Banks Hoping For Looser Trump Reins Are Too Giddy

US banks enjoyed a sharp stock price jump on Donald Trump’s election victory; two weeks later, they’ve held onto those gains. There’s one good reason for this — and several poor ones, all to do with regulation.

The slam-dunk is that big banks now have very large amounts of excess capital: The six largest lenders have $124 billion more equity than they need, with JPMorgan Chase & Co. alone counting for $54 billion of that, according to Bloomberg Intelligence. Higher capital demands are now extremely unlikely from the Federal Reserve and other regulators that are working to bring US bank oversight into line with global Basel III standards.

However, the overhaul of these rules isn’t about to be cancelled, and a broad relaxation of standards isn’t likely any time soon either. Similarly, a complete rollback of the Biden-era antitrust stance, which bankers hope will kickstart a wave of deal activity and stock market listings, is also far from assured. The biggest change that could happen quickest is the Trump administration starving regulators and supervisors of the resources to do their existing jobs well. To my mind, that’s one of the biggest risks for the banking sector, too.

BIG US BANKS

The finance industry might not have unanimously cheered Trump’s candidacy, but it was definitely cool on Biden’s time in office. He brought heavy handed leaders to the Federal Trade Commission, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Respectively Lina Khan, Gary Gensler and Rohit Chopra all did good work to protect consumers and investors, but are likely to be replaced. Still, this will take some months, and it doesn’t mean all their efforts will be undone.