Strong Q1 Seen For JP Morgan, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs

 | Apr 13, 2021 11:27AM ET

After years of standing on the sidelines while other sectors ran the ball downfield, banks are finally back under center approaching the kickoff of Q1 reporting season. Sure, bank earnings were generally pretty good in Q4, but arguably all the fundamental elements really didn’t join the huddle until the quarter that just ended.

This is starting to show up on Wall Street. So-called “value stocks,” which include banks, outplayed growth sectors like tech early this year, a major turnaround from the recent past. This week, the biggest U.S. financial institutions open the books and investors will see if their newfound enthusiasm was justified.

JP Morgan Chase (NYSE:JPM), Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) and Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) — which kick off earnings season Wednesday ahead of Citigroup (NYSE:C), Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) and Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) later this week — look like they came through the quarter mostly with flying colors.

It would be surprising if they didn’t, considering that the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yield nearly doubled during the quarter, though it’s still low by historic standards at a recent level near 1.67%. Back in March, it hit a 13-month high of 1.78%, way up from last August’s depths near 0.5%.

The rising yield curve we’ve seen this year — where longer-dated bond yields rise faster than shorter-term ones — is like catnip for the banking industry, allowing banks to borrow (and pay deposits) at low rates and lend out at higher ones. The premium of the 10-year yield to the two-year yield recently hit its highest level since mid-2017 as investors built more inflation and economic growth into their outlooks.

This happened with the Fed keeping its benchmark short-term borrowing rate at zero and pledging to leave it there long-term, regardless of inflation. It also coincided with almost unprecedented amounts of fiscal stimulus.

You could hardly dream up a better scenario for the banking industry, which for a long time had to make its own luck, even before COVID. The yield curve actually inverted (went negative) at one point a couple years back, and the low interest rates and credit risks that came along with the pandemic put huge pressure on all the big banks.

h2 Fundamentals Finally Favoring Financials/h2

Now, for the first time in a while, the big banks have a tailwind and investors can focus more on traditional bank functions and less on the industry’s efforts to bail out the floodwaters. The 10-year yield is much higher than it was six months ago, so they can make more on the spread and that should go right to the bottom line.

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Beyond that, trading is an important part of many bank businesses (especially some of the big Wall Street sluggers like JPM and GS), and they possibly saw benefits in their bond trading during Q1 thanks to opportunities there. As always, investors should consider focusing on the separate fortunes of equities and fixed income trading, where there’s often bifurcation.

A sizzling housing market and signs of upticks in the U.S. manufacturing and services sectors mean more households and businesses might have been out there borrowing last quarter, another potential boost for banks. This could go especially for big banks with major consumer-facing businesses like credit cards and home mortgages.

Most of the major banks put large amounts of capital into “loan loss provisions” over the last year as a shield in case of default from clients, but began pulling those back recently. These protective measures weighed on earnings in 2020, but may be less of a factor in Q1 and beyond. One interesting thing to look for as banks report is what they say about rolling back some of this caution, because it could potentially flow back into profit margins.

“Credit risk should improve from the abyss of 2020,” research firm CFRA said in a recent note previewing bank earnings.

To make things even rosier, some of the measures banks took to protect themselves in the down years, including cost cutting and higher fees, aren’t going away and could continue to provide traction.

On the less rosy side, some analysts worry about higher corporate taxes possibly coming later this year if the Biden administration gets its infrastructure plan through, and say certain industries like commercial real estate remain on the watch list for potential loan loss provisions.

Despite those worries, Financials are the second best-performing sector year-to-date, up more than 18% through early April. Only Energy (another downtrodden sector until recently) gained more Q1 ground.

We’ll examine MS, BAC, and C in a subsequent report, but for now let’s focus on the first big banks to report, led by JPM on Wednesday.