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Big investment banks have worst start to year since 2006

Reuters September 5, 2019, 06:05:28 IST

LONDON (Reuters) - The world’s largest investment banks have had their worst start to a year since 2006, according to the latest data published by industry analyst Coalition on Thursday. In the first six months of 2019 investment banks reported revenues of $76.8 billion, down 11% on the prior year and the lowest first-half performance for 13 years. Revenues fell across the board, with the deepest decline in equities trading, down 17% to $22.1 billion

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Big investment banks have worst start to year since 2006

Big investment banks have worst start to year since 2006

LONDON (Reuters) - The world’s largest investment banks have had their worst start to a year since 2006, according to the latest data published by industry analyst Coalition on Thursday.

In the first six months of 2019 investment banks reported revenues of $76.8 billion, down 11% on the prior year and the lowest first-half performance for 13 years.

Revenues fell across the board, with the deepest decline in equities trading, down 17% to $22.1 billion.

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Fixed income, currencies and commodities revenues fell 9%, while investment bank advisory was down 8%.

The banks’ profitability also suffered, with operating margins sliding 500 basis points to 31%, their lowest level for four years.

Several major banks have cut jobs in their investment banking divisions in response to weak results, including Deutsche Bank , HSBC , Societe Generale and Citigroup .

Deutsche Bank plans to make the deepest cuts after announcing 18,000 jobs cuts in July, with the bulk in investment banking.

Coalition tracks Bank of America Merrill Lynch , Barclays , BNP Paribas , Citi, Credit Suisse , Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs , HSBC, JP Morgan , Morgan Stanley , Societe Generale and UBS .

(Reporting by Iain Withers. Editing by Jane Merriman)

This story has not been edited by Firstpost staff and is generated by auto-feed.

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