Articles Tagged: trading revenue

2 articles found

Banks’ Q3 Bonanza and Faster Bonuses? Windfalls, Risk-Taking—and a Private‑Credit Reckoning

Wall Street banks just delivered their strongest third quarter in years, powered by a one‑two punch of booming trading and a resurgent deal machine. From JPMorgan’s record trading haul to a five‑year‑best earnings beat at Morgan Stanley, large U.S. banks posted double‑digit profit growth as equity markets near record highs and tariff-driven volatility kept clients active across rates, currencies, commodities, and stocks. Investment banking fees surged as M&A, IPOs and debt issuance found a higher gear. The windfall is already stirring a perennial question with fresh urgency: what happens to bonus pools when the revenue mix swings toward discretionary, performance-sensitive businesses like trading and advisory? Compensation pressures are building—but so are the warning lights. JPMorgan pushed provisions for credit losses higher, even as Bank of America lowered its own. And JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon warned that recent auto- and consumer-linked bankruptcies may be early signs of broader excess in private-company financing. As Q4 begins, investors and employees alike are watching three fault lines: the durability of the deal pipeline, the health of credit, and how banks manage compensation optics and timing.

JPMorganMorgan StanleyBank of America+13 more

Wall Street’s Trading Boom: How Record Q3 Trading at Goldman and JPM Reshapes Market Liquidity, Risk Appetite and the Fed’s Next Move

Wall Street’s trading engines roared in the third quarter, delivering a record $8.9 billion haul at JPMorgan and a decisive beat at Goldman Sachs powered by fixed income and a resurgent investment banking franchise. In an environment shaped by tariff-driven volatility, geopolitics, and the AI-capex supercycle, the two bellwethers are signaling something bigger than a single quarter’s outperformance: dealer balance sheets are being used, primary issuance is reopening, and cross-asset liquidity is—so far—holding up even as valuations hover near highs. The paradox is that strength can be a complication. Booming trading and issuance ease financial conditions, which could delay the path to rate cuts if inflation proves sticky. Meanwhile, bank leaders are flagging cracks under the surface—from auto-sector bankruptcies to rising provisions—that sit uncomfortably alongside an IMF warning about equity concentration, bond market fragility, and the growing web of bank–NBFI linkages. This piece connects the dots: why trading surged, how liquidity is evolving, where risk could surface next, and what it all means for the Fed’s calculus.

JPMorganGoldman SachsFICC+17 more