A Wall Street dealmaking bonanza in the third quarter helped boost profits at JPMorgan Chase (JPM) and Goldman Sachs (GS) as some of the country’s largest banks raked in higher revenues from investment banking and trading.
JPMorgan posted net income of $14.4 billion, a 12% increase from the third quarter of last year and roughly $1 billion more than what analysts anticipated.
Revenue from JPMorgan’s investment banking division climbed 17% from a year ago to $2.6 billion, while client trading jumped 25% to $8.94 billion.
“The U.S. economy remained resilient in the quarter,” JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said in an earnings release, adding that “M&A activity picked up against a supportive backdrop.”
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“However, significant risks persist — including from tariffs and trade uncertainty, worsening geopolitical conditions, high fiscal deficits and elevated asset prices,” he added. “As always, we hope for the best but prepare the firm for a wide range of scenarios.”
Goldman reported net income of $4.1 billion, a 37% increase from the third quarter of last year and roughly half a billion dollars more than what analysts anticipated.
Goldman’s revenue from investment banking climbed 42% from a year ago to $2.6 billion, while client trading and financing jumped 11.5% to $7.2 billion.
“This quarter’s results reflect the strength of our client franchise and focus on executing our strategic priorities in an improved market environment,” Goldman CEO David Solomon said in the bank’s earnings release.
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Other big banks that benefited from a recent frenzy of mergers and IPOs were Wells Fargo (WFC) and Citigroup (C).
The third quarter profits at Wells were $5.6 billion, a 9% increase from the third quarter of last year and also roughly half a billion dollars more than what analysts anticipated.
Its fees from investment banking rose 25% from the third quarter of last year, to $840 million. In July, Wells Fargo landed a leading role in one of the largest tie-ups so far this year: Union Pacific’s (UNP) $72 billion acquisition of rail rival Norfolk Southern Corp (NSC).
“The momentum we are building across our businesses drove strong financial results in the third quarter,” Wells Fargo CEO Charles Scharf said in the bank’s earnings release.
At Citigroup, dealmaking fees jumped 17% and traders in equities and fixed income generated $5.6 billion — 15% more than a year earlier.
The stock of Wells Fargo was up more than 4% at the market open while JPMorgan and Goldman were down roughly 3%. Citigroup was down slightly.
The results kicked off a third quarter earnings season for the US banking industry as Wall Street’s biggest lenders continue to ride high on optimism about dealmaking.
Their clients have largely shaken off the economic uncertainty surrounding President Trump’s tariffs, which initially froze IPOs and mergers in the spring. Large companies have since unleashed a boom through the summer and fall in public offerings, corporate bond sales and sizable mergers.
These same lenders also stand to benefit from what has so far proved out as a loosening of capital and supervisory requirements from their Washington regulators.
But many bankers are still cautious about the overall environment, noting the many uncertainties that remain.
“We know that conditions can change quickly, and so we remain focused on strong risk management,” Goldman’s Solomon added.
Scharf at Wells noted that “some economic uncertainty remains,” but “the U.S. economy has been resilient and the financial health of our clients and customers remains strong.”
David Hollerith covers the financial sector, ranging from the country’s biggest banks to regional lenders, private equity firms, and the cryptocurrency space.
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