U.S. Megabank Outlook In Focus

 | Jul 14, 2019 09:29

With Fed rates about to fall, the stakes are rising for the big six U.S. lenders

Once again, we are about to enter a Low Interest Rate Policy world as the Fed and a host of other developed-world central banks prepare to embark on renewed policy easing. For almost all of the corporate world, that’s a welcome prospect, though not for banks. The cornerstone of lenders’ businesses is net interest income, the difference between their average loan rate and average interest paid on deposits. When base rates fall, bank profits soften. For the dominant U.S. banks, low Fed rates coincided with problematic share price progress. Over the last few years, their share performance relative to the broader market has been much improved, juiced by a combination of Fed rates ratcheting higher and a Trump tax boost. With the effect of the latter fading and the Fed on course to unwind tightening, most U.S. Big Bank stocks have underperformed so far this year.

Normalised relative to S&P 500: JPM, WFC, BAC, GS, C, MS – year to date