JPMorgan Just Had the Most Profitable Year in the History of Banking

July 14, 2017 at 07:50 AM
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U.S. bank earnings have kicked off without any tumult. Investors should be grateful for that increasing sense of dependability, though they appear to be looking for more.

JPMorgan Chase & Co., Wells Fargo & Co., Citigroup Inc. and PNC Financial Services Group Inc. each delivered second-quarter results on Friday that topped Wall Street's expectations. 

On a measure of earnings per share, each bank has improved its respective streaks of beating or meeting analysts' estimates:

The business of fixed-income trading, which has been a bright spot over the past year, has received outsize attention as it has fallen from grace after a long stretch of low volatility and tepid volumes, as expected.  

Instead, its quarterly gyrations should be accepted by shareholders just as they withstand changes in the weather, according to JPMorgan's chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon. 

He has a point — the diversity of JPMorgan combined with the size of its overall corporate and investment bank, which houses the fixed-income trading business, gives the bank a level of flexibility. 

That defense might not stick if JPMorgan's other businesses weren't performing, but they are. The bank posted quarterly net income of $7 billion in the three months ended June 30. 

That was its biggest haul ever, driven in part by a significant jump in net interest income, a direct result of the Federal Reserve's rate increases. Its efforts to bulk up asset and wealth management, where revenues have roughly doubled since 2006, have borne fruit. 

Net income for the business climbed 20 percent compared with results in the same period last year to a record $624 million. And for now, despite broad concerns about auto and credit card loans, there's no need to worry about widespread cracks. The bank's so-called net charge-off rate, which measures delinquencies, remains minimal. 

Overall, there's little doubt that earnings per share at JPMorgan and its rivals will climb in coming quarters. 

While a lot of that growth can be attributed to capacious buybacks, it's heartening to see that other levers such as continued loan growth and the impact of higher interest rates are helping each bank justify their respectively rich valuations. 

For JPMorgan specifically, its credit card business has gained momentum, illustrated by an uplift in both sales volume and card revenue. 

Investors, however, didn't seem entirely satisfied, punishing bank shares in early trading. That could set an ominous tone for next week, when Bank of America Corp., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley round out earnings season for the big banks.

While the same stability and dependability demonstrated on Friday should carry over, potential negative surprises can never be ruled out. One possible culprit is Goldman, if only because fixed-income, currencies and commodities trading accounts for roughly a quarter of the firm's revenues. 

The fact that the bank is reviewing the direction of its commodities business after a weak start to the year indicates that it understands that shareholders won't be able to continually swallow strings of future swings and misses quite as easily as they can accept the weather. 

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