Business
JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America
(L-R) Brian Moynihan, Chairman and CEO of Bank of America; Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase; and Jane Fraser, CEO of Citigroup; testify during a Senate Banking Committee hearing at the Hart Senate Office Building on December 06, 2023 in Washington, DC.
Win Mcnamee | Getty Images
Expectations are high that when banks start posting second-quarter results Tuesday, led by JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, revenue from trading equities and fixed income will approach, or even exceed, the records set earlier this year.
That’s a key part of what veteran analyst Mike Mayo of Wells Fargo calls the “sweet spot” in the financial sector right now. Both of banking’s profit engines — Wall Street and Main Street — are in growth mode at the same time.
The largest U.S. banks are raking in rising fees from helping corporations tap the markets, punctuated by last month’s giant SpaceX IPO, while risk-taking traders are also thriving as geopolitical unrest including the Iran war stokes volatility across asset classes.
“You saw the largest IPO in history, a pace of mergers that’s on track to be a record year, and a broadening out of trading to include equity and fixed income across myriad geographies,” Mayo told CNBC.
The quarter’s big bank earnings come at an unusually favorable moment for the industry. After years of navigating higher interest rates and inflation-fueled recession fears, lenders are benefiting from a rare combination of booming Wall Street activity, resilient consumer credit and a long-awaited pickup in business lending.
“There’s not much more you can ask for,” Mayo said.
The trends, which coincide with the Trump administration’s push to ease banking regulations, have helped financial stocks outperform the broader market for two straight years, Mayo noted. That streak also raises the stakes as investors look for signs the momentum can continue into 2027.
JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs are set to post results early Tuesday, with Morgan Stanley reporting Wednesday.
‘Big money maker’
Investment banking revenue for the group could surge 26% from a year ago, while trading revenue could jump 14%, according to KBW analyst Chris McGratty.
Besides the hundreds of millions of dollars in fees that SpaceX paid banks — led by Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley — for the IPO itself, the firms garnered fees for raising debt for the newly public company, and also have a shot at managing the wealth of newly minted millionaires and billionaires.
On top of that, Goldman and Morgan Stanley likely reaped so-called “soft dollars” from the SpaceX IPO, according to Jay Ritter, professor emeritus of finance at the University of Florida’s Warrington College of Business.
SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, speaks on a screen remotely from SpaceX headquarters in Starbase, Texas, speaks before the launch of SpaceX’s initial public offering (IPO) at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York on June 12, 2026.
Adam Jeffery | CNBC
Soft dollars are essentially fees that hedge funds pay investment banks for a slice of an oversubscribed IPO, Ritter said.
“The big money maker for investment banks in IPOs is not the bankers’ fee, but the ability to allocate shares to hedge funds and some active mutual funds that pay soft dollars,” he said.
Meanwhile, trading gains were driven by strength in equities as stock markets climbed during the quarter, as well as heightened activity in fixed income after the Iran conflict sent oil prices, interest rates and currencies swinging, McGratty said.
“Banks are doing a good job these days of capturing the upside of volatility, whereas in previous cycles, they’ve been caught offsides,” McGratty said.
‘Demand is back’
But Mayo argued that the more important development this quarter might be happening away from Wall Street.
The less glamorous business of commercial lending could be turning the corner after years of weakness as banks look to wrest market share from private credit lenders and as the artificial intelligence-fueled spending boom spreads to the rest of the economy, he said.
“Demand is back as companies treat the uncertainty as the new normal and build that new factory, invest in plants and get on with business,” Mayo said.
The trend could benefit regional lenders including Fifth Third because commercial lending represents a larger share of their business than it does for diversified giants like JPMorgan, Mayo said.
Construction of a $16 billion data center developed by Related Digital for Oracle and Open AI, in Saline, Michigan, May 6, 2026.
Jim West | Universal Images Group | Getty Images
Consumer banking also appears healthy. Low unemployment has kept borrowers current on mortgages, auto loans and credit cards, limiting losses.
There are still some risks for the quarter, including potential blowups in the private credit realm, even though that concern has subsided for most banks in the absence of new “cockroaches” emerging. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon warned analysts and investors last year after the collapse of subprime car lender Tricolor Holdings that “when you see one cockroach, there are probably more.”
Another is whether competition over deposits is intensifying, as some players have been forced to pay higher rates to attract and keep savers’ dollars, McGratty said. In an environment where interest rates are steady or rising, that could pressure lender margins.
After two years of market-beating returns, investors are becoming less interested in how strong the last quarter was than whether this unusually favorable backdrop can last.
