EDITOR NOTE: As Q4 earnings season begins, it’s evident that Wall Street banks are crushing analyst earnings expectations; many of the banks raking in record-high profits. The same can’t be said of Main Street, however. Businesses on the consumer end are still suffering, many small businesses (like your local mom-and-pop stores)--are unable to take advantage of the low rates and newly-printed money that the Federal Reserve has set forth to heal the economy. In short, we’re seeing a boost in credit but not real production. Wall Street is only a small yet powerful portion of the entire US economy. The rest of it comprises the businesses which people like you and I own or work for. If you’re not seeing growth around you, then you’re likely seeing a true snapshot of the big picture. In short, without Main Street growth, there is no economic recovery; there is no real production and therefore no real wealth permeating the segment of the economy that matters most to us. All you have is an illusion of a healthy economy conjured up by credit--not unlike how loading up on credit card debt to go on an unaffordable buying spree may temporarily give you the false sense that somehow you’re among the rich.
America’s big banks capped off a winning year, led by soaring Wall Street-facing business lines.
Why it matters: Banks cashed in on the white-hot IPO market, record debt issuance, and sky-high trading volume — all of which played out as economic peril softened the consumer side of their businesses.
The big picture: Financial results show that banks, which rake in money as middlemen, made a killing thanks to unprecedented action by the Federal Reserve — which caused a rush of activity in financial markets, pushed a slew of companies to issue debt, and led to a flood of others to go public for the first time.
That's made up for weakness in their Main Street-facing businesses (think credit cards services or personal/business loans).
What they're saying: Big banks’ “trading results don’t totally match up with what’s happening in the real world, but they do reflect macro trends that are happening,” says Mark Doctoroff, co-head of the Financial Institutions Group at MUFG.
By the numbers: JPMorgan, the country’s biggest bank, posted its best-ever profit in the last three months of 2020 — boosted by its corporate and investment bank, which set a new divisional record for annual revenue.
Flashback: The 2020 story is an about face from the prior year when banks said strong consumer activity made up for lackluster trading desk volumes.
Worth noting: Banks are slowly releasing some of the more than $30 billion they cumulatively set aside to cover bad loans (which also took a bite out of profits). It's a sign executives think the worst of the coronavirus’ economic hit is over, particularly with another big stimulus package backed by the Biden administration.
Originally posted on Axios
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