Bank Of America Withdraws Recession Forecast Amid Strong Job Market, Expresses Concerns Over New Capital Rules

Zinger Key Points
  • Bank of America retracts its earlier recession forecast due to a strong job market and robust consumer spending.
  • The bank's CEO Brian Moynihan expresses concerns over new capital requirements for U.S. banks.

Bank Of America Corp BAC has retracted its earlier forecast of an impending recession, citing a robust job market and vigorous consumer spending as the primary reasons.

The bank’s CEO Brian Moynihan confirmed this in an interview with Bloomberg on Thursday.

Moynihan expressed optimism about the economic climate, stating: “people are employed, they have money, they are spending money.” The economy seems to be reaching a stable state, he said.

BofA’s Revised Economic Outlook

Earlier this week, economists at Bank of America discarded their previous prediction of a recession in the United States.

“Growth in economic activity over the past three quarters has averaged 2.3%, the unemployment rate has remained near all-time lows, and wage and price pressures are moving in the right direction, albeit gradually,” BofA wrote in the report.

This makes BofA the first major Wall Street bank to officially retract such a forecast, reflecting growing optimism about the economic outlook.

Previously, the economics team at Bank of America led by Michael Gapen had predicted a mild recession in the first half of 2024. Now, they anticipate 75 basis points of rate cuts in 2024 and 100 basis points of cuts in 2025, significantly below market expectations.

Read also: Bank Of America Adopts AI And Metaverse For New Employee Onboarding

Concerns Over New Capital Rules

During the interview, Moynihan also expressed concerns about the proposed new capital requirements for the largest US banks.

He warned they could risk pushing more banking activity outside of well-regulated sectors.

“If you get the capital regulations — the banking system — too tight, you push things back outside the tent, and that’s a concern.”

Bank of America will adjust its model to fit the new rules and “make things work,” Moynihan said, but warned that the changes could make all banks less competitive.

Read now: Stocks Mitigate Losses Ahead Of Apple, Amazon Earnings; Treasury Yields Rocket On Debt Frenzy: Thursday’s Market Drivers

This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors.

Photo: Shutterstock.

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Posted In: Large CapMacro Economic EventsManagementTop StoriesEconomicsMarketsMediabanksbig banksBrian MoynihanInflationInterest RatesMichael GapenRecession
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