Skip navigation

Strong bank results mask wider weakness

JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs prosper, but broader industry fights headwinds

Earns JPMorgan Chase
Mark Lennihan / AP
JPMorgan Chase & Co. posted a 36 percent jump in second-quarter profit, surpassing Wall Street expectations as strength in its consumer and investment banking businesses offset a jump in credit losses.
  LIVE QUOTE
Quotes delayed 15+ min.
Health of the 400 biggest banks
Image: Chief executives from major financial institutions
Data file
Check troubled loans at the largest banks, in the Bank Tracker from msnbc.com and American University's Investigative Reporting Workshop.
Banks with most troubled loans
Image: IndyMac Bank
Data file
Check which banks reported the most troubled loans, in the Bank Tracker from msnbc.com and American University's Investigative Reporting Workshop.
  Send us your questions
The Answer Desk

Got a question about the economy or personal finance? Click here to send it to the Answer Desk.

Banks face Feb. 1 deadline on compensation
The nation's biggest banks face a February deadline for submitting employee compensation plans to the Federal Reserve, according to people with knowledge of the process.

By John W. Schoen
Senior producer
msnbc.com
updated 11:41 a.m. ET July 17, 2009

John W. Schoen
Senior producer

E-mail
The long national banking nightmare may be over — but only for a select few banks.

On Thursday, JPMorgan Chase & Co., bolstered by strength in investment banking, reported a 36 percent increase in second quarter profit that beat analysts' expectations.

The report follows news from Goldman Sachs on Tuesday of a stunning $2.7 billion profit less than a year after one of the worst financial crises since the Great Depression began. Revenues soared 39 percent to $25.62 billion.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

But most of the industry remains mired in a pile of bad debts and rising defaults that continue to weigh on profits and balance sheets. CIT, struggling for survival under the pressure of continuing loan losses, was denied a federal lifeline Wednesday and now faces the prospect of bankruptcy or possible liquidation.

"The financial crisis is not over,” Stephen Roach, chairman at Morgan Stanley Asia said on CNBC. “The (International Monetary Fund) is telling us that by the end of this crisis $4 trillion worth of bad assets will be written down. Thus far financial institutions have written off, at most, half of that. So there plenty more to come.”

The surprisingly strong results at Goldman Sachs Tuesday sparked a wave of optimism that the heavy losses that have battered the banking industry for over a year may finally be easing. But a closer look at where Goldman made those profits may temper that enthusiasm. Profits were driven by record investment banking fees, including the underwriting of new stock sales for companies trying to raise cash.

With traditional investment banking competitors like Lehman Bros. and Bear Stearns no longer around to compete for investment banking business, Goldman Sachs was able to substantially increase its share of that business.

“Goldman is essentially the last investment house standing,” said Matt McCormick, a banking analyst at Bahl and Gaynor Investment Counsel. “So they have the ability not only to attract and retain great employees, but they have the ability to attract and retain great clients."

JPMorgan also saw big gains in its investment banking business and in revenues from bond trading, profit centers that only a handful of other large banks enjoy.

On Friday, Bank of America reported better-than-expected second-quarter earnings of $2.42 billion, but also said it was plagued by losses from failed loans. Citigroup posted a profit of $3 billion, instead of the loss Wall Street expected, but its earnings were helped by a gain of $6.7 billion from selling its stake in Smith Barney. Rising costs for bad loans also nagged Citigroup.

“When I look at the rest of the banks, I don't like what I see," said Jim LaCamp, a portfolio manager with Macroportfolio Advisors. "We still have deteriorating credit quality on real estate loans, commercial real estate loans on credit cards and so the regional banks are all still reeling."


Sponsored links

Resource guide