After a serviceable second quarter,
In an earnings call with analysts on Tuesday, CEO Chris Gorman said the Cleveland-based bank was raising its guidance for net interest income and loan growth, adopting more tech and hiring more staff.
“We are enjoying significant success in the marketplace while concurrently making investments in people and technology that will drive our future growth,” Gorman said.
In terms of its financial outlook,
One reason for that optimism was
“We are positively revising our 2025 guidance, given the strong first half of the year and encouraging pipelines we see heading into the back half,”
Gorman also said the bank is on course to increase its headcount of “frontline” bankers — including investment bankers, payments advisors and wealth managers — by 10% this year.
Overall,
The bigger difference was in
“We had a solid first half of the year,” Gorman said. “We remain vigilant in a dynamic environment and are well positioned for a wide range of scenarios. We are operating from a position of strength.”
A number of analysts agreed. Keith Horowitz of Citi called
“We are also encouraged by its wider NIM and well-managed expenses, which bode well for positive EPS revisions and
Read more on bank earnings:
As for the macro environment,
On Tuesday, Gorman referred to that “April pause” in the past tense, and expressed tentative confidence that “probably more certainty” regarding U.S. trade policy was on its way — and
“I would say that our clients are cautiously optimistic,” Gorman said. “They go through all the macro concerns, geopolitical tariffs, trade — and then you ask about their business, and they say they feel pretty good about their business.”
This was true of consumer as well as commercial clients, he said.
“Our consumer is just fine,” Gorman said. “As you look at how the credits are performing, if you look at how spending volumes are performing, our clients are in good shape.”