Will Major Banks' Earnings Offer Clues to a Soft Landing or Harder Recession?

 | Jan 12, 2023 02:55PM ET

Last October 13, the S&P 500 index (SPX) fell to 3,491, which ultimately turned out to be its 2022 intraday low. 

The very next day, several of the largest U.S. banks reported better-than-expected Q3 earnings, and the SPX began a nearly 10% rally through year-end.

Coincidence? Maybe not. Bank earnings often help set the tone for the entire reporting season, which in turn can flash a green or red light for the broader market. Banks, by their very nature, are closer to the heartbeat of the economy than most industries, so their results and observations merit close scrutiny.

Heading into Q4 earnings season—which starts Friday morning before the open with expected results from JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM), Citigroup (NYSE:C), Bank of America (NYSE:BAC), and Wells Fargo & Company (NYSE:WFC)—there’s a long list of questions investors hope banks can answer about the financials sector and the economy as a whole. Their results and how they answer these questions could help determine if the light turns green or red on Wall Street.

h2 What Investors Might Want to Learn/h2
  • How was loan volume in Q4, and what is the banks’ forecast for loan volume in Q1 and beyond?
  • How does credit look, both for consumers and businesses?
  • Is a recession likely, and, if so, how deep will it be?
  • How much did banks put aside in Q4 loan loss reserves to protect from possible credit defaults?
  • Has inflation peaked, and, if so, how much will it drop?
  • Will the initial public offering (IPO) market rebound at all this year?
  • Could the recent decline in mortgage rates set a floor below the slumping housing market?
  • What’s the outlook for possible mergers and acquisition (M&A) activity? Goldman released research last week that it expects M&A to pick up in the second half of 2023, but will other banks agree?
  • Is the long descent in stocks and bonds still hurting trading activity in the capital markets?

Though there may not be many simple answers during bank earnings season, consider this a guide for evaluating the sector. Several of these industry challenges helped drive bank earnings into the ditch the first three quarters of 2022, and analysts expect more suffering to show up on Q4 balance sheets. The NASDAQ Bank index—which includes all bank stocks, not just the biggest ones—fell 18% in 2022.

h2 Q4 Bank Earnings Seen Falling Sharply/h2

That’s roughly in line with analyst expectations for a 16% year-over-year drop in Q4 2022 bank earnings, according to research firm FactSet. Banks are expected to be among the industries with the weakest Q4 earnings results, in part due to higher interest rates that slowed mortgage and other loan demand, along with falling capital markets activity like IPOs.

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That said, the biggest banks have a long history of beating Wall Street’s expectations. In Q3, several managed that even as year-over-year profits slumped amid growing loan loss provisions and a dusty IPO market. At the same time, rising net-interest income due to the Federal Reserve’s rate increases provided some support. Easy year-over-year comparisons on interest rates could mean continued bottom-line support from this aspect of the business in Q4.

Beyond the raw numbers, it’s also important to listen closely to what banking executives say on their earnings calls and in their press releases. That’s where they often paint a more detailed picture of the economy and the industry. Last earnings season, banking executives warned of a potential U.S. recession and slowing global growth, along with the chance of rising credit risk as interest rates rose to 15-year highs. At the same time, they talked about “resilient” consumer sentiment, low delinquencies and decent loan growth. 

Will their tone change versus Q3? If they sound more negative, that might raise new speed bumps for the broader market.