“We know the quarter’s going to be strong, so I think the question that you ask yourself is around sustainability, right?” McGratty said. “Is it all sustainable?”
Business
EdgeMode enters non-binding offer for 300 MW data center sale

EdgeMode enters non-binding offer for 300 MW data center sale
Business
Stocks to Watch: SK Hynix, SpaceX, Intel
Stocks to Watch: SK Hynix, SpaceX, Intel
Business
The Iran War Hasn’t Helped Defense Stocks. Maybe Earnings Can.
The Iran War Hasn’t Helped Defense Stocks. Maybe Earnings Can.
Business
UK-Switzerland deal to scrap roaming charges and allow Britons to use e-gates
The UK has signed a new trade deal with Switzerland that will allow British travellers faster passage through airports by using e-gates for the first time.
Described by Trade Secretary Peter Kyle as “the most significant services trade deal the UK has ever negotiated”, the agreement will also scrap mobile roaming charges for tourists and professionals visiting both countries.
The government says the deal is estimated to increase UK exports to Switzerland by £5.2bn annually “in the long run”.
A services mobility deal, allowing businesses to provide services for up to 90 days without a work permit, was due to expire in 2029, but the new deal puts this on a permanent footing.
The government says UK passport holders will be allowed to use e-gates at Zurich airport from as soon as the end of this year – with Geneva and Basel airports set to announce a timetable for adoption shortly.
The scheme is separate to Switzerland’s implementation of the EU’s new border control system – the Entry/Exit System (EES), which will allow UK citizens to use EU eGates.
UK employees will also be permitted to transfer to work in Switzerland for up to five years without stringent economic needs tests.
Ministers say lawyers, accountants and architects are among professionals who will benefit.
Government figures show about 800,000 Britons visit Switzerland each year.
Switzerland is the UK’s sixth-largest services export market, with over £30bn in services trade between the two countries in 2025. Its citizens can already use eGates at UK airports.
The agreement comes after trade deals were struck with the US, India, the Gulf Co-operation Council, South Korea and the EU.
It also comes as Sir Keir Starmer enters his final weeks as prime minister before being replaced by Andy Burnham.
“Whether you’re growing a business or travelling for work, this agreement is about making life easier and creating more opportunity for people across the UK,” Sir Keir said.
“It means British firms will find it easier to sell their expertise in one of our most important markets in Europe, supporting jobs and investment here at home.”
Meanwhile, the transport secretary has spoken with the European commissioner for sustainable transport and tourism about Europe’s new EES border system.
Heidi Alexander and Apostolos Tzitzikostas agreed to “work together with aim for smoothest possible EES checks ahead of the busy summer period”, the UK government said.
Business
Bookkeeping for Small Business: Step-by-Step Guide(2026)
There was a period — let’s call it the Shoebox Era — when my entire bookkeeping system consisted of a spreadsheet named IMPORTANT_FINAL_v3_ACTUALFINAL.xlsx, a rubber-banded stack of receipts fading in the sun on my dashboard, and a business bank account that had, on more than one occasion, quietly paid for my dog’s vet bill. I found out I owed real, actual money to the IRS roughly eleven minutes before I found out I was two months behind on categorizing anything at all. Character-building? Sure. Necessary? Absolutely not.
If any of that sounds familiar, you’re not bad at business — you just haven’t built a system yet. So what does a bookkeeping system that actually works look like, and how much of it can you realistically run yourself? Let’s find out.
Bookkeeping for small business is the ongoing process of recording, organizing, and categorizing every financial transaction a company makes — sales, expenses, payroll, and beyond — to produce accurate records for tax filing, cash flow tracking, and informed decision-making. Done consistently, it turns a shoebox of receipts into a real-time picture of how your business is actually doing.
Bookkeeping vs. Accounting: What’s the Difference?
People use these words interchangeably, which is a bit like confusing the person who logs your grocery receipts with the person who tells you whether you can afford to eat out this month. Related jobs. Very different altitudes.
| Bookkeeping | Accounting | |
|---|---|---|
| Focus | Recording day-to-day transactions | Interpreting and analyzing financial data |
| Timeframe | Present — what happened today/this week | Big picture — trends, forecasts, strategy |
| Typical tasks | Categorizing expenses, invoicing, reconciling accounts | Preparing financial statements, tax strategy, advising on decisions |
| Who does it | You, an employee, or a bookkeeper | A CPA or accountant (often building on bookkeeping records) |
Good bookkeeping is what makes good accounting possible. Skip the first and the second one is just guessing with better vocabulary.
