As U.S. banks prepare to report their third-quarter earnings, investor attention is focused on the potential for a soft landing in the economy, Federal Reserve rate cuts, and their impact on bank valuations.
Analysts at Bank of America remain cautiously optimistic about the outlook for bank stocks. They predict that a soft-landing scenario could trigger a rebound in customer activity, improve loan growth, and positively drive higher price-to-earnings (P/E) multiples for the sector. However, macro uncertainties, including Fed policy shifts and the upcoming U.S. elections, temper the enthusiasm.
Bank of America equity analyst Ebrahim H. Poonawala highlighted in a note Monday that rate cuts could be "structurally bullish" for bank earnings per share (EPS) outlooks and stock P/E multiples. A softer rate environment is expected to reinvigorate customer activity, particularly in investment banking, mortgage lending, and loan growth.
However, lower interest rates are expected to negatively impact "asset-sensitive banks" as loan yields will drop.
Political Risks Loom Large Ahead of Elections
The upcoming U.S. election adds an additional layer of uncertainty for banks.
"A Trump win is likely seen as positive for relief on the regulatory/M&A fronts. Democratic sweep likely most negative outcome for the sector given potential for higher taxes, more of the same (or worse) on regulatory changes," analysts wrote.
While current valuations appear cautiously optimistic about a soft landing, political outcomes could trigger volatile movements in the sector. A Trump win would likely lead to a "knee-jerk" positive reaction in bank stocks, while a Democratic win could weigh on sentiment.
Regional Banks Preferred Over Money Center Banks
For the third quarter of 2024, the investment bank favored regional banks, as tracked by the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF
Regionals have greater flexibility with deposits, better hedging strategies, and more potential for capital relief as mark-to-market losses on bond books decline.
Key picks include U.S. Bancorp
First Bancorp
On Monday, Bank of America also downgraded Comerica Inc.
Looking ahead, Friday, Oct. 11, will see key earnings reports from JPMorgan Chase