KEY POINTS
  • After two years of pandemic-fueled, double-digit growth in Bank of America card volume, "the rate of growth is slowing," CEO Brian Moynihan said.
  • While retail payments surged 11% so far this year to nearly $4 trillion, that increase obscures a slowdown that began in recent weeks: November spending rose just 5%, he said.
  • "There is a slowdown happening, there's no question about it," Wells Fargo CEO Charlie Scharf said. "We are expecting a fairly weak economy throughout the entire year."
  • But, in a divergence that has implications for the coming months, the downturn isn't being felt equally across retail customers and businesses, Scharf said.

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Shoppers walk the aisles of Wal-Mart for Black Friday deals on November 25, 2022 in Dunwoody, Georgia.

American consumers are tapping the brakes on spending as the Federal Reserve's interest rate increases reverberate throughout the economy, according to the CEOs of two of the largest American banks.

After two years of pandemic-fueled, double-digit growth in Bank of America card volume, "the rate of growth is slowing," CEO Brian Moynihan said Tuesday at a financial conference. While retail payments surged 11% so far this year to nearly $4 trillion, that increase obscures a slowdown that began in recent weeks: November spending rose just 5%, he said.

In this article