At last, Wall Street has something to cheer
Consumer banks, on the other hand, are starting to suffer
Capital markets are twitchy. When interest rates spiked in 2022, their response was fast. Stocks plunged; bosses deferred plans to go public, issue stock and buy rivals. Sharp-suited bankers suddenly found their calls going unanswered. By contrast, the economy adapts slowly. As inflation climbed, people did not cut back much on spending, instead using their credit cards more. With the labour market healthy, they did not struggle to repay debt as rates rose. The result was a bonanza for consumer banks. They raked in ever more interest from resilient borrowers as defaults and delinquencies stayed low.
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This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Main street sags”
Finance & economics July 20th 2024
- Stocks are on an astonishing run. Yet threats lurk
- Why investors have fallen in love with small American firms
- At last, Wall Street has something to cheer
- Japan’s strength produces a weak yen
- China’s leaders face miserable economic-growth figures
- YIMBY cities show how to build homes and contain rents
- Americans are wrong to wish for an era of stable bipartisanship
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Trump wastes no time in reigniting trade wars
Canada and Mexico look likely to suffer
How Trump, Starmer and Macron can avoid a debt crunch
With deficits soaring, their finance ministers will have to be smart
What Scott Bessent’s appointment means for the Trump administration
The president-elect’s nominee for treasury secretary faces a gruelling job
What Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders get wrong about credit cards
Forget interest rates. Rewards are the real problem
Computers unleashed economic growth. Will artificial intelligence?
Two years after ChatGPT-3.5 arrived, progress has been slower than expected
Should investors just give up on stocks outside America?
No, but it is getting a lot harder to keep the faith