JPMorgan Chase shares drop after bank gives disappointing guidance on 2024 interest income

Economy

The bank said first-quarter profit rose 6% to $13.42 billion, or $4.44 per share, from a year earlier, boosted by its takeover of First Republic during the regional banking crisis last year. Per-share earnings would’ve been 19 cents higher excluding a $725 million boost to an FDIC fee covering costs from last year’s bank failures.

Revenue climbed 8% to $42.55 billion as the bank generated more interest income thanks to higher rates and larger loan balances.

But in guidance for 2024, the bank said it expected net interest income of around $90 billion, which is essentially unchanged from its previous forecast.

That appeared to disappoint investors, some of whom expected JPMorgan to raise its guidance by $2 billion to $3 billion for the year. Shares of JPMorgan fell more than 6% Friday.

While the NII guidance “strikes us as ultra-conservative (and now leaves room to be revised upward later on), we suspect the unchanged outlook will disappoint investors,” Piper Sandler analyst Scott Siefers said Friday in a note.

JPMorgan posted a $1.88 billion provision for credit losses in the quarter, far below the $2.7 billion expected by analysts. The provision was 17% smaller than a year ago, as the firm released some reserves for loan losses, rather than building them as it did a year earlier.

While trading revenue overall was down 5% from a year earlier, fixed income and equities results topped analysts’ expectations by more than $100 million each, coming in at $5.3 billion and $2.7 billion, respectively.

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon called his company’s results “strong” across consumer and institutional areas, helped by a still-buoyant U.S. economy, though he struck a note of caution about the future.

“Many economic indicators continue to be favorable,” Dimon said. “However, looking ahead, we remain alert to a number of significant uncertain forces” including overseas conflict and inflationary pressures.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: REUTER

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