Investment Bank Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Investment Bank stocks.

Investment Bank Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Sep 18 NTRS Northern Trust Decreases Prime Rate
Sep 18 SPGI Fed Rate Cuts Start With A Bang As Powell Makes This Commitment; S&P 500 Pauses
Sep 18 JEF Jefferies (JEF) Reports Next Week: Wall Street Expects Earnings Growth
Sep 18 RY 3 Top TSX Dividend Stocks To Consider
Sep 18 SPGI Kenya is First African Nation to Build Deforestation-Reduction Project Registry & Teams with S&P Global Commodity Insights
Sep 18 RY A significant number of Canadians have started or are considering starting their own business in 2024: RBC Poll
Sep 18 PNC This Bank Could Be the Next to $1 Trillion in Assets. Should You Buy the Stock Today?
Sep 18 RY Indonesia Surprises With Quarter-Point Cut Before Fed Move
Sep 17 PNC Why big banks are obsessed with 1995
Sep 17 PNC FDIC board approves new, stricter policy on bank merger transactions
Sep 17 NTRS Bring Your Child to Work Day at Northern Trust India
Sep 17 RY RBC Names Ventura Head of US ECM, Passaro Head of Syndicate
Sep 17 JEF Jefferies scores Buy rating in new coverage at UBS as M&A rebounds
Sep 17 SPGI Palantir, Sempra added to BofA's US 1 list; S&P Global removed
Sep 17 SPGI Tesla Is One Of The 10 Worst Wealth-Destroyer Stocks This Year
Sep 17 MC Moelis Appoints Dr. Louise Mirrer as an Independent Member to its Board of Directors
Sep 17 NTRS Nasdaq, Marvell Technology And 2 Other Stocks Executives Are Selling
Sep 16 JEF Jefferies Hires Ex-Citigroup Banker for Top EMEA Debt Job
Sep 16 SPGI S&P Dow Jones Indices Launches MyIndex™ and Collaborates with Brooklyn Investment Group to Expand Access to Customizable Indices
Sep 16 SPGI Fed Meeting: Rate Cuts May Start With A Bang; S&P 500 Eyes New High
Investment Bank

An investment bank is a financial services company or corporate division that engages in advisory-based financial transactions on behalf of individuals, corporations, and governments. Traditionally associated with corporate finance, such a bank might assist in raising financial capital by underwriting or acting as the client's agent in the issuance of securities. An investment bank may also assist companies involved in mergers and acquisitions (M&A) and provide ancillary services such as market making, trading of derivatives and equity securities, and FICC services (fixed income instruments, currencies, and commodities). Most investment banks maintain prime brokerage and asset management departments in conjunction with their investment research businesses. As an industry, it is broken up into the Bulge Bracket (upper tier), Middle Market (mid-level businesses), and boutique market (specialized businesses).
Unlike commercial banks and retail banks, investment banks do not take deposits. From the passage of Glass–Steagall Act in 1933 until its repeal in 1999 by the Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act, the United States maintained a separation between investment banking and commercial banks. Other industrialized countries, including G7 countries, have historically not maintained such a separation. As part of the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd–Frank Act of 2010), the Volcker Rule asserts some institutional separation of investment banking services from commercial banking.All investment banking activity is classed as either "sell side" or "buy side". The "sell side" involves trading securities for cash or for other securities (e.g. facilitating transactions, market-making), or the promotion of securities (e.g. underwriting, research, etc.). The "buy side" involves the provision of advice to institutions that buy investment services. Private equity funds, mutual funds, life insurance companies, unit trusts, and hedge funds are the most common types of buy-side entities.
An investment bank can also be split into private and public functions with a screen separating the two to prevent information from crossing. The private areas of the bank deal with private insider information that may not be publicly disclosed, while the public areas, such as stock analysis, deal with public information. An advisor who provides investment banking services in the United States must be a licensed broker-dealer and subject to U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) regulation.

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