Driven by the unprecedented value of takeovers and a roaring stock market, Wall Street's biggest investment houses are set this coming week to report quarterly results that have the potential to leave investors breathless.
The biggest players in investment banking -- with Goldman Sachs Group Inc leading off Tuesday -- have reaped blockbuster fees in a record year for global merger and acquisition activity. The volume of acquisitions announced this year broke the record set in 2000, with more than US$3.46 trillion in deals reached this year.
Wall Street analysts spent the past week raising their earnings projections, telling clients they underestimated the breadth of deals the securities firms would capture. The fourth quarter has seen a total of US$908.2 billion of announced deals, beating out last year's US$846 billion, according to financial data provider Dealogic.
In this past week alone, Bank of New York Corp said it would buy rival Mellon Financial Group Inc for US$16.5 billion and LSI Logic Corp snapped up rival Agere Systems Inc. for US$4 billion.
"The quarter has been phenomenal," said Brad Hintz, a banking analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. "There won't be a question if things are weakening, but instead it's a matter of how high they will go and by how far brokerages will beat analyst expectations."
Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley Inc, Merrill Lynch & Co, Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc and Bear Stearns Cos have earned a combined US$21.3 billion in the first nine months of the year. This surpasses the full-year record of US$20.4 billion set last year.
The companies are expected to report a combined US$128 billion of revenue this year, according to analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial. Bear Stearns and Lehman report on Thursday, while Morgan Stanley is scheduled for the following week and Merrill Lynch next month.
Guy Moszkowski, an analyst with Merrill Lynch, on Wednesday readjusted his fourth-quarter projections higher for the group. At the heart of it, he said, is that equity underwriting has surged 61 percent from the third quarter due to strength in the US and international M&A.
He also noted that initial public offering activity has rebounded by about 114 percent from the third quarter. Proprietary trading, which is a brokerage's own money that it uses to invest, also could see record levels during the quarter because of Wall Street's record run.
"Trading fundamentals are generally strong," Moszkowski said. "Equity markets have rebounded solidly this quarter from the weakness we saw this summer."
But, can this continue? That answer might come as chief financial officers at the major brokerages lead analysts through their earnings reports, and answer questions about how they feel next year will shape up.
A strong forecast looks likely -- and that signals the good times for individual investors will also continue.
There was a record M&A backlog during the third quarter with deals worth US$24.9 billion registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission, according to Dealogic. As of Thursday, there were US$19.2 billion of deals on the books -- compared to US$20.3 billion a year earlier.
And so long as the pipeline remains rich, and the investment house's themselves don't forecast a slowdown in the markets, then next year should be off to a good start. That also means stock prices for the banks themselves -- many of which already trading near yearly highs -- stand to gain.
"History argues that when you look at their earnings, the minute they are produced they become ancient history ... you're looking at 2007," said Richard Bove, an analyst with Punk, Ziegel & Co. "Once the earnings come out, you'll see everyone immediately raise their estimates and stock price targets."
The New Taiwan dollar is on the verge of overtaking the yuan as Asia’s best carry-trade target given its lower risk of interest-rate and currency volatility. A strategy of borrowing the New Taiwan dollar to invest in higher-yielding alternatives has generated the second-highest return over the past month among Asian currencies behind the yuan, based on the Sharpe ratio that measures risk-adjusted relative returns. The New Taiwan dollar may soon replace its Chinese peer as the region’s favored carry trade tool, analysts say, citing Beijing’s efforts to support the yuan that can create wild swings in borrowing costs. In contrast,
Nvidia Corp’s demand for advanced packaging from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) remains strong though the kind of technology it needs is changing, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) said yesterday, after he was asked whether the company was cutting orders. Nvidia’s most advanced artificial intelligence (AI) chip, Blackwell, consists of multiple chips glued together using a complex chip-on-wafer-on-substrate (CoWoS) advanced packaging technology offered by TSMC, Nvidia’s main contract chipmaker. “As we move into Blackwell, we will use largely CoWoS-L. Of course, we’re still manufacturing Hopper, and Hopper will use CowoS-S. We will also transition the CoWoS-S capacity to CoWos-L,” Huang said
VERTICAL INTEGRATION: The US fabless company’s acquisition of the data center manufacturer would not affect market competition, the Fair Trade Commission said The Fair Trade Commission has approved Advanced Micro Devices Inc’s (AMD) bid to fully acquire ZT International Group Inc for US$4.9 billion, saying it would not hamper market competition. As AMD is a fabless company that designs central processing units (CPUs) used in consumer electronics and servers, while ZT is a data center manufacturer, the vertical integration would not affect market competition, the commission said in a statement yesterday. ZT counts hyperscalers such as Microsoft Corp, Amazon.com Inc and Google among its major clients and plays a minor role in deciding the specifications of data centers, given the strong bargaining power of
TARIFF SURGE: The strong performance could be attributed to the growing artificial intelligence device market and mass orders ahead of potential US tariffs, analysts said The combined revenue of companies listed on the Taiwan Stock Exchange and the Taipei Exchange for the whole of last year totaled NT$44.66 trillion (US$1.35 trillion), up 12.8 percent year-on-year and hit a record high, data compiled by investment consulting firm CMoney showed on Saturday. The result came after listed firms reported a 23.92 percent annual increase in combined revenue for last month at NT$4.1 trillion, the second-highest for the month of December on record, and posted a 15.63 percent rise in combined revenue for the December quarter at NT$12.25 billion, the highest quarterly figure ever, the data showed. Analysts attributed the