Financials Q3 2020 Earnings Preview: Banks' Loan Losses To Pressure Profits

 | Oct 12, 2020 09:35AM ET

With the Q3 2020 earnings season kicking off this week, results from top US banks may show they endured more pain from the pandemic which has hurt their lending businesses and forced them to set aside additional money for potential loan losses.

However, that lethal combination of shrinking lending and escalating loan losses have so far not played out the way many analysts had predicted. Indeed, the  massive government stimulus already in circulation seems to be helping banks avoid the worst case scenario.

In both the first and second quarters, in order to brace for the expected tsunami of souring loans, some of the top US banks put aside additional cash, but with the pandemic uncertainty persisting, the necessary loan loss provisions needed remains unpredictable. A surge in new COVID-19 cases this month now threatens to further impair commerce at a time when the government and Congress are negotiating another stimulus package for consumers and businesses, though that effort appears once again to have stalled.

“We are in a completely unpredictable environment for which there are no models, no cycles to point to,” Citigroup (NYSE:C) Chief Executive Officer Michael Corbat told analysts in a Bloomberg report after its Q2 earnings release.

This uncertain situation continues to keep investors on the sidelines when it comes to bank stocks. The KBW Nasdaq Bank Index is down 30% this year, compared with a 7.6% gain for the broader S&P 500.

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Wells Fargo (NYSE:NYSE:WFC) is the year’s biggest loser among major banks, with shares tumbling 53%. The stock closed on Friday at $25.30