"We see solid consumer activity across the board," Bank of America's chief executive, Brian Moynihan, said in a statement. He added that the country's economy still appeared to be "steadily growing."
JPMorgan's overall results were strong, too: It earned $9.7 billion for the quarter, 16 per cent more than in last year's second quarter. Its credit card business boomed, but revenue from other kinds of loans fell.
Activity on Wall Street has faltered recently, with investors unsure of how to plan for fallout from Trump's continuing trade war and the increasing likelihood that the Federal Reserve will begin to cut interest rates after a brief period of increases.
"We don't know what kind of rate cut we're going to get, and we don't know why," Paul Donofrio, Bank of America's chief financial officer, said. "That's important."
Lower interest rates could cause banks to earn less in interest on loans. Bank of America and JPMorgan both warned that the Fed's likely shift toward lowering rates meant that they would probably earn less in the second half of the year than they originally anticipated.
Goldman Sachs was the only one of the five big banks to declare some type of win on Wall Street, although it was a partial one: an increase in revenue from trading stocks and certain kinds of derivatives. At $9.5 billion, Goldman's overall quarterly profit was down 2% from the same period last year. It was the only one of the five to report a decline.
Citigroup may have gotten the most significant lift from a lower tax rate. The bank's chief financial officer, Mark Mason, said the strength in Citi's adjusted per-share earnings — $1.83, higher than Wall Street analysts' expectations — was mostly a result of the lower rate and of a decline in its outstanding shares. The decline stemmed from Citi's repurchasing shares.
Citi, Bank of America, JPMorgan and Wells Fargo said last month that they planned to repurchase a combined $105 billion in shares over the next year.
Written by: Emily Flitter
© 2019 THE NEW YORK TIMES