Big Banks Prep for Billions More in Bond Issuance

Wall Street firms are expected to capitalize on ultra-low credit spreads and strong demand from investors after they report quarterly results.

Glencore Plc. employees work on the trading floor of Glencore Agriculture, in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on April 25, 2017. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg.

Wall Street banks are expected to launch a barrage of bond sales as soon as next week, capitalizing on ultra-low credit spreads and strong demand from investors after they report quarterly results.

The six biggest U.S. banks could borrow $20 billion to $24 billion after they post results, JPMorgan Chase & Co. credit analyst Kabir Caprihan wrote in a research note on Monday. That’s more than the $15 billion they typically raised in October over the prior decade, according to Caprihan, and comes on top of the roughly $107 billion they have borrowed so far this year at the senior holding company level, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Although the banks are borrowing more this year, they are really getting back to a normal level of bond issuance since the Federal Reserve stopped raising interest rates last year, and more recently began cutting them.

“It is reasonable to expect bank new issuance post-earnings and pre-election,” said Nicholas Elfner, co-head of research at Breckinridge Capital Advisors. “With tight spreads and the prospect for Fed cuts, we think supply should normalize in the quarters ahead.”

Big banks always need fresh funds for their own lending, and as the biggest borrowers in the U.S. investment-grade market, they are known to be savvy about when to borrow.

Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Arnold Kakuda says the banks are getting ahead of potential volatility around the U.S. elections in November and taking advantage of borrowing costs that are near a 20-year low amid strong investor demand. He estimates the “Big Six” will complete at least $15 billion to $20 billion of sales.

“The lenders may be strategic and issue above these levels to quench the voracious thirst of bond investors for corporate debt,” said Kakuda.

Banks typically issue debt after reporting quarterly results, which kicked off this morning with JPMorgan and Wells Fargo & Co. Next week, Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc., and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are scheduled to report on Tuesday, followed by Morgan Stanley on Wednesday.

Moody’s Ratings expects the big banks to report strong third-quarter trading revenue and improvements in investment banking compared with the year-ago period, thanks in part to record corporate debt issuance and an increase in equity issuance.

All eyes will be glued to forecasts for full-year net interest income, which measures the difference between what a bank collects on loans and pays out to depositors. It is the biggest revenue source for traditional lenders, so any hints of what they can deliver in 2025, as the Fed is expected to keep cutting rates, will be important.

The broader banking industry faces some credit concerns, especially smaller lenders with commercial real estate exposure. The proportion of banks with negative ratings outlooks has risen, with several negative actions last year after a string of regional-bank failures, according to S&P Global Ratings.

Still, most banks enjoy stable outlooks, and regulatory tightening since the regional crisis has been a credit positive, S&P analysts including Stuart Plesser wrote in a September 27 note.

In addition to bank bond issuance expected this month, JPMorgan’s Caprihan predicts another $30 billion to $40 billion of new bank debt to hit the market from November through January. Voya Investment Management will be one of the investors looking to buy, according to Samuel Wilson, portfolio manager at the firm.

He views banks as a rare bright spot in a market where corporate bond spreads are so tight that investors must scour for opportunities where the risks are worth the slim rewards. U.S. investment-grade spreads averaged 82 basis points as of Wednesday’s close, according to Bloomberg index data, the tightest level since September 2021.

“In the context of a tight market, it’s still a trade that we like,” Wilson said in a phone interview Wednesday.

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