Tuesday February 9, 2010 2:17 PM ET
SmartMoney
Published July 16, 2009  |  A A A
On the Street by AnnaMaria Andriotis (Author Archive)

5 Reasons Banks Are Profiting in a Recession

Investors and consumers are still reeling from the recession, but the nation’s big banks are posting huge, unexpected profits.

On Thursday, JPMorgan Chase (JPM) announced a $2.7 billion second-quarter profit. On Monday, Goldman Sachs (GS) announced a $3.4 billion profit for the same quarter.

What’s going on here?

Analysts say the banks’ results come down to two big common denominators: (1) investment banking, particularly an increase in underwriting activity (when companies turn to banks for cash), and (2) trading revenues from a volatile quarter that included a big rally.

About 80% of Goldman’s net revenues came from underwriting and trading revenues, says Scott Sprinzen, a managing director in the financial institution's ratings group at Standard & Poor’s.

Here are five reasons why banks are reporting big profits during the recession:

Increase in underwriting

Companies looking to raise money or refinance their debt saw the second-quarter rally and the bump in optimism as a window of opportunity, and they brought their business to investment banks like Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan.

Separately, many financial companies were forced to raise additional capital during the second quarter. Banks and other lenders that accepted federal money under the Temporary Asset Relief Program (TARP) moved to return those funds to avoid additional oversight, but the government required that most of those firms raise additional capital before giving the money back. Those capital campaigns led to an increase in underwriting requests, particularly at Goldman and JPMorgan, Sprinzen says.

Here’s how underwriting works: companies approach Goldman or JPMorgan’s investing arm requesting cash. In turn, the banks talk to their clients (pension funds and insurance companies, for example) to see if there’s any interest among them in investing. Should the bank’s clients show interest, the company looking to raise money receives a check, and, in return, the bank collects an underwriting fee – usually a percentage of the amount the bank helped the company raise.

So far, second-quarter results show that banks recorded underwriting fees larger than those they earned during the tech bubble, says Michael Wong, an equity analyst at Morningstar. Because the stock market performed so poorly over the past year, there was a lot of pent-up demand during the second quarter from companies looking to raise money, he says. After the March stock market rally, companies took the opportunity to raise as much as they could – including not only the cash they need now but the cash that they anticipate they’ll need for the remainder of this year, he says. They took into account that investors may become skittish and less willing to lend later on, especially if the rebound slows down, he says.

Wong says these were extraordinary circumstances and that called this revenue stream from underwriting unsustainable. “[Since] equity underwriting demand was pulled forward from the future, that means there will be less demand to be fulfilled in the future,” he says.

High trading revenue

Stock market volatility and the March rally triggered a flurry of trading activity earlier this year that contributed to banks revenues.

More people were trying to get in on the rally, buying or selling more frequently then they had in the previous quarter, says Jaime Peters, a senior equity analyst at Morningstar. Trading principal transactions brought in $3.1 billion in revenue for JPMorgan during the second quarter, she says.

The market’s volatility has played a significant role. “When things are more volatile, people tend to trade more, and as a result JPMorgan has more volume… which typically will result in more revenues,” she says.

Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan don’t trade on exchanges; most of their trades are over the counter, which means if you want to enter into a trade or a swap, you call the bank to arrange it and they make a commission on the deal.

Forecasts for trading remain mixed. “As credit continues to tighten we’re probably going to see trading income decline,” Peters says. “We’re at a high point with…the opportunity to make money in principal transactions, so it will come down.”

Richard Bove, a bank analyst with brokerage Rochdale Securities, says opportunities remain. The outlook for further gains in trading remains positive, especially in the category known as fixed income, currencies and commodities, Bove wrote in a report on Goldman’s earnings. “The mark downs and write-offs of the past year have ended to a great degree,” he writes.

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User Comments
glassman96

1 Comments
Why do they have to lie to China by telling them that their money is secure here? China is going to pull the plug soon. They know that their money is in jeopardy. The U.S. can't go no further than down. This country is just trying to buy time. The big corp's in this country can't even keep their businesses afloat, let alone know how to run them. This country invested money it didn't have in failing businesses. How stupid is that? Unless this country can come up with a way to create 6 million jobs and sell all the foreclosed homes at their mortgage value or higher, it is in deep chit. This country is like a boat with a hole in it, they keep drilling more holes hoping that the water will drain out. Good Luck America, but even that won't save you now. Next step martial law. *** http://new-world-order.itrustgodonly.com/
Posted by: cramer_stocks
Criminals! They all tout each other's genius all the while leveraging the public's money. And couldn't we have guessed that Jim Cramer's #1 stock has been Goldman Sachs (GS) for the last 4 years. A chart of his Goldman Sachs (GS) stock picks
http://www.stocktagger.com/2007/09/jim-cramer-calls-goldman-sachs-gs-best.html
DrckDdsn

1 Comments
Banks need to stop attempting to "Charading Around" allowing the Media-viewing Public to believe they have powers that they've never had, that is why the Whitehouse lost its Financial Powers that were "Non-existent" in the first place, their both just "messengers" for the World Fortune. They have been trying to steal the Authority of the Ethnic Royals and Ruler Class Citizens that control the World Fortune and Natural Resources for Decades! And worse is that they run to these same people like "pissants" every single time, smiling in their faces like nothing is going to happen but them allowing themselves to be extorted into allowing the United States Whitehouse be a "Racketeering & Extortion Ring" playing the "World Security Authority" by filing false evidentaries and undocumented information concerning terrorism that they themselves have always been organizing subversively!
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