Cash Basis vs. Accrual Accounting: Which Should You Choose?
Before you record a single transaction, you need to pick an accounting method — it determines when income and expenses actually count.
Cash Basis
Accrual Basis
When revenue is recorded
When cash is received
When it’s earned (invoice sent), regardless of payment
When expenses are recorded
When cash leaves your account
When the expense is incurred, regardless of payment
Complexity
Simple, intuitive
More involved, needs more diligent tracking
Best for
Freelancers, solopreneurs, service businesses without inventory
Businesses with inventory, receivables, or that want a more accurate real-time financial picture
IRS note
Available to most businesses under $30M in average gross receipts (check current threshold)
Required for larger businesses and those carrying inventory
If you’re a one-person consultancy invoicing a handful of clients, cash basis will probably feel more intuitive and require less bookkeeping overhead. If you’re holding inventory, extending credit to customers, or want financial statements that actually reflect your business’s health at a glance rather than just your bank balance, accrual is worth the extra structure.
How Do You Set Up a Small Business Bookkeeping System?

Four foundational steps, done once, save you from redoing everything later.
Step 1: Open a Dedicated Business Bank Account
This is non-negotiable, and not just because it looks more professional. Mixing personal and business funds — commonly called “commingling” — makes every subsequent bookkeeping task harder, muddies your legal liability protection if you’re an LLC, and turns tax season into forensic archaeology.
Step 2: Choose Your Bookkeeping Tool (Spreadsheets vs. Software)
A spreadsheet can work for the first few months of a very simple business. But most modern bookkeeping software pays for itself by automatically syncing bank and card transactions, auto-categorizing recurring expenses, and exporting tax-ready reports — the kind of manual work that eats hours every month if you’re doing it by hand. QuickBooks and Xero remain the most widely used general-purpose options, with a growing field of leaner, cheaper alternatives built specifically for solo and micro businesses.
Step 3: Customize Your Chart of Accounts
Your chart of accounts is the categorized list of buckets — income, expenses, assets, liabilities, equity — that every transaction gets sorted into. Most software gives you a generic template to start from, but it’s worth tailoring it to your actual business. A construction company needs job-costing categories; a service business needs to separate subcontractor costs from software subscriptions. Set it up thoughtfully once, and every report you pull later will actually mean something.
Step 4: Automate Your Transaction Data Feeds
Connect your bank accounts, credit cards, and payment processors (Stripe, PayPal, Square) directly to your bookkeeping software so transactions import automatically instead of requiring manual entry. Manual entry isn’t just tedious — it’s the single fastest way to fall behind, because it’s the first task that gets skipped when you’re busy.
What Should Be on Your Small Business Bookkeeping Checklist?
Consistency beats intensity here. A little bit weekly prevents a lot of pain quarterly.
Weekly tasks
- Categorize new transactions
- Capture and file receipts (a phone photo the moment you get one beats a shoebox every time)
- Send any outstanding invoices
Monthly tasks
- Reconcile bank and credit card statements against your books
- Follow up on unpaid invoices
- Review your Profit & Loss statement for anything that looks off
Quarterly and annual tasks
- Make estimated tax payments, if applicable
- Review your books with a bookkeeper or accountant before filing
- Close out the year’s books and prepare year-end financial statements
If you’re self-employed or otherwise responsible for quarterly estimated taxes in the U.S., the 2026 federal due dates are April 15, June 15, and September 15, 2026, with the fourth-quarter payment due January 15, 2027 — generally owed if you expect to owe $1,000 or more in federal tax for the year. Penalties are avoidable by paying at least 90% of the current year’s tax, or 100% of the prior year’s tax (110% if you’re a higher earner).
Which 3 Financial Reports Should You Actually Monitor?
Bookkeeping produces data. These three reports are what turn that data into decisions.
The Profit and Loss Statement (P&L)
Also called an income statement, this shows revenue minus expenses over a given period — the report that answers “am I actually making money?” Review it monthly, not just at tax time, so you catch a problem while it’s still small.
The Balance Sheet
A snapshot of what your business owns (assets), owes (liabilities), and what’s left over (equity) at a specific point in time. The foundational equation — assets equal liabilities plus equity — is what keeps this report balanced, literally.
The Cash Flow Statement
Profitable on paper and broke in reality is a more common combination than most new business owners expect, especially under accrual accounting where revenue is recorded before cash actually arrives. The cash flow statement tracks the physical movement of money in and out, which is what actually determines whether you can make payroll next week.
What Bookkeeping Mistakes Are Costing You Money?
