Finding A Way: Banks Beat Expectations Despite Struggles As Earnings Go Into High Gear

Two of the nation’s biggest banks beat earnings expectations Tuesday, but showed signs of struggle in a challenging environment. On the positive side, both banks continued to find ways to make money given all the circumstances weighing against them.

Investors entered this quarter knowing Bank of America Corp (NYSE: BAC) and Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE: GS) could face some headwinds, especially on the trading side for GS. That’s exactly what happened, with trading revenue and investment banking revenues falling for GS, and interest rate income declining for BAC. Both companies blew away earnings expectations by finding other sources of strength — for instance rising loan revenue at GS — but the question is whether guidance might ultimately have to go lower.

Though Q2 wasn’t cooperative for some of the big banks, keep in mind that change could come quickly. If interest rates rise again and the stock market continues climbing, then boom, banks could find themselves in calmer waters.

From a raw numbers standpoint, BAC reported earnings per share of 46 cents on revenue of $22.83 billion. Wall Street analysts’ consensus had been for BAC earnings of $0.43 per share on revenue of $21.91 billion. GS came in with earnings of $3.95 a share on revenue of $7.89 billion. That blew away analysts’ consensus for earnings of $3.51 on revenue of $7.57 billion.

As investors digest today’s bank earnings, the overall mood seems a little cautious. Earnings drive the market, but expectations for non-earnings related factors have been tempered over the last week or two. A stalling legislative agenda in Washington could be part of that. The U.S. dollar fell to new lows for the year early Tuesday, and some analysts believe the weakness might reflect the static situation on Capitol Hill. Health reform’s chances took a big blow Monday when two more Republican senators said they couldn’t support it. While health care isn’t necessarily the big enchilada for the stock market, the crippled reform effort could indicate jeopardy for other key projects like tax reform and infrastructure legislation. Those are initiatives many stock market investors had hoped could provide a boost.

In other earnings news, the tech sector got off to a positive start after Monday’s close when Netflix, Inc. (NASDAQ: NFLX) reported it added 5.2 million new subscribers in Q2. NFLX added 4.1 million international subscribers and stated the company expects international to generate a profit for the full year for the first time. The international part of the business has had profitable quarters, but never an entire profitable year. The stock went gangbusters in pre-market trading, climbing 10% at one point.