April 18, 2026

Better business. Better community

Business Industry and Financial

Wall Street banks’ blockbuster quarter gives dealmakers hope for a ‘golden age’ of investment banking

Wall Street banks’ blockbuster quarter gives dealmakers hope for a ‘golden age’ of investment banking

A group of men in suits walking through downtown Manhattan
Workers in downtown ManhattanMomo Takahashi/BI
  • Big banks posted strong earnings results this week as dealmaking returns to Wall Street.

  • Goldman’s advisory revenue jumped 60% to $1.4 billion from a year earlier, the bank said.

  • JPMorgan, Citi, and Morgan Stanley also logged double-digit gains in investment banking fees.

After nearly three years of sputtering and false starts since the pandemic-era highs, dealmaking is finally looking like it’s back in gear on Wall Street.

Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, and Morgan Stanley all reported blockbuster third-quarter earnings this week, as CEOs revived mergers and financing plans that had stalled while investors waited for markets to thaw. For the second quarter in a row, signs are mounting that the long-standing dealmaking drought — which has affected bankers’ pay and morale — is showing real signs of easing.

“Whether we are entering a golden age of investment banking remains to be seen, but it has been several years of chatter around green shoots, and now the flywheel is taking hold,” Morgan Stanley CEO Ted Pick told analysts in a call on Wednesday.

The firm reported investment banking revenue of $2.1 billion — up 44% year-over-year — buoyed by an 80% surge in equity underwriting to $652 million, as well as rising advisory fees of $684 million, up 25%.

Goldman Sachs led the rebound Tuesday, announcing its third-highest quarterly net revenues ever: more than $15 billion, the bank said in its quarterly earnings release. David Solomon, the firm’s CEO, told investors in a shareholder call that mergers were back — propelling the firm’s advisory revenues 60% higher than the same period one year earlier, to a quarterly total of $1.4 billion.

“The setup remains constructive,” he said Tuesday, praising a “more supportive regulatory environment” for spurring renewed activity.

Other firms that reported their numbers this week, from JPMorgan Chase to Bank of America, were also enjoying the dealmaking high, reporting double-digit fee jumps.

Stocks of large-cap banks were up late Wednesday morning, with Bank of America up by more than 5%, Morgan Stanley rallying by 6%, and JPMorgan gaining 2%.

To be sure, Wall Street knows how it feels to spot rays of optimism, only to see them eclipsed by clouds of uncertainty that disrupt the levers of corporate transacting.

“The world is in an uncertain place, and there could be pauses depending on how geopolitics feel, but generally speaking, the investment banking product category over the next couple of years should be up and to the right,” Morgan Stanley’s Pick predicted.

link