HomeBusinessWall Street sees limited upside in one, but rates the other as...

Wall Street sees limited upside in one, but rates the other as a strong buy

President-elect Donald Trump couldn’t be more optimistic about bank stocks, which have lagged the broader market for years. Trump could roll back banking regulation, or simply pay less attention to the banks — a change from the control they received from the Biden administration. Bank mergers and acquisitions are likely to be approved more quickly, and a Trump presidency and lower interest rates could lead to more dealmaking and initial public offering activity, boosting investment banking revenues.

The two largest banks in the US JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM) And Bank of America (NYSE: BAC)have already seen their shares rise by about 8% and 10% respectively since Election Day. It may not seem like much compared to some of the artificial intelligence high-flyers in the market today, but it’s a big move for highly liquid, blue chip stocks with modest volatility. After the big move, Wall Street sees limited upside potential for one of these stocks, but rates the other as a strong buy.

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With approximately $4.2 trillion in assets, JPMorgan Chase is the largest bank in the US. The stock is up about 40% this year, which is another huge move for a stock with a beta roughly in line with the broader market.

While several banks failed in 2023 due to poor balance sheet management in the high interest rate environment, JPMorgan Chase has benefited. Treasurers and CFOs of companies who did not want to do their business with a bank that could fail flocked to big banks like JPMorgan, which are too big to fail. Additionally, the banking crisis allowed JPMorgan to acquire First Republic in an FDIC-backed deal.

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While First Republic would likely have gone bankrupt had it not been acquired, JPMorgan Chase gained a bank with a strong affluent customer base. JPMorgan Chase would not have been allowed to close the deal under normal circumstances because it already has more than 10% of the US deposit market share and therefore cannot legally buy any more US banks. The deal also involved loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC.

Lower interest rates, friendlier governance and a steepening yield curve should benefit JPMorgan Chase. However, analysts believe the market has already factored these tailwinds into the stock price. Over the past three months, 19 analysts have issued reports on JPMorgan Chase, with 13 rating the stock as a buy, five saying to hold the stock and one saying to sell. The average consensus price target of around $234 implies a downside of around 3%.

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