After last week’s earnings debacle by Jefferies, which is the bank widely viewed as a harbinger of how the rest of Wall Street does in any given quarter, some expected modest results from the big banks when they began reported Q4 earnings today. However, concerns proved to be unfounded based on the solid results by the largest US bank, JPMorgan, which just reported stellar earnings and officially launched Q4 earnings season. Here is a snapshot of what JPM reported for Q4:
- FICC sales & trading revenue $5.01 billion, beating estimate $4.37 billion
- Equities sales & trading revenue $2.04 billion, missing estimates of $2.32 billion
- Investment banking revenue $2.60 billion, beating estimates of $2.56 billion
- Advisory revenue $1.06 billion, beating estimates of $921.7 million
- Equity underwriting rev. $498 million, beating estimates of $445.9 million
- Debt underwriting rev. $921 million, missing estimates of $1.03 billion
Not surprisingly, the balance sheet of the largest US bank, remains “fortress” and how can it not when the government hands the bank the best assets of failed banks on a silver platter, which keeping the toxic sludge for US taxpayers. Here are the details:
What is notable is that for the first time in a while, JPM’s total asset base shrank, with total assets down to exactly $4.0 trillion, down from $4.2 trillion last quarter, even as deposits rose again from $2.383 trillion to $2.417 trillion.Looking at the expense side of things, here too there was good news with JPM reporting…
Turning to the all important Commercial and Investment bank group, as noted above, here things were generally stronger than expected, with JPM beating on FICC, Investment banking, advisory, and equity underwriting, while missing on Equity sales and trading and on debt underwriting. Overall, net income for the group was $6.6BN, up 59% YoY on revenue of $17.6BN, up 18% YoY. Of these, Markets revenue was $7.0 billion, up an impressive 22% YoY with the details as follows.
On the expense side, JPM reported $8.7B, up 7% YoY, predominantly driven by higher brokerage, technology and legal expense; As for credit costs., they were $61mm, driven by net downgrade activity and the net impact of charge-offs, largely offset by a reserve release due to an update to loss assumptions on certain loans in Markets.Commenting on the quarter, CEO Jamie Dimon said that “the US economy has been resilient” however, “two significant risks remain. Ongoing and future spending requirements will likely be inflationary, and therefore, inflation may persist for some time. Additionally, geopolitical conditions remain the most dangerous and complicated since World War II.”Dimon also said that client asset net inflows totaled $486B in 2024, adding that “we have consistently said that regulation should be designed to effectively balance promoting economic growth and maintaining a safe and sound banking system.”Looking ahead, JPM said that it expects $90BN in Net Interest Income ex markets for 2025, as its “balance sheet growth offsets the drop in rates.” Including markets, NII would be $94 billion, well above the $89.8BN analyst estimate.On the expense side, JPM sees about $95 billion in total adjusted expense, up from $91.1BN in 2024, due to expenses increases across all sectors.JPMorgan did a U-turn on 2025 NII guidance in the quarter. In October, Chief Financial Officer Jeremy Barnum said the $87 billion consensus estimate at the time was “a little toppy.” By December, however, the interest-rate outlook was higher, and Marianne Lake, who runs the lender’s sprawling consumer unit, told investors that 2025 NII could come in about $2 billion higher.Finally, the bank also expects an card service NCO rate of 3.6% for the full year.Commenting on the results, Goldman bank analyst Richard Ramsden gave it a thumbs up, saying “we expect a positive market reaction to results, as JPM: 1) delivered better NII and fees; 2) increased the 2025 NII ex Markets guidance and implied all in NII guidance; and 3) kept flat 2025 expense guidance.”Some more highlights from his note:
Without any major red flags in the earnings which generally beat across the board, shares of JPMorgan, up 46% in the 12 months through Tuesday, gained 2.2% in early trading. JPM’s Q4 investor presentation can be found here.More By This Author:Consumer Inflation Expectations Jump As Labor Market, Household Finance Sentiment CrumblesKey Events This Week: CPI, PPI, Retail Sales, Q1 Earnings Start And Fed Speakers GaloreScorching Hot Payrolls Smash Estimates As US Unexpectedly Adds Massive 256K Jobs In December As Unemployment Rate Drops