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Global Banks Are In The Crossfire Of The Iran War The Iran War Is Stress Testing Every Corner of Global Banking.

#GlobalBanks #RisingRisks #IranWar #Inflation

My latest at @forbes.com.

www.forbes.com/sites/mayrar...

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Global banks predicted to get 10% trading revenue boost on tariff turmoil By Saeed Azhar NEW YORK (Reuters) -Global banks including top U.S. lenders are expected to report a 10% gain in markets revenue as traders cashed in on shifting U.S. tariff policies, according to estimates from analysis firm Crisil Coalition Greenwich. The projections follow a 15% gain in trading revenue in the first quarter for 12 global banks, the data showed. Bank of America and Citigroup (NYSE:C) executives said last month they expect markets revenue to climb by mid-to-high single digit percentages in the second quarter, following a strong first quarter. When U.S. banking giants report second quarter earnings next week, they could even beat those expectations, executives and analysts said. The gains come after U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff announcements in April spurred volatility in stocks and drove volumes to a record in the U.S. Treasuries market, according to electronic trading platform Tradeweb Markets (NASDAQ:TW). "Anybody that’s in the market-making business, providing people with instantaneous liquidity, is going to benefit," said a senior Wall Street executive who declined to be identified discussing client activity. "Stocks went down, bonds went down, and the currency went down - your portfolio was just more risky, and we just saw derisking." Coalition bases its estimates on 12 global banks, including JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM), Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo, as well as European rivals. "Volatility is the friend of markets revenue," said Mollie Devine, head of markets competitor analytics at Coalition. Some of the tariff announcements were a "positive catalyst" for trading desks, she added. Equities performed better than fixed income and currencies, Devine added, even though stock markets are smaller than those for bonds or foreign exchange. She estimated equities revenues would gain 18% in the second quarter, while bonds would climb 5% compared with the previous year. PATH TO NORMAL Banks are seeing sustained levels of higher trading activities given volatility around tariffs, interest rates and geopolitics, said Mike Mayo, an analyst at Wells Fargo. "The higher trading in the last few years is not an aberration, but more a path back to normal after 15 years of zero percent interest rates," he said. Tradeweb Markets, which operates electronic marketplaces for rates, credit, equities and money markets, reported average daily volume of $2.7 trillion in April, up 38.6% from a year earlier. It posted a record $2.71 trillion average daily volume in March. Activity in U.S. government bonds on Tradeweb’s platform surged to a record in April, including the biggest weekly jump since 2001, as yields rose after U.S. President Trump’s initial tariff announcements stunned markets. Coalition forecast markets revenue would grow about 7% for banks in its index for 2025, compared to a 13% gain projected for the first half. The 2025 revenue projection of $246.2 billion is the best since 2009, the year after the onset of the global financial crisis, the data shows. Separately, Mayo at Wells Fargo predicted trading revenue would be up 8% in the first half for major U.S. banks, then slow to 5% in the second half and remain in low single-digit percentages next year. "The immediate effect of the tariffs was to exaggerate the extent of trading" and the effect of tariffs will recede as time passes, he said. With valuations skyrocketing in 2024, many investors are uneasy putting more money into stocks. Sure, there are always opportunities in the stock market – but finding them feels more difficult now than a year ago. Unsure where to invest next? One of the best ways to discover new high-potential opportunities is to look at the top performing portfolios this year. ProPicks AI offers 6 model portfolios from Investing.com which identify the best stocks for investors to buy right now. For example, ProPicks AI found 9 overlooked stocks that jumped over 25% this year alone. The new stocks that made the monthly cut could yield enormous returns in the coming years. Is C one of them?

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📈 New IWH Discussion Paper

Xiang Li, Steven Ongena:
Global Banks’ Macroeconomic Expectations and Credit Supply

📅 Published: June 20, 2025

🔍 Full paper: www.iwh-halle.de/publikatione...

#economics #macroeconomics #asymmetricinformation #creditsupply #expectation #globalbanks

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Factbox-Global banks cut China growth forecasts as trade war deepens SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Global investment banks are lowering their projections for China’s economic growth this year as U.S. President Donald Trump’s aggressive tariffs are expected to take a toll on the world’s second-largest economy. Some of the banks had upgraded their forecasts for China just a month ago, encouraged by signs of improvement in the sputtering economy in the first two months of the year. Sino-U.S. trade tensions have intensified after Trump announced reciprocal tariffs on April 2, leading to tit-for-tat duties on each other’s goods. By April 11, China was all but under a U.S. trade embargo as tariffs rose to 145%. Gross domestic product growth in the first quarter is forecast at 5.1% year-on-year, while full-year expansion is predicted to hit 4.5% in 2025, compared with last year’s 5.0% pace, according to a Reuters poll, falling short of the official target of around 5.0%. China is due to release its first-quarter GDP data and activity indicators on Wednesday. Here is a summary of some forecasts for the China’s GDP. NEW (PREVIOUS) INVESTMENT 2025 2026 HOUSE CITI 4.2% (4.7%) GOLDMAN SACHS 4% (4.5%) 3.5% (4%) UBS 3.4% (4%) 3% (3%) ** In the previous factbox, some of the institutions raised their GDP forecast for this year following some early signs of economic recovery. KEY QUOTES: ** UBS "Under our current new baseline assumptions, we estimate tariff hikes this year to pose a more than two-percentage-point drag on China’s GDP growth. We expect China’s exports to the U.S. to fall by 2/3 in the coming quarters and its overall exports to fall by 10% in USD terms in 2025, the latter also takes into account slower U.S. and global growth. While tariff exemptions will likely reduce the inflationary pressure somewhat in the U.S., we expect they are unlikely to affect importers’ desire to find alternatives to imports from China. Therefore, we expect continued negative impact of the tariff hikes on China’s exports in 2026." ** CITI "We see little scope for a deal between the U.S. and China after recent escalations. Domestic policies could focus more on demand expansion. We expect additional funding of 1 to 1.5 trillion yuan ($205 billion) while policy implementation accelerates. The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) could cut policy rates by 40 basis points and reserve requirement ratio (RRR) by 100 basis points. Policy constraints such as the exchange rate and debt management could stay, however. With prolonged elevated uncertainties, policymakers could choose to keep more powder dry." ** GOLDMAN SACHS "Recent events have underscored the speed with which President Trump can alter tariff rates, while also highlighting the likelihood that high tariffs on Chinese goods will persist. We estimate that 10 to 20 million workers in China may be exposed to U.S.-bound exports. The combination of extremely high U.S. tariffs, sharply declining exports to the U.S., and a slowing global economy is expected to generate substantial pressures on the Chinese economy and labor market." ($1 = 7.3052 Chinese yuan renminbi)

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