The major banks in the U.S. are anticipating a flood of loan defaults as
households and business customers take a big financial hit from the
coronavirus pandemic. JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Bank of America,
Citigroup and Goldman Sachs raised the funds set aside for bad loans by
nearly $20 billion combined in the first quarter, earnings reports
released over the past two days show. And Wall Street expects that
figure may go even higher next quarter, a possibility bank executives
acknowledged on earnings conference calls.
Bank of America and Citigroup said Wednesday that their profits sank more than 40% in the first quarter as both set-aside billions for potentially bad loans. A day earlier, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo reported even steeper drops in profit as those banks also set aside large sums to cover loan losses. Even the investment banks were not immune to the pandemic. Goldman Sachs’ first-quarter profit dropped by 46% from a year earlier, due to significant losses on its own investments as well as a buildup in reserves for potential loan defaults. -Full Report
Bank of America and Citigroup said Wednesday that their profits sank more than 40% in the first quarter as both set-aside billions for potentially bad loans. A day earlier, JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo reported even steeper drops in profit as those banks also set aside large sums to cover loan losses. Even the investment banks were not immune to the pandemic. Goldman Sachs’ first-quarter profit dropped by 46% from a year earlier, due to significant losses on its own investments as well as a buildup in reserves for potential loan defaults. -Full Report