By Peter Hobson
LONDON (Reuters) – Lower income from oil reduced commodity-related revenues at the world’s ten biggest investment banks in the third quarter, but booming profits from precious metals means they are still set for a bumper year, consultants McKinsey CIB Insights said on Monday.
Big banks have almost doubled their earnings this year from trading, selling derivatives and other activities in the commodities sector thanks to price volatility, supply disruption and a boom in trading since the coronavirus outbreak.
Massive swings in the price of oil
A rush of interest in gold from investors and a fracturing of the market after the virus stuck created lucrative opportunities for banks.
The ten largest had net revenues of $1.5 billion over the July-September quarter, McKinsey CIB Insights said, down from $2.4 billion over April-June but up from $1.1 billion in the third quarter of 2019.
For the first nine months of the year, their revenues were $5.6 billion, up from $3.2 billion in 2019, McKinsey said.
(GRAPHIC: Commodities bonanza – https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/ce/xklvybeqqpg/COMMODITIES%20BONANZA%20Q3.JPG)
Earnings from oil fell to $416 million in the third quarter from $1.1 billion in the second, but were still up from $341 million in the third quarter of 2019.
Profits from precious metals, meanwhile, rose to $577 million from $457 million in the second quarter and $209 million in the third quarter of 2019.
Revenues from power and gas and agricultural commodities fell in the third quarter and income from industrial metals was roughly stable.
The ten banks McKinsey CIB Insights tracks are Bank of America
(Reporting by Peter Hobson; Editing by Marguerita Choy)