Industrial Investors Brace for Disappointing 2H24 amid Anticipated Misses and Downward Guidance Revisions; Sights Turn to 2025 for Which Optimism is Building
Industrial Investors Brace for Disappointing 2H24 amid Anticipated Misses and Downward Guidance Revisions; Sights Turn to 2025 for Which Optimism is Building
Survey Finds Notable Sentiment Divergence Resulting in Bull-Bear Barbell; Outright Bearishness at Highest Level in 12 Months with More Downward Guidance Revisions Expected
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Continuing last quarter’s earnings season trend, U.S. Banks are largely reporting strong results relative to Street expectations with most posting solid Q3 beats on the top- and bottom-line. Broadly speaking, results have been bolstered by strength in capital markets, investment banking, and wealth management. Executives remain largely optimistic for a more robust M&A and IPO environment on the horizon amid signs that sponsors may be readying to tap their more than $1T of dry powder.
As the Fed has kicked off its easing cycle with a 50 bps rate cut last month, questions around the expected path of interest rates and the impact on net interest income (NII) garnered outsized attention on earnings calls. While some noted near-term NII headwinds are likely to persist into next year, executives touted swift measures to reduce deposit pricing. With two additional 25 bps rate cuts expected this year (one in November and one in December), and more seen on the table for 2025, commentary also reflected the view that a more upwardly sloping yield curve should be more supportive in the year ahead, albeit with timing uncertain.
Continuing, overall loan growth remains muted, albeit with some positive comments around emerging demand trends and hopes for lower rates and post-election certainty to loosen pent-up demand. Views regarding the U.S. consumer reflect a continuation of trends seen in recent quarters, with spending more selective and lower-income groups under particular pressure. That said, executives point to normalization rather than a sharp drop-off, with consumers broadly on solid footing and supported by relatively low unemployment and steady wage growth.
Taken together, bank executives struck a mostly upbeat tone on the state of the U.S. economy and prospects for a soft landing supported by cooling inflation and the start of Fed rate cuts. At the same time, most remain guarded in their macroeconomic commentary, wary of heightened geopolitical turmoil and a contentious U.S. political landscape – what they describe as “tail risks” and a “variety of economic environments”.
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