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Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Investment Strategist
The same macro shock helps banks that sell liquidity, hedging and advice, but hurts luxury groups that need calm and travel.
Strong bank earnings do not prove the economy is fine. They partly reflect unsettled markets doing what unsettled markets do.
Luxury weakness looks more like a mix of tourism pressure, Middle East disruption and softer discretionary demand than broad consumer collapse.
A messy macro backdrop often gets described as one giant verdict on the economy. This week’s earnings say that is too neat. Big United States banks show that volatility, trading and dealmaking can still turn uncertainty into revenue. Luxury groups show that geopolitical stress, disrupted travel and fragile high-end demand can hit sales rather quickly. Same shock, very different plumbing.
The market reaction made the contrast clear without needing a spreadsheet. Bank shares generally held up or moved higher after earnings, while luxury names came under clear pressure. Investors were not making a grand judgment on the whole economy. They were reacting to which business models can still turn uncertainty into revenue, and which ones rely more heavily on confidence, travel and a steady spending mood.
For large banks, a messy quarter does not automatically mean a bad one. Recent results from JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley and Bank of America showed that trading desks, advisory work and deal activity can all stay busy when markets are unsettled. That is the key point. Banks do not just sit and watch volatility. In some parts of the business, they earn from it.
When markets swing, clients tend to do more, not less. They rebalance portfolios, hedge risks, raise capital and ask advisers for help. That can support earnings even when the wider backdrop feels noisy. It is a useful reminder that macro stress is not always just a cost. For parts of finance, it can also be demand.
Still, this is not a simple all-clear. Investors know that trading-driven strength can be helpful without being fully durable. If volatility cools, if rate expectations shift again, or if companies become more cautious about deals and listings, that earnings support may look less powerful. So the bank story is strong, but it is not effortless. It depends on the kind of activity that often comes with unsettled markets, not calm ones.
Luxury looks almost like the mirror opposite, but only almost. Recent updates from Hermès, Kering and LVMH suggest the sector is not collapsing, but it is clearly more exposed to today’s geopolitical strain than parts of finance. The pressure is showing up less through a broad demand cliff and more through softer travel flows, weaker airport retail, disruption in the Middle East and a consumer mood that still looks cautious rather than carefree. Hermès is a good example. Sales still grew 5.6% at constant exchange rates, but that was below Bloomberg expectations of 7.44%. In other words, this was not a disaster. It was a reminder that even the strongest luxury names can feel it when tourism slows and regional traffic weakens. Kering’s message was more fragile. Gucci sales fell 8% in the quarter compared to last year, much worse than the 4.3% drop analysts expected on Bloomberg. That matters because Gucci is still the emotional and financial centre of the Kering story. It also reinforces the broader point that luxury does not just sell products. It sells confidence, movement and a certain ease of spending, all of which become harder to sustain when flights are disrupted and headlines turn tense. LVMH adds a more balanced layer. Group sales rose 1% organically, but that still fell short of analysts expectations, as compiled by Bloomberg. The group still showed resilience in parts of the business, which helps explain why this is not a sector in free fall. But the broader message is still clear enough: luxury has become more exposed to travel disruption and regional instability at a time when demand was only gradually finding its footing again. That does not mean the luxury story is broken. It means the sector needs a calmer world more than banks do.
The real lesson is not that banks are “safe” and luxury is “broken.” It is that earnings quality depends on what a company is paid to do. Banks earn from activity, spreads, hedging and advice. Luxury earns from desire, confidence, mobility and mood. When oil rises, headlines darken and routes become less predictable, those ingredients do not all move in the same direction. Some businesses get busier. Others get quieter.
The first risk is reading too much into one strong bank quarter. Trading revenue can be excellent precisely because markets are unsettled, which means it is helpful but not always repeatable. The second risk is assuming luxury weakness is only regional and temporary. If higher energy prices, weaker travel and softer confidence start feeding into broader discretionary spending, the pressure could spread beyond the Middle East link. The third risk sits between the two: if volatility stays high for the wrong reasons, it may lift trading desks in the short run but still cool borrowing, listings and corporate confidence later on.
The neat story would be that strong banks mean the economy is coping and weak luxury means the consumer is cracking. This week’s results argue for more humility. Banks are benefiting from a market that is busy, defensive and still willing to transact. Luxury is being hit by a world that feels less easy to travel through and less relaxed to spend in. Both can be true at once. For investors, that is the useful part. Macro shocks do not produce one verdict. They expose which companies get paid for turbulence and which ones quietly depend on calm. Same storm, different roofs, and very different earnings calls.