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    29.8200
  • TODAY'S CHANGE (%)
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    above average

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  • Nov 19, 2024

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    • 4:43AM ET on Tuesday Nov 19, 2024 by Dow Jones
      Companies Mentioned: HSBC, JBAXY, SCGLY, BCS, BNPQY, UBS, DB

      0943 GMT - Barclays and UBS are well positioned to benefit from the pockets of opportunity brought about by a second Trump administration, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods says in a research note. European investment banks with more exposure to U.S. capital markets, a stronger U.S. dollar and less exposure to tariffs are naturally the way to go, analysts Thomas Hallett and Andrew Stimpson write. Deutsche Bank and German banks in general aren't well placed on potential tariffs given the country's large foreign trade surplus, they add. A stronger dollar tends to favor the Swiss more--such as UBS and Julius Baer--and the Germans the least, they note. Likely reduced financial regulation from the Republican sweep with greater prospects from M&A activity should also support European and U.S. banks, they add. (elena.vardon@wsj.com)
  • Nov 14, 2024

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    • 7:16AM ET on Thursday Nov 14, 2024 by Dow Jones
      Companies Mentioned: GS, MS, SCGLY, BCS, BNPQY, UBS, DB

      1216 GMT - JP Morgan prefers European investment banks in the long term compared with their U.S. counterparts. Though shares in U.S. banks have justifiably risen after the election on expectations of stability in the regulatory environment and anticipated investment banking activity, the market seems to have already priced in potential positive moves by the new administration in their valuations of U.S. lenders but not in that of European ones, analysts write. "We see this momentum continuing near-term, also supported by a good trading environment in Equities and also in Credit in 4Q so far," they say. European investment banks also stand to benefit from client activity levels improving. The broker's top picks are Deutsche Bank, UBS and Barclays and prefers banks geared to non-net interest income. JP Morgan has an overweight rating on the global investment bank sector. (elena.vardon@wsj.com)
    • 6:29AM ET on Thursday Nov 14, 2024 by Dow Jones
      Companies Mentioned: SWDBY, CRARY, MDIBY, HSBC, ING, BBVA, LYG, SCGLY, UNCFF, CAIXY, ALBKY, BCS, BNPQY, ISNPY, NWG, SAN, DNKEY

      1129 GMT - European banks reported an aggregate 8% pretax profit beat in their third-quarter results, Jefferies says in a research note, reviewing the 32 lenders in its coverage. Stronger revenue drove results, while lower provisions and costs also provided support, analysts say. While net interest income slightly missed views on average, income from fees, commissions and trading continued to surprise positively, they say. "European banks have now outperformed consensus expectations for no less than 17 quarters in a row," the analysts say. This confirms the sector's earning momentum. The Stoxx Europe 600 banking index has gained 21% year to date. (elena.vardon@wsj.com)
  • Nov 6, 2024

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    • 3:45AM ET on Wednesday Nov 06, 2024 by Dow Jones
      Companies Mentioned: SWDBY, BBVA, JBAXY, SCGLY, BNPQY, UBS, CRZBY, DB

      0841 GMT - The first-order implications for European financials from the U.S. election are limited overall, Citi analysts say in a research note as a Republican victory looks increasingly likely. There are longer-term implications for European banks, however, given the future rates and foreign-exchange trajectory, the knock-on impact of new tariffs--relevant for China and Mexico-exposed companies--and potential deregulation of U.S. peers, analysts write. "Banks which could be beneficiaries of a potential Republican clean sweep - UBS, Julius Baer, BNP and SocGen, whereas the impact is likely to be more mixed for others, and likely to be viewed as negative for BBVA, German and Swedish banks in our view," they add. (elena.vardon@wsj.com)
  • Nov 4, 2024

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