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Natwest and Lloyds set to reveal earnings: What to expect amidst economic shifts

Lloyds and Natwest will kick off earnings on July 24 and July 25 followed by peers Barclays, HSBC and Standard Chartered the following week

The Canary Wharf business district(Image: Getty Images)

The FTSE 100's banking heavyweights, Natwest, Barclays, Lloyds and HSBC are preparing for what pledges to be a compelling half-year reporting period.

Lloyds and Natwest will launch earnings on July 24 and July 25, with rivals Barclays, HSBC and Standard Chartered following the subsequent week, as reported by .

The opening quarter was characterised by President Donald Trump's White House comeback as trading revenues soared amid multiple investor withdrawals before 'Liberation Day. '.

The administration's tariff assault, which commenced at the start of the second quarter, caused banking shares to plummet.

The FTSE 350 banks index plunged to a trough of 4,700.7 during the upheaval, though commercial agreements and renewed investor sentiment have enabled it to climb more than 2,000 points beyond 6,100.

Credit provisions amongst banking behemoths increased in first-quarter filings, with HSBC elevating anticipated credit losses to $876m from $202m, whilst Barclays allocated £74m for "elevated US macroeconomic uncertainty".

Nevertheless, analysts anticipate the Trump government's trade strategy to have exerted reduced influence during the second quarter.

"Tariff risks feel much lower now, as the US administration has delayed most of their 'Liberation Day' tariffs, and it now appears that the US administration is using tariffs as a tool to negotiate with their trading partners," analysts at the Bank of America said. They noted that º£½ÇÊÓÆµ domestic banks faced "reduced exposure to tariff risks" following the government's trade agreement with the US in May.