Big banks set aside $4 billion for a recession. Investors are more optimistic: Morning Brief – Yahoo Finance

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This article first appeared in the Morning Brief. Get the Morning Brief sent directly to your inbox by signing up here.
Saturday, January 14, 2022
Today's newsletter is by Myles Udland, Head of News at Yahoo Finance. Follow him on Twitter @MylesUdland and on LinkedIn. Read this and more market news on the go with Yahoo Finance App.
Big banks including JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, and Bank of America all reported quarterly results on Friday.
These firms collectively sent a clear message to investors — we are preparing for a downturn.
As a group, these banks set aside more than $4 billion in loan-loss provisions, or money they expect won't be paid back by borrowers.
JPMorgan (JPM) set aside $1.85 billion in provisions for credit losses, saying these reserves were built as the firm's outlook is "now reflecting a mild recession in the central case."
Bank of America (BAC), for its part, set aside $1.1 billion for credit losses in the fourth quarter, Wells Fargo (WFC) $936 million, and Citigroup (C) another $640 million.
Initially, investors saw these reserve builds as a negative sign for banks and the economy more broadly. Futures were lower early Friday, as were shares of each bank.
By the time the closing bell rang on Friday, however, shares of each company were higher along with the broader market.
A reaction from investors that is consistent with early trading in 2023.
And perhaps indicative of a more constructive backdrop in the months to come.
In a note to clients earlier this week, Fundstrat's Tom Lee observed that market history says the S&P 500's rally in the first few days of the year — a period that wrapped up last Tuesday — is an unequivocal positive.
Citing the "First Five Days" rule, Lee notes that in seven prior instances in which the S&P 500 rose 1.4% or more in the first five trading days of the year after a losing year, the index logged annual gains each time — with an average gain of 26%.
"In other words, the 'base' case for 2023 is [the] S&P 500 could gain >25%," Lee wrote. "And this is completely counter to consensus which sees [the S&P 500] falling to 3,000 in first half 2023, before recovering to be flat. In short, 2023 should see far stronger returns than many expect."
Now, a rebound in the stock market after traders endured the most challenging environment in a generation should come as only a mild surprise. The stock market may not be mean reverting, but stocks do tend to go up over time.
Moreover, investors tend not to react to what is happening but rather what they think will happen.
Apply this logic to the case of bank stocks on Friday, and the market action suggests investors feared even worse news. If some investors think this is a "bad news is bad news" kind of market, then it seems the inverse is true as well — good news was good news on Friday.
And if we look away from financial giants and towards more speculative pockets of the market, we find that risk-on energy is definitely percolating beneath the surface.
Frantic rallies in one-time meme stocks like Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) and Carvana (CVNA) this week — and to a lesser extent names like Coinbase (COIN) and Cathie Wood's flagship ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK) — suggest some investors have entered 2023 with a "new year, new you" mindset after a rough 2022.
And whether you consider yourself a market historian or not, anyone paying even cursory attention to daily price action in early 2023 can see things look quite different from how we ended last year.
Now, the rub in noting stocks go up over time is that the impulse behind these steady gains are steadily rising corporate profits. And many on Wall Street still don't think investors are being conservative enough in modeling a drop in profits this year.
But if stock prices tell us what investors believe about the future, then corporate profits tell us what we know about the past.
In the fourth quarter of 2021, JPMorgan, Bank of America, and Citigroup, for instance, all released reserves that had been set aside for credit losses amid a booming economy and healthy consumer balance sheets. In the year that followed, inflation surged to 40-year highs, and an imminent recession became the consensus view on Wall Street and Main Street.
Against this recent history, then, Friday's market reaction serves as a reminder investors already prepped for this bad news from banks. That's what all the fuss was about last year.
And what all the optimism is about so far this year.
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What to watch in markets on Friday, January 13, 2023.
At first glance, most consumers appear to be keeping their heads above water. A day after December inflation data showed price increases coming off the boil – but still high — fourth-quarter earnings showed some signs of consumer slowdown and strain, but not a wallet that’s coming apart at the seams. Case in point: Bank of America’s consumer-deposit balances are showing “strong liquidity.”
On Friday, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned Congress that the U.S. would hit its debt ceiling this coming Thursday, earlier than many had expected. You wouldn’t know it from the stock market’s reaction. The market does have a lot on its mind, after all, from economic data to earnings to Federal Reserve speakers, all matters that seem far more pressing at the moment.
The average interest rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage has fallen by three-quarters of a percentage point since mid-November.
Presley, who inherited Elvis Presley's fortune, once claimed she had suffered an "11-year odyssey to financial ruin."
There's still a lot to like about Amazon stock, even though the company's coming off a hard year, JMP Securities Equity Research Analyst Nick Jones recently told Yahoo Finance Live.
Oppenheim Group President Jason Oppenheim sits down with Yahoo Finance’s Allie Garfinkle to reflect on the housing market in 2022, what he expects for 2023, the impact of interest rates on real estate, and his Netflix series "Selling Sunset."
Yahoo Finance crypto reporter David Hollerith shares the latest news in the crypto market, including Crypto.com's plans for reducing its workforce.
Many retirees plan to earn extra income to supplement their retirement spending. But how much can a retired person earn without paying taxes? The answer to this question varies based on your situation. Understanding the tax rules surrounding retiree income can … Continue reading → The post How Much Can a Retired Person Earn Without Paying Taxes? appeared first on SmartAsset Blog.
(Bloomberg) — It has been a dizzying start to the year for Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. investors after the company’s bankruptcy warning sparked renewed buying by retail traders and fueled a rally reminiscent of the meme-stock frenzy two years ago.Most Read from BloombergPfizer Bivalent Vaccine Linked to Strokes in Preliminary Data‘I Feel Like I Got Duped’: Tesla Price Drop Angers Current OwnersTrump’s Attack on NY Sexual Assault Law Called ‘Absurd’ By JudgeTwitter Workers Forced to Drop Group Lawsui
The first UFC headliner of 2023 is official after Nassourdine Imavov and Sean Strickland made weight Friday in Las Vegas.
Even as Buffett's company Berkshire Hathaway has ventured into other sectors, it has always invested in banks.
Pulte Capital CEO Bill Pulte and Thor Equities CEO Joe Sitt explain why U.S. real estate is headed towards "big trouble" in 2023 and could put "a lot of things to a stop."
(Bloomberg) — The country’s two largest banks just put rivals on notice: they’re finally prepared to pay out more to savers demanding higher yields on their deposits.Most Read from BloombergPfizer Bivalent Vaccine Linked to Strokes in Preliminary Data‘I Feel Like I Got Duped’: Tesla Price Drop Angers Current OwnersTrump’s Attack on NY Sexual Assault Law Called ‘Absurd’ By JudgeTwitter Workers Forced to Drop Group Lawsuit Over SeveranceThe Document That Separates Biden and TrumpAfter a year of r
U.S. consumer prices unexpectedly fell for the first time in more than two-and-a half years in December.
While the stock market has performed abysmally over the past 12 months, there are plenty of stocks available at steep discounts. Three Motley Fool contributors were asked to identify dirt cheap stocks to buy in January. Here's why they chose Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), Teva Pharmaceutical Industries (NYSE: TEVA), and Vertex Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: VRTX).
These companies have achieved such long dividend growth streaks thanks to a meaningful business moat and resilience to recessions.
The super investor is sounding the alarm.
And how you can turn their financial success into your own.
What happened Electric vehicle (EV) start-up Arrival (NASDAQ: ARVL) has struggled to get its business off the ground. The stock is down more than 90% in the past year. Surprisingly, that is after the stock has more than tripled in the last five trading days.

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