U.S. bank results: a sign of things to come for the Big-6

Eli Rodney
April 13, 2025
Banks+7 more

To close out last week we highlighted the U.S. banks should report strong trading activity on the back of volatile markets and high volumes. JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley confirmed this view, reporting record equities trading revenue (45%+ Y/Y).

While it shouldn’t be long-lived, a strong trading backdrop should favour some Canadian banks more than others…

… and with Trump at the helm volatility could be the new normal, giving the strength out of this segment more staying power.

Management highlighted uncertainty as the new normal as well, supporting additional provisioning and a softer growth outlook, given strategic investments have been put on hold until the dust settles on trade.

… that shifts their focus away from more strategic priorities with obvious implications for the investment banking pipeline outlook towards more short-term work, optimizing supply chains and trying to figure out how they’re going to respond to the current environment.

Jeremy Barnum, CFO - JPM Q1 earnings call

We saw Canadian banks do the same thing in Q1, taking additional provisions to reflect a more cautious credit outlook…

… and like their U.S. counterparts, the Big-6 have adequate capital buffers to absorb any near-term shock.

We’ve gotten enough out of the U.S. banks to be confident in the read-through but we should get another data point tomorrow, with Goldman Sachs reporting before the open.

Get smarter on Canadian markets

Get our insight-packed coverage of Canadian markets delivered to your inbox 3x per week in 5 minutes or less.

Disclaimer: Bullpen Finance Inc. is not a registered investment advisor. The information provided is for educational purposes only and should not be considered investment advice. See our terms of service for more information.

Get smarter on Canadian markets

Get The Morning Meeting, our insight-packed Canadian markets newsletter delivered to your inbox 3x per week.

Read by professionals from:

Bank of Montreal
Toronto Dominion Bank
Bank of Nova Scotia
Royal Bank of Canada
National Bank of Canada
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce