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Major Banks Shatter Equities Revenue Records in Latest Quarter

Published Jul 14, 2026
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Summary:
  • Major banks posted record equities trading revenue last quarter.
  • Market volatility drove a surge in client trading activity.
  • The results underscore Wall Street's strength in turbulent markets.

Trading Profits Surge Across the Board

Wall Street's biggest banks just finished a quarter that looks almost too good to be true. JPMorgan Chase alone brought in $6 billion from its stock-trading desks.

To put the $7.42 billion in context: the $7.42 billion from Goldman's stock-trading operations over the latest quarter exceeds the total that division earned during the entire year of 2019. That is how fast the cash is pouring in.

The boom is not limited to the usual suspects. Bank of America reported record stock-trading revenue and higher dealmaking, though its expenses also climbed more than expected. Wells Fargo beat analyst estimates in wealth management and investment banking.

Last year, when Donald Trump began his presidency, the benchmark for combined stock-trading income from America's six biggest financial institutions was $13.5 billion. That figure has been exceeded every quarter of his second term so far.

What Is Fueling All This Trading

The reason is not one big event. It is three of them happening at once.

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Investors are constantly shuffling their portfolios because of the artificial intelligence boom. Every new AI announcement or earnings report moves money into some stocks and out of others. On top of that, the U.S. military conflict with Iran has created uncertainty, and inflation fears keep popping up.

Each of those forces pushes people to buy and sell. When they do, the banks' trading desks take a cut.

Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan's CEO, put it plainly: "The markets are booming right now. It's getting as close to as good as it gets. We just don't know how long it's going to last."

That last part is the key. The same forces driving all this activity could flip. A ceasefire with Iran, a sudden drop in inflation, or an AI bubble popping would change everything fast.

The catch: Banks are spending a lot more money to keep up. They are investing in technology and paying top talent to run their desks. That raises a real question - how much of this record revenue will actually turn into profit?

What It Means for Your Portfolio

Jeremy Barnum, JPMorgan's CFO, offered an honest warning for anyone getting too comfortable. "Is the current revenue run rate of this quarter something we can count on?" he asked. "The answer to that is obviously not. It would be naive not to be worried, but at the same time, it's always easy to be worried and the market keeps going up."

For investors, this boom cuts two ways. On one side, when banks are making money hand over fist, it often means the market is active and liquid. Your trades get filled quickly and spreads are tight. Bank stocks themselves tend to rise with their revenue, which is good if you own them.

On the other side, this level of activity usually comes with higher leverage and more risk-taking behind the scenes. The same energy that pushes markets up can pull them down just as fast. And there are already signs of strain beyond Wall Street - PepsiCo recently noted that some customers pulled back spending because gas prices were rising.

The bottom line: the bank trading boom is a snapshot of a market that is running hot. It is great while it lasts. Just do not assume it will last forever.

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