Picture: CARLO ALLEGRI/REUTERS
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The second-largest US lender, Bank of America, beat analysts’ first-quarter profit estimates as it collected hefty interest payments from customers, while its bond traders had their best quarter in a decade.

Rival banking giants JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup also reaped windfalls from higher interest payments in the first quarter, while setting aside billions of dollars to prepare for a worsening economy.

“Results were strong despite a challenging economic environment with market and banking sector volatility,” Bank of America CFO Alastair Borthwick said on Tuesday.

The bank on Tuesday announced 4,000 job cuts despite the results, Financial Times reported. The cuts will be made before the end of June.

The company’s shares were down marginally in choppy trading, erasing earlier gains.

" Our research team continues to predict a shallow recession that will occur beginning in the third quarter of 2023. "
- CEO Brian Moynihan
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The collapse of two US lenders in March shook the industry and deepened concerns about a looming recession. The crisis battered bank stocks and prompted spooked depositors to move their cash to larger institutions.

“Our research team continues to predict a shallow recession that will occur beginning in the third quarter of 2023 ... if we look at our consumer behaviour, payments by consumer continue to drive the US economy,” CEO Brian Moynihan said, reiterating an earlier view.

“Bank of America had a strong Q1 as higher interest rates continued to boost its net interest margin despite rising deposit costs,” David Fanger, senior vice-president at Moody’s Investors Service, said.

“This, together with strong sales and trading revenues and the seventh consecutive quarter of positive operating leverage, more than offset the adverse impact of modest deposit outflows.”

Total deposits at the bank fell 1% to $1.91-trillion in the first quarter, compared with the fourth quarter, as customers who were unsatisfied with the deposit rates offered by lenders moved their cash into money market funds to chase greater yields.

Traders in fixed income, currencies and commodities stayed in high demand, bringing in $3.5bn in revenue for Bank of America, up 27% from a year earlier.

Economists expect the US economy to slow in the second half of the year as the Federal Reserve raises interest rates to tame inflation, prompting Bank of America to build $124m in reserves in the first quarter, compared with a release of $362m last year.

Still, combined debit and credit cards spending was resilient, rising 6% in the quarter, according to BofA.

Consumer debit and credit spending was still robust given strong US employment and wage growth, Borthwick said, despite concerns about a looming recession.

“Consumers are in great shape in terms of credit quality by any historical standard.”

Revenue at the company’s consumer banking unit rose 21% to $10.7bn in the first quarter.

Net interest income (NII), which reflects how much money the bank makes from charging interest to customers, rose 25% to $14.4bn in the quarter.

The bank said it expects NII to fall 2% in the second quarter, when compared with the first quarter.

Meanwhile, global mergers & acquisitions activity shrank to its lowest level in more than a decade in the first quarter of 2023, hurt by rising interest rates, high inflation and recession fears. The slump in dealmaking has weighed on Wall Street investment banks in recent months, prompting thousands of job cuts.

Bank of America’s investment banking fees fell 20% to $1.2bn in the quarter. Its revenue, net of interest expense, increased 13% to $26.3bn, beating estimates of $25.13bn.

Reuters

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