Financial ETFs Poised to Strengthen | ETF Trends

With the Federal Reserve beginning interest rate normalization, major banks are already jumping on the opportunity to increase prime rates, bolstering their profit margins and potentially supporting financial sector exchange traded funds.

On Wednesday, banks including Wells Fargo & Co. (NYSE: WFC), JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE: JPM) and Bank of American Corp. (NYSE: BAC) raised their prime rates to 3.5% from 3.25%, Reuters reported. [Bank Stocks, ETFs Continue to Attract]

Prime rates are the interest rates that commercial banks charge credit-worthy clients and are typically determined by the federal fund rate, or overnight rate that banks lend to one another.

Major banks hiked their prime rates in response to the Fed’s decision to raise its main short-term rate to a range of 0.25% to 0.5% from its previous range of 0% to 0.25%.

However, these banks have held off on raising the deposit rates, or the interest rate banks pay to account holders. The average interest rate on a savings account is about 0.48%, according to Bankrate.

“We won’t automatically change deposit rates because they aren’t tied directly to the prime,” a JPMorgan Chase spokesperson told CNBC. “We’ll continue to monitor the market to make sure we stay competitive.”

Banks do not have much of incentive to raise deposit rates as there is still plenty of cash on hand.

“Loan rates will rise but that’s not necessarily the case for deposits as banks are already flush and don’t need to raise rates to bring more in the door,” Bankrate.com Chief Financial Analyst Greg McBride told CNBC.