The Dow went over 10K for the 3rd time on the upbeat earnings news from Intel, JP Morgan, and Goldman Sachs.
But just how good were these reports?
Intel:
So, revenue down vs. 1 year ago. Profit down vs. 1 year ago. Income down vs. 1 year ago.
But looks great vs. Q2 when Intel had a $1.45B antitrust fine from the EU
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30717099/
JP Morgan?
Barry Ritholz highlighted The King Report:
http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2009/10...rgan-earnings/
Goldman Sachs?
http://truthingold.blogspot.com/2009...-earnings.html
So there you have it. Normal operations going down; a one-off fine last quarter making Intel look good in comparison and "Fixed Income, Currency, and Commodity" revenues helping out JPM and GS.
I wonder how much of that was selling crap mortgages to the Fed?
But just how good were these reports?
Intel:
Non-GAAP Comparison | ||
Q3 2009 | vs. Q2 2009 | |
Revenue | $9.4 billion | up $1.4 billion |
Operating Income/(Loss) | $2.6 billion | up $1.1 billion |
Net Income/(Loss) | $1.9 billion | up $807 million |
Earnings/(Losses) Per Share | 33 cents | up 15 cents |
GAAP Comparison | |||
Q3 2009 | vs. vs. Q2 2009 | vs. vs. Q3 2008 | |
Revenue | $9.4 billion | up $1.4 billion | down $828 million |
Operating Income/(Loss) | $2.6 billion | up $2.6 billion | down $519 million |
Net Income/(Loss) | $1.9 billion | up $2.3 billion | down $158 million |
Earnings/(Losses) Per Share | 33 cents | up 40 cents | down 2 cents |
But looks great vs. Q2 when Intel had a $1.45B antitrust fine from the EU
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30717099/
JP Morgan?
Barry Ritholz highlighted The King Report:
http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2009/10...rgan-earnings/
JP Morgan reported better than expected earnings due to fixed income revenue jumping to a record $5B (vs. -$3.6B). Earnings are $3.59B. Once again the usual suspects hailed JPM’s “fortess-like balance sheet”. Few on The Street or in government want to talk about JPM’s humongous, $80 trillion notional value derivative book.
JPM CEO Jamie Dimon: Credit costs remain high and are expected to stay elevated for the foreseeable future in the consumer lending and card services loan portfolios.
USA/Today: JPMorgan’s loss provision to cover current and future home loan defaults rose to $3.99 billion, while its provision for credit card losses surged to $4.97 billion.
Credit card defaults and mortgage losses are likely to continue to creep higher and lag an overall economic recovery. Losses on credit cards typically mirror unemployment, which rose to 9.8% in September.
JP Morgan’s losses on credit cards have already passed 10%. The bank said the percentage of credit card loans it wrote off as not being repayable in the third quarter reached 10.3%.
Loan losses were also pushed higher by weakness in the portfolios JPMorgan acquired when it
purchased the failed bank Washington Mutual a year ago.
JPM CEO Jamie Dimon: Credit costs remain high and are expected to stay elevated for the foreseeable future in the consumer lending and card services loan portfolios.
USA/Today: JPMorgan’s loss provision to cover current and future home loan defaults rose to $3.99 billion, while its provision for credit card losses surged to $4.97 billion.
Credit card defaults and mortgage losses are likely to continue to creep higher and lag an overall economic recovery. Losses on credit cards typically mirror unemployment, which rose to 9.8% in September.
JP Morgan’s losses on credit cards have already passed 10%. The bank said the percentage of credit card loans it wrote off as not being repayable in the third quarter reached 10.3%.
Loan losses were also pushed higher by weakness in the portfolios JPMorgan acquired when it
purchased the failed bank Washington Mutual a year ago.
http://truthingold.blogspot.com/2009...-earnings.html
Looking at Q2 to Q3: Investment Banking -38%, Asset Management -6%, Trading and Principal Investments -7%. So where did they make this record profit you ask? Their FICC, or Fixed Income, Currency and Commodities unit generated all the profits, paper profits that is.
Let's break it down from their press release: Net revenues in FICC were $5.99 billion, significantly higher than the third quarter of 2008. These results reflected strong performances in credit products and mortgages, which were significantly higher compared with a difficult third quarter of 2008. Credit products and mortgages are GAAP-speak for "securities we hold, we can't sell, but we can mark them up to whatever profit number we want to report to make big bonuses." Notice the comparision to Q3 '08, which was when all these positions were marked down drastically. Now they are marking them back up and reporting the paper gains.
There's more: "Net revenues in Equities were $2.78 billion, 78% higher than the third quarter of 2008. These results reflected strong net revenues in derivatives, which were significantly higher than the third quarter of 2008."
Let's break it down from their press release: Net revenues in FICC were $5.99 billion, significantly higher than the third quarter of 2008. These results reflected strong performances in credit products and mortgages, which were significantly higher compared with a difficult third quarter of 2008. Credit products and mortgages are GAAP-speak for "securities we hold, we can't sell, but we can mark them up to whatever profit number we want to report to make big bonuses." Notice the comparision to Q3 '08, which was when all these positions were marked down drastically. Now they are marking them back up and reporting the paper gains.
There's more: "Net revenues in Equities were $2.78 billion, 78% higher than the third quarter of 2008. These results reflected strong net revenues in derivatives, which were significantly higher than the third quarter of 2008."
I wonder how much of that was selling crap mortgages to the Fed?
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