Bank Cheat Sheet: How Much EPS Downside Is The Market Pricing In?

In a new report, Deutsche Bank analyst Matt O’Connor discussed what the recent selloff in bank stocks means in terms of market expectations for 2016 bank earnings. O’Connor believes significant earnings downside has already been priced into bank stocks.

Deutsche Bank’s analysis indicates that the market is now expecting 10 percent downside to big U.S. bank earnings this year. O’Connor noted that, if macroeconomic conditions improve in the short-term, the bank selloff may prove to be an overzealous knee-jerk reaction. However, if the economy continues to deteriorate, he sees plenty more room to the downside for bank earnings.

Related Link: 'Credit Default Swap' Data Indicate Increasing Short-Term Market Risk

“We est [estimate] a modest C&I cycle could hit EPS by 10 percent and a haircutting of trading, ibanking and wealth/asset mgmt. would reduce mkt sens banks by another 7-10 percent,” O’Connor explained. He added that lower-than-expected net interest income represents up to 5.0 percent additional earnings downside.

O’Connor said Deutsche Bank sees real risk of a U.S. recession, but anticipates any recession would likely be a mild one.

A Few Names

Deutsche Bank maintains Buy ratings on the following market-sensitive and large regional banks:

  • Bank of America Corp BAC
  • JPMorgan Chase & Co. JPM
  • Citizens Financial Group Inc CFG
  • M&T Bank Corporation MTB
  • PNC Financial Services Group Inc PNC
  • SunTrust Banks, Inc. STI
  • U.S. Bancorp USB
  • Wells Fargo & Co WFC

Disclosure: The author owns shares of Bank of America.

Image Credit: Public Domain
Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs
date
ticker
name
Price Target
Upside/Downside
Recommendation
Firm
Posted In: Analyst ColorLong IdeasTop StoriesMarketsAnalyst RatingsTrading IdeasGeneralDeutsche BankMatt O'Connor
Benzinga simplifies the market for smarter investing

Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.

Join Now: Free!

Loading...