Q2 Bank Earnings Preview: Hawkish Fed Pivot Eyed

Back in April, big banks entered first-quarter earnings season grappling with a war in Iran, surging inflation, and a market expecting possible rate cuts. The banks proceeded to impress with their results, and the sector posted sharp second-quarter market gains.

Heading into earnings season this week, the macro climate has shifted dramatically, with implications for Wall Street's iconic names and the broader banking industry. Initial public offering (IPO) volume has skyrocketed and more deals are in the pipeline, the Federal Reserve seems more likely to hike than ease rates, and a framework deal between the United States and Iran may pressure crude oil and Treasury yields.

Banks are expected to roll with the punches and deliver solid earnings reports, though the future is somewhat hazy amid these shifting economic and monetary trends. Banks kick off earnings season Tuesday, when several of the biggest names report.

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"The big banks report early in the earnings season and can often set the tone for the whole market," said Alex Coffey, senior trading and derivatives strategist at Schwab.

The nearly 20% rise in the KBW Nasdaq Bank Index (BKX) between the end of March and late June outpaced a 13% gain in the broader market over the same period, suggesting investors at that time still saw banks benefiting from economic fundamentals.

But fundamentals may be in question, despite a bright earnings picture, amid worries that a hawkish Fed could remove the punch bowl. Weaker-than-expected first-quarter consumer spending data and sluggish June jobs growth have raised fresh economic concerns just as investors have begun to anticipate rising rates.