1. Mixing personal and business expenses. Beyond the bookkeeping headache, commingling can undermine the liability protection an LLC or corporation is supposed to give you.
2. Misclassifying contractors and employees. Getting 1099 vs. W-2 status wrong isn’t a paperwork technicality — it carries real financial and legal consequences with the IRS.
3. Letting your paper trail go cold. No receipt, no proof — and no proof means no deduction if you’re ever audited. Most U.S. tax professionals recommend keeping supporting records for at least three to seven years, depending on the situation, so build a digital filing habit rather than trusting a shoebox (or its digital equivalent, the “Downloads” folder).
4. Skipping reconciliation. This is the step where errors, duplicate charges, and outright fraud get caught. Skip it for a few months and you’re not just behind — you’re bookkeeping blind.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much do bookkeepers charge? Pricing varies widely by scope and service model. Basic software-supported plans can start in the low hundreds per month, while services that include a dedicated bookkeeper or controller oversight tend to run higher. Get quotes based on your actual transaction volume rather than relying on a single benchmark figure.
Can I do my own bookkeeping? Yes, especially in the early stages of a simple business — plenty of solo founders manage their own books using accounting software. The trade-off is time and risk: as transaction volume and complexity grow (payroll, inventory, multiple revenue streams), the hours it takes and the cost of a mistake both climb, which is usually the point where outsourcing starts to pay for itself.
What records do I need to keep for taxes? At minimum: bank and credit card statements, receipts and invoices for income and expenses, payroll records if you have employees, and documentation for any major purchases or contracts. Digital, organized, and backed up beats a shoebox every time — you’ve heard that from me twice now, and I mean it both times.
The Bottom Line
Good bookkeeping isn’t about becoming a numbers person overnight. It’s about building small, boring, repeatable habits — a weekly ten minutes here, a monthly reconciliation there — so that tax season stops being a crisis and starts being a formality. Consistency beats perfection every time.
Business
Globalfoundries CLO Azar Samak L sells $23,751 in GFS shares

Globalfoundries CLO Azar Samak L sells $23,751 in GFS shares
Business
SK Hynix US-listed shares slip nearly 8% as Nasdaq debut euphoria cools
The sell-off was sharper in Seoul, where SK Hynix shares tumbled more than 15%, marking their biggest one-day fall in nearly two decades. The fall in SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics dragged South Korea’s Kospi down 9%, triggering a 20-minute trading halt.
The weakness spread to US memory and storage stocks as well. Micron Technology fell 6.4%, SanDisk dropped 8.4% and Western Digital declined 6.8%. The Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index lost 3.6%.
SK Hynix had raised more than $26 billion last week through its US listing, selling ADRs after its Korean shares had more than tripled this year. The company has been one of the biggest global beneficiaries of the artificial intelligence boom because of its leadership in high-bandwidth memory chips, which are used in AI data centres.
The stock’s sharp fall shows that investors are reassessing valuations after a rapid run-up. Chip stocks have had a weak start to July as concerns grow over whether the AI capital spending cycle can continue at the same pace.
Investors are also watching the supply outlook. South Korea has been pushing large chip investment plans, with President Lee Jae Myung saying the government would help speed up projects to build chip fabs worth hundreds of billions of dollars, as outlined by Samsung and SK Hynix. While such investment supports long-term capacity, it has also raised concerns that today’s tight memory supply could eventually turn into oversupply.SK Hynix CEO Kwak Noh-jung has dismissed concerns about aggressive capacity expansion. He told Reuters that the memory industry is heading for its most severe supply shortage in 2027 and said demand could exceed the company’s production capacity well into the next decade.
Volatility in SK Hynix has risen sharply this year as global investors chased exposure to AI memory. Leveraged products have added to the swings. In Hong Kong, a single-stock ETF tracking SK Hynix and targeting twice the daily returns of the shares fell more than one-third on Monday, its steepest one-day drop since listing in October.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
Business
Volkswagen planning to cut up to 100,000 jobs globally
The chief executive of the German car giant Volkswagen Group has confirmed it is looking to cut up to 100,000 jobs – twice as many as previously stated.
The group, which includes Porsche, Audi, Seat and Skoda as well as the VW brand, had previously said it would axe some 50,000 posts in Germany by 2030.
It suffered a steep decline in profits last year – the result of falling sales in key markets, as well as increasing competition from Chinese brands moving into Europe.
In a widely-reported memo to staff, chief executive Oliver Blume said the Group’s costs were 20% higher compared to rival businesses, and it would need to reduce its outgoings even further.
