Receiving Wide Coverage ... The results are in: Third-quarter results at the big five American banks “weren’t as bad as some investors and analysts had feared, but they weren’t great either — especially in the all-important fixed-income trading category,” the Wall Street Journal reports. “In most cases, leading the pack meant having the smallest year-over-year decline in revenue for a particular trading category.”
The Heard on the Street column says the results show the two big investment banks — Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley — “can perform reasonably well even when the environment is tough. What happens if things get better?” Morgan Stanley, it says, is “a proven, steady performer.” But “for those who can stomach some risk in exchange for higher potential returns, it may be time to wade back into Goldman Sachs.”
The New York Times chooses steadiness. “Morgan Stanley may not provide as many thrills as Goldman, but it ought to avoid many of the spills,” it says. “Goldman’s $94 billion market capitalization has edged back ahead of its rival’s, after they briefly traded places in the summer. There’s a case to be made that they should swap around again.”
Adapt or suffer: Ireland is opening its arms once again to the banking industry a decade after the country’s economy was crippled by a banking disaster. The reason: Brexit may cost the country, the U.K.’s biggest trading partner, 40,000 jobs if exports to the U.K. decline. It hopes to soften the blow by luring 10,000 financial services jobs.
“Faced with Brexit, Ireland has no choice but to adapt,” said Patrick Honohan, a former governor of the Central Bank of Ireland. “Whether we like it or not, financial services is part of that.” Wall Street Journal, Financial Times
Wall Street Journal JPM buys WePay: JPMorgan Chase agreed to buy payments company WePay, which the paper calls “the bank’s first sizable acquisition of a financial-technology startup.” The bank plans to roll out WePay’s technology, which helps online marketplaces and crowdfunding websites process payments, to its four million small-business customers.
No decision yet: President Trump is expected to pick a Federal Reserve chair before he embarks on his first trip to Asia on November 3. The finalists are current Fed Chair Janet Yellen, who will meet with the president Thursday; Fed governor Jerome Powell, former Fed governor Kevin Warsh, National Economic Council Director Gary Cohn and Stanford University economist John Taylor. “Honestly, I like them all, I do. I have a great respect for all of them,” Trump said.
Tougher rules: Canada’s banking regulator announced new mortgage financing rules “that real estate watchers and economists say could dramatically slow house buying and borrowing,” according to the paper. The rules, which take effect on January 1, would require all prospective buyers — including those with a downpayment of 20% or more — to undergo a stress test before they can qualify for a mortgage. The test would show if the borrower can handle payments on a loan with an interest rate two percentage points above the actual rate.
“These revisions reinforce a strong and prudent regulatory regime for residential mortgage underwriting in Canada,” said Jeremy Rudin, head of the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions.
Financial Times Open for business: While other countries, including the U.S. and China, have put restrictions on the use and trading of cryptocurrencies, Japan, has gone the other way, recently issuing operating licenses to 11 bitcoin exchanges. “For Japan, cryptocurrencies sit within the realm of fintech,” the paper explains. “The government and banking leaders hope that this sector’s businesses — ranging from artificial intelligence-led investment advisory groups to cloud data storage — will free up cash sitting in bank deposits and reignite the economy.”
Quotable “This is easily the most groundshaking mortgage rule of all time, and that’s not an understatement.” — Robert McLister, founder of the mortgage-rate comparison site RateSpy.com, about mortgage rules announced by the Canadian government.
Lawmakers including one of the original sponsors of the Corporate Transparency Act have filed an amicus brief in the appeal against an Alabama court ruling that the law is unconstitutional, which would throw into question Treasury's newly-established beneficial ownership structure.
The Connecticut bank —a regional traditionally regarded as a cautious lender — said nonperforming loans and leases rose 53% year-over-year. The uptick was in mostly the commercial-and-industrial loan space, although there was one nonperforming commercial real estate loan, executives said.
The two regional banks are anticipating that borrower demand will increase in the back half of the year. High interest rates and economic uncertainty have been muting the appetite for borrowing.
In a letter to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen last week, the Massachusetts senator highlighted the growing use of cryptocurrencies by malicious organizations abroad and underscored the need for anti-money-laundering and counterterrorism provisions in future proposals.
Brendon Falconer, finance chief of the Indiana company since 2019, faces felony child molestation charges. But CEO James Ryan says management is focused on the CapStar integration and organic growth.