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JPMorgan Chase Profits Jump 52% Amid Banking Turmoil


JPMorgan Chase & Co. posted a 52% jump in its first-quarter profits, helped by higher interest rates, which allowed the bank to charge customers more for loans. The bank saw deposits grow noticeably, as business and customers flocked to the banking titan after the failure of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank last month.

With JPMorgan’s strong results, as well as solid results from Citigroup and Wells Fargo on Friday, there seem to be few signs of potential trouble in the banking system — at least among the nation’s biggest, most complex financial institutions.

“These were the most watched bank earnings announcements in over a decade, with market participants scouring the results looking for signs of cracks in the US banking sector. Those analysts looking for signs of the banking crisis were greatly relieved to not find any,” said Octavio Marenzi, CEO of the consulting firm Opimas LLC, in an email.

JPMorgan, the nation’s biggest bank by assets posted a profit of $12.62 billion, compared to a profit of $8.28 billion in the same period a year earlier. On a per-share basis, the bank earned $4.10 a share, up from $2.63 a share a year ago, beating analysts’ expectations.

Most of the profit growth came from higher interest rates. The bank’s net interest income was $20.8 billion in the quarter, up 49% from last year.

JPMorgan grew deposits by $37 billion during the quarter, up to $2.4 trillion. Deposits at big banks had been falling for several quarters as consumers spent down their pandemic savings and businesses tapped into their stored cash to pay bills. But with the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank in March, businesses have been withdrawing their funds from smaller banks and moving them into the larger banks, which are considered “too big to fail” and have an implicit government backstop.

In a call with reporters, JPMorgan Chief Financial Officer Jeremy Barnum said most of the new deposits flowed into new business and company bank accounts opened in the past month. The new deposits reversed the flow of deposits exiting the bank for several quarters.

“What crisis?,” analysts at UBS titled their report after JPMorgan, Wells and PNC reported their results.

JPMorgan and CEO Jamie Dimon have been the industry’s go-to problem solvers for banking issues for years now. After the failure of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, JPMorgan helped put together a consortium of other big banks to keep First Republic Bank from being next to fail. The group of banks put $30 billion in uninsured deposits into First Republic, which appears to have at least bought the midsize bank some time to repair its balance sheet and maybe find a buyer.

“The U.S. economy continues to be on generally healthy footings — consumers are still spending and have strong balance sheets, and businesses are in good shape. However, the storm clouds that we have been monitoring for the past year remain on the horizon, and the banking industry turmoil adds to these risks,” Dimon said in a statement.

JPMorgan continued to benefit from consumers switching from saving to spending. Credit card spending rose 13% from a year earlier, and more customers are now keeping a balance instead of paying off their credit cards, so the bank is making money from processing the transactions as well as the interest off the balances.

Meanwhile business in the bank’s corporate and investment bank remains relatively quiet, as many businesses and investors are holding off making big decisions amid high inflation. Revenue from advisory fees were flat, while revenue from trading stocks and bonds were flat to down.

JPMorgan shares rose more than 6% in early trading.

(AP)



5 Responses

  1. John Pierpont Morgan, known as J. P. Morgan (born April 17, 1837, Hartford, Connecticut – died March 31, 1913, Rome, Italy), was an American financier and banker. Initially centered on banking, Morgan’s ’empire’ gradually expanded into many other areas such as electricity, steel, railroads and shipping. In this last field, he is the founder of the International Mercantile Marine Company, a shipping company bringing together a number of American and also British companies (notably the White Star Line). As such, Morgan is the de facto owner of the Titanic which sank a year before its death.

  2. It’s not their first time, is it? 🙂

    “During the American Civil War, Morgan became involved in arms sales, buying obsolete rifles from the army before having them refurbished, then reselling them to the army at a much higher price. However, such weapons were faulty and a scandal breaks out. The government refuses to pay Morgan, who has to sue him twice. Like many wealthy people of the time, Morgan escaped enlistment by paying $300 in compensation.

    He is one of the “titans” of the Gilded Age industry (literally “golden age”) along with Rockefeller, Astor, Vanderbilt or Carnegie. They were sometimes called the “robber barons” because of their lack of scruples about the means employed to develop their personal fortune.

  3. Known as a tyran, who wouldn’t hesitate to inflict cruel sentences on his workers, he invented modern finance by buying up small businesses, reorganizing them and reselling them at a higher price. In 1873, he used his congressional connections to cut government subsidies to businessman Jay Cooke, one of his rivals. He took advantage of the Great Depression to affect a number of small business mergers and formed gigantic trusts of various industries, factories and railroad lines. To eliminate his rivals, he exploits his monopoly position in the field of transport to prevent them from bringing their products to market

  4. He escaped the sinking of the Titanic, having refused the cruise because he was with his mistress in treatment in France at Aix-les-Bains.

    His portrait was featured on Monopoly tickets for a long time. He has often been caricatured to resemble a predator. He ‘famously’ stole a bottle of rare “Fine Napoleon” cognac from La Tour d’Argent in Paris. The restaurant, which only had two, accepted the millionaire’s apology letter and returned the blank check he sent them as compensation!

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