HomeNewsBusinessMarketsWall St Week Ahead | US bank stocks falter as recession worries take hold

Wall St Week Ahead | US bank stocks falter as recession worries take hold

Banks face a potential double whammy: While a recession could hurt loan growth and increase credit losses, higher rates threaten to shrink profit margins if the interest that lenders pay out on deposits eats away at interest earned from loans

December 17, 2022 / 06:37 IST
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Representative image
Representative image

Shares of US banks are taking a beating in December, as worries over an expected recession and weakening profit margins dull the industry's appeal.

The S&P 500 banks index has slumped some 11 percent this month against a 5.5 percent drop for the broader index in the same period. Among the hardest hit were shares of Bank of America, which have fallen 16 percent this month. Shares of Wells Fargo & Co have slumped about 14 percent, and those of JPMorgan Chase & Co are down over 6 percent.

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Signs of pessimism over the economy have crept into asset prices in recent weeks, as investors grow increasingly worried that the Federal Reserve’s most aggressive monetary policy tightening in 40 years - aimed at reducing inflation - will also hamstring growth.

Treasury yields, which move inversely to prices, have recently tumbled to three-month lows, signaling that growth worries may be pushing investors into bonds. Others have pointed to energy shares, which have fallen about 12 percent from recent highs, as a sign that investors may be factoring in an economic slowdown.