Big Bank Earnings Preview And Early Q3 2019 Results

 | Oct 04, 2019 02:24AM ET

The market appears to be double minded about the recent flow of soft U.S. economic data. It is hoping that the bad news of economic weakness will prompt the Fed to be even more accommodative than it would otherwise be. This line of thinking is likely at play in the market’s reaction to the weaker-than-expected September non-farm payroll report.

Notwithstanding, this tendency to look at all incoming data from the Fed perspective, the market is forced at times to see bad news as nothing else but bad news. And that’s the reason why stocks sold off on the weak ISM survey, particularly the manufacturing survey. Even a market addicted to easy Fed policy can’t see anything good or positive in a global economic slowdown.

Banks don’t follow this generalized market behavior because they are worse off either way. The fortunes of these cyclical operators move in lockstep with the broader economy and Fed rate cuts have a negative bearing on their margins.

Banks are cyclical businesses engaged in lending and other activities like investment banking, money management, and trading that are always at the mercy of the economic cycle. Banks not only experience low demand for its services when the economic cycle turns down, but the quality of its existing assets (its loan portfolio) also goes down as its customers’ credit profiles weaken.

It is important to keep this distinction in mind as we start thinking about bank earnings, which get underway with the Citigroup (C) report on Friday, October 11th; JPMorgan (JPM) and Wells Fargo (WFC) follow with their reports on Tuesday, October 15th.

Estimates have been steadily coming down for banks, with JPMorgan’s Q3 EPS estimate of $2.42 down from $2.50 three months back. We see a similar trend for full-year 2019 and 2020 estimates for JPMorgan and most of its peers. The chart below shows the aggregate revisions trend for the Zacks Major Banks industry, of which JPMorgan, Wells Fargo and the other major players are part of.