, said Goldberg. Net interest income rose
14% in the second quarter, on average, for the four biggest banks, he estimates.
"You have really strong loan growth and very low loan losses," he added.
But a severe recession could cause actual loan losses and negate such gains,
said Cassidy.
WALL STREET WIPEOUT
Morgan Stanley, the sixth-biggest U.S. bank by assets and a major Wall Street
player and investment manager, also reports on Thursday and is expected to show
a 17% decline in profits.
The fifth-biggest bank, Goldman Sachs Group Inc., is expected to report a 51%
profit drop when it reports on July 18.
Goldman, like Morgan Stanley, does less consumer and business lending than the
four biggest banks and changes in its loan loss provisions are less important
for profits.
But fees Goldman makes on deals, including stock and bond underwriting, are
expected to be down sharply, partially offset by more trading revenue due to
increased volatility. [L4N2YO3FW]
Mortgage business revenue is expected to decline as higher interest rates dampen
home loan demand and refinancing.
Banks' asset management businesses will also report lower revenue on lower stock
and bond prices, Goldberg said.
(Reporting by David Henry in New York. Additional reporting by Megan Davies.
Editing by Michelle Price and Deepa Babington)
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