What’s going on here? Bank of America and Morgan Stanley both announced market-pleasing results on Tuesday. What does this mean? Morgan Stanley brought $3 billion in profit through the door in the second quarter, up 41% from the year before – and Bank of America brought in $6.9 billion, down 7%. Both were better than analysts expected, but the situation wasn’t all rosy. Morgan Stanley’s wealth management business, which earns based on the amount of assets it has, had a tough time: new business slumped to its lowest ebb since 2020. Meanwhile, Bank of America’s net interest income – the difference between what it earns on loans and what it pays savers – fell. But with the Federal Reserve expected to cut interest rates later this year, that could improve. The bank will be hoping so, as it’s a massive source of profit. Why should I care? Zooming in: Missing the mark. Wall Street neighbors JPMorgan and Wells Fargo both saw their net interest income fall short of analysts’ estimates, so Bank of America’s miss in that department won’t raise too many eyebrows. See, with interest rates sticking above 5%, consumers and businesses have been reluctant to take out loans – a key source of income for banks. Mind you, with rates expected to come down a tad later this year, that should bolster borrowing – and the economy. The bigger picture: The going rate. Higher interest rates have sent dollars by the trillions into money market funds in the past few years, with savers happy to earn 5% or more now – a level that’s keeping their savings comfortably ahead of inflation. Even Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway has flocked to cash and short-term bonds, investing $182 billion at the end of the first quarter alone. What happens next could be interesting: as rates in the US begin to fall, that money could start to move – much of it into stocks. |