This, he said would mean a theoretical loss of 50,000 jobs worldwide.
“We are currently assessing across all brands, companies and regions how many adjustments are actually necessary and feasible,” he said.
“We need to become more efficient, more robust and simpler. We must reduce our costs.”
He added the company had been “unable to confirm” alternative uses for four factories in Germany which have previously been threatened with closure.
Two of the plants, in Zwickau and Emden, are used for electric car production. But along with other factories in Hanover and Neckarsulm, they are seen as expensive to run.
VW’s profits have fallen sharply in recent years. In 2023, it made an operating profit of €22.6bn ($25.8bn, £19.3bn). This dropped to €19.1bn in 2024, and then to just €8.9bn last year.
The group has been badly hit by a fall in sales in China, once one of its most lucrative markets. In the first six months of the year they were down 26% compared to last year.
In the US, sales fell more than 7%, in part due to the impact of tariffs on car imports introduced by the Trump administration.
Meanwhile Chinese brands have been moving aggressively onto international markets, introducing new technologies while benefitting from lower production costs than European rivals.
This has added to the pressure on established brands to keep their own costs under control, and slashed profit margins.
In late 2024, after threats of mass strikes, VW reached an agreement with the German trade union IG Metall to cut 35,000 jobs at its namesake brand by 2030, in a “socially responsible manner”, with another 15,000 jobs to go at its other brands.
The plans now under discussion appear to go much further.
Last week saw widespread protests at Volkswagen sites across the country, ahead of a meeting of VW’s supervisory board, which includes labour representatives as well as company managers.
Some industry analysts suggested to Agence France Presse that Volkswagen had deliberately publicised the number of 100,000 as a negotiating tactic, and that the final figure of cuts is likely to be lower.
Business
Revvity: Overvalued On Sentiment
Revvity: Overvalued On Sentiment
Business
GAO finds Obamacare exchange lacked safeguards against unauthorized changes
Rep. Buddy Carter, R-Ga., joins ‘Varney & Co.’ to sound off on Republicans defying President Donald Trump over Obamacare subsidies and defend legislation to denaturalize and deport immigrants convicted of fraud.
A new government watchdog report warns that stronger safeguards against fraud are needed in the Obamacare exchanges to prevent bad actors who serve as agents and brokers in the federal marketplace from making unauthorized plan enrollments and changes to get compensation from health insurance providers.
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) on Monday released a report showing that the number of consumer complaints about unauthorized plan enrollments and changes grew more than fourfold from 2023 to 2025, rising from a combined 66,548 to 299,604 in that period.
The review found that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), which maintains the federal Obamacare exchange, had insufficient controls to protect consumers from unauthorized activity by unscrupulous agents and brokers.
Among the issues it identified were weak processes to ensure consumer consent for agent or broker actions, a lack of restrictions ensuring that only the agent or broker associated with a consumer’s enrollment can access the consumer’s exchange records, and CMS not informing consumers of all actions taken by agents and brokers.
OBAMACARE PRICES ARE SET TO SPIKE – HERE’S WHY

The GAO found the federal Obamacare exchange run by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services lacked consumer safeguards. (Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images)
GAO recommended stronger security controls, including one-time passcodes to verify consumer authorization, restricting access to the broker of record, and notifying consumers when brokers take actions on their accounts.
Some agents and brokers switched consumers into different Obamacare plans without their knowledge or consent, according to the GAO. The unauthorized changes can force Americans to change doctors, lose coverage for medications and pay higher out-of-pocket costs, the report found.
The report also warns that consumers could be hit with unexpected tax liabilities if inaccurate income or eligibility information was used to obtain federal premium tax credits, while taxpayers could end up footing the bill for subsidies paid to ineligible enrollees.
Many consumers do not discover the unauthorized changes until they seek medical care or receive an IRS notice during tax season, according to the GAO.
VANCE TURNS UP HEAT ON STATES WITH FEDERAL CASH THREAT OVER MEDICAID FRAUD CRACKDOWN

President Trump has made rooting out fraud, waste and abuse a cornerstone of his agenda. (Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images)
Separately, the Trump administration has made health care fraud enforcement a major priority.
A 2024 CMS enrollment-data review identified 2.8 million Americans potentially enrolled in multiple Medicaid, CHIP or subsidized Affordable Care Act exchange plans.
The administration has also targeted Medicaid fraud, putting all 50 states on notice to identify improper enrollment activity and develop fraud-prevention plans.
Fox News Digital reached out to CMS for comment.
Fox News Digital’s Peter D’Abrosca contributed to this report.
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