scorecard
  1. Home
  2. finance
  3. Wall Street's traders are getting spanked again

Wall Street's traders are getting spanked again

Portia Crowe   

Wall Street's traders are getting spanked again
Finance1 min read

new york stock exchange traders

REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange December 18, 2014.

The banks had a good first quarter, thanks largely to strong trading revenues - but now that's starting to change.

In fact, bond volatility started to turn down back in March, even before the end of the quarter, reports The Wall Street Journal's John Carney.

And without that volatility, traders aren't able to take advantage of spreads between prices. That means they can't make as much money.

After beating on the bottom line in the first quarter, Citigroup is now expressing concern about its trading department.

In a call last week, executives said fixed-income, currency, and commodities revenues were looking bad - just as bad as this time last year, when executives were forecasting a 20 percent drop in revenues.

In the end, Citi saw a 12 percent drop in Q2 last year, while JP Morgan saw a 15 percent drop and Goldman 10 percent.

But, Carney reported, that's actually kind of normal for second-quarter earnings, which follow the seasonally busy first quarter when everyone adjusts their portfolios and hedges for the new year.

So, don't worry, things will hopefully pick up again soon.

Read the full story at WSJ.com »

NOW WATCH: NYSE Trader Explains The Importance Of The VIX

READ MORE ARTICLES ON


Advertisement

Advertisement