Wall Street Revival Solidifies After Q3 Reports From Bank of America, Citigroup And Goldman Sachs

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Wall Street Revival Solidifies After Q3 Reports From Bank of America, Citigroup And Goldman Sachs
Wall Street Revival Solidifies After Q3 Reports From Bank of America, Citigroup And Goldman Sachs

Bank of America Corporation (NYSE: BAC), Citigroup Inc (NYSE: C) and The Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE: GS) were the latest to report better than expected quarterly earnings, beating gloomy forecasts, just like their banking peers Wells Fargo & Company (NYSE: WFC) and JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE: JPM) did last Friday.

Morgan Stanley solidifies dealmaking revival with a surge in investment banking.

Net revenue grew 16% to $15.4 billion. Fixed income and equities trading revenue grew 13% to $5 billion. Revenue from investment banking fees surged as much as 56% YoY to almost $1.4 billion, as Morgan Stanley made the largest leap among big banks with JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America and Citigroup also recording a rise in revenue both from equities and investment banking fees.

Wealth management’s net new assets grew 79% YoY and 76% compared to the previous quarter to $64 billion with revenues rising 13.5% YoY to $7.3 billion.

With investment banking having picked up, along with an increase in trading, net profit went up by 32% YoY to $3.2 billion.

Citigroup’s profit has been hit by credit losses but earnings topped estimates.

Citigroup reported strong third quarter results fueled by the same trend reported by Morgan Stanley: growth in investment banking and wealth management. However, Morgan Stanley has also set more money aside to offset potential loan losses. During the third quarter, Citigroup reported revenue grew merely 1% YoY to $20.32 billion, but still surpassing LSEG’s estimate of $19.84 billion. Banking revenue surged 18% with investment banking rising 31%, while wealth revenue grew 9%. Equity markets revenue grew 32%, but fixed income revenue dipped 6%. Determined to do its transformation right, Citigroup drove expenses down 2% YoY as it remains on track to achieve its full year expense target range between $53.5 billion and $53.8 billion, excluding some regulatory costs.

Earnings per share of $1.51 surpassed LSEG’s consensus estimate of $1.31 but net income fell to $3.2 billion due to a higher cost of credit.

Goldman Sachs sees profits leap with a steady economy.

Goldman Sachs topped both revenue and profit estimates with its third quarter results. It reported third quarter revenue rose 7% to $12.70 billion, surpassing LSEG’s estimate of $11.8 billion, while profit surged 45% YoY to $2.99 billion, or $8.40 per share, also topping LSEG’s consensus estimate of $6.89 per share. Investment banking revenue went up 20% to $1.87 billion, followed by equities trading posted revenue grew 18% to $3.5 billion, the asset and wealth management division reported a 16% rise as revenue grew to $3.75 billion. On the other hand, fixed income trading revenue went down 12% YoY to $2.96 billion.

Bank of America, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup continued last week’s trend that got kicked off by reports from JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo, as big banks reported a strong third quarter in a constructive and undoubtedly improved macroenvironment.

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