JPMorgan Chase disappoints to start earnings season

JPMorgan Chase disappoints to start earnings season

All good things come to an end. After seven straight quarters of record levels of profits from net interest income, the spread between what earns by lending and what it pays depositors to raise funds, JPMorgan Chase (JPM) reported that net interest income slightly missed analyst estimates for the first quarter. The quarter the company reported today certainly wasn’t a disaster. The bank earned $23.1 billion in net interest income in the period, up 11% from the first quarter of 2023. But the end of the beat and raise guidance of the last year and a half plus an increase in costs were enough to lead to substantial selling today, April 12. The shares finished the day down 6.47% at $182.79. Analysts and investors were clearly hoping for more.

Saturday Night Quarterback (on a Sunday) says, For the week ahead expect…

Saturday Night Quarterback (on a Sunday) says, For the week ahead expect…

This week I expect the market to put its obsession with the Federal Reserve, inflation, and interest rates on hold, and switch to watching earnings reports for the first quarter of 2024. The first batch of earnings–the Big Banks JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Citigroup (C), and Wells Fargo (WFC)–hits the wires on Friday, April 12–with Netflix (NFLX) to begin tech/momentum earnings reports on Tuesday, April 18. I think it would be an overstatement to say that the quarter’s earnings reports are make or break for this rally–the economic news is just too strong and interest rate cuts loom out there somewhere even if no one can say just when. But this quarter will provide an important data point in the “Stocks have climbed too far, too fast” vs. “This rally can run higher on a strong economy” debate. And the first set of high-profile earnings looks likely to throw some cold water on the most fevered market optimists.

JPMorgan Chase starts off big-bank earnings by knocking it out of the park (Go Phillies!)

JPMorgan Chase starts off big-bank earnings by knocking it out of the park (Go Phillies!)

Maybe JPMorgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon felt his bank’s earnings report was so good that he had to pour a little cold water on investors. “This may be the most dangerous time the world has seen in decades,” Dimon said in a statement Friday. He also issued a caution about the records set in the third quarter. “These results benefit from our over-earning on both net interest income and below normal credit costs, both of which will normalize over time.” But the caution aside, it’s hard for me to find anything not to like in the big bank’s report.

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Earnings It’s All About Surprise

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Earnings It’s All About Surprise

Today’s video is Earnings: It’s All About Surprise. Good news is good, but it doesn’t necessarily move markets. On Friday, July 14, JPMorgan Chase came out with a stellar earnings report–but other stocks in the sector moved down on a belief that these banks wouldn’t match JPMorgans good news. However, SURPRISE! On July 18, Bank of America came out with a very good earnings report, and the stock popped by 4.2%. Bank of America surprised the market with a big bump from its Wall Street trading operations. On the surprise, Bank of America actually moved the entire banking index up 2.29%. On the negative side, regional bank PNC Bank surprised negatively with a cut to its full year guidance from 6-8% to 5-6%, and the stock, of course, fell. (Early in the day although it recovered by the close.) Keep all this in