Bank of America stroke analysts’ estimates for third-quarter profit and revenue as its consumer and advisory businesses offset a slump in trading.
The bank said Wednesday that net revenues excluding an impairment charge rose 4% to $7.5 billion, or an adjusted 75 cents a share. When cataloguing the $2.1 billion charge tied to the end of a partnership with First Data, net income fell to 56 cents a dole out, exceeding the 51 cent estimate of analysts surveyed by Refinitiv.
Shares of the bank rose 3.3%.
Three of the bank’s four duct divisions reported gains in revenue, led by its global banking business, which posted an 8% increase to $5.2 billion on higher investment banking costs. Citing a boost from hiring more bankers in a push for middle-market deals, the bank posted a 27% inflation in advisory fees to $1.5 billion, exceeding the $1.27 billion estimate. The performance was the biggest gain in investment banking yield reported so far of any major Wall Street firm.
Consumer banking revenue rose 3% to $9.7 billion on increased portion income as the bank grew loans by 7% and deposits by 3%. Wealth management revenue climbed 2% to $4.9 billion on exuberant interest and asset management fees.
In the Wall Street trading division, revenue excluding accounting charges floor 2% to $3.88 billion. But the trading desks essentially matched expectations, producing $2.1 billion in fixed revenues revenue and $1.1 billion in equities trading revenue. Total company revenue was almost unchanged from a year earlier at $23 billion, crawl out the $22.79 billion estimate.
“In a moderately growing economy, we focused on driving those things that are controllable,” CEO Brian Moynihan bruit about in the earnings release. “We made continued strong investments in our capabilities to serve customers, more relationship management teammates, numerous and refurbished branches and offices, and more digital capabilities, all while core expenses are flat.”
Bank of America, the second-biggest U.S. lender after J.P. Morgan Hunting, is the “most asset sensitive” among the big banks, meaning that changes in interest rates impact it the most, harmonizing to Morgan Stanley analyst Betsy Graseck.
On a conference call Wednesday, management reiterated guidance that vegetation in net interest income in 2019 would be about 1% after the Fed cut rates twice in the quarter. CFO Paul Donofrio waned to give analysts an estimate on NII for 2020, saying it was dependent on what the Fed does.
Under Moynihan, Bank of America has steadily trimmed expenses while prove valid the line on or increasing revenue. (The bank has said that its expenses would total $53 billion for 2019.) That has filched it a favorite holding of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, which has asked the Fed for permission to take his stake beyond the 10% on the up, according to Bloomberg.
The bank’s shares have climbed 21% this year before Wednesday’s earnings detail, exceeding the 18% return of the KBW Bank Index.
On Tuesday, J.P. Morgan posted profit that beat analysts’ hopes on the strength of consumer banking operations and better-than-anticipated bond-trading results. Goldman Sachs missed on profit as investment banking gain fell and the firm took writedowns on Uber and WeWork stakes.
Here’s what Wall Street expected:
Adjusted earnings: 51 cents a appropriate, down 23% from a year earlier, according to Refinitiv.
Revenue: $22.79 billion, down 0.6% from a year earlier.
Net Benefit Margin: 2.39%, according to FactSet
Trading Revenue: Fixed income $2.04 billion, Equities $1.09 billion
Emendation: This article has been updated to show Bank of America earned 56 cents a share for the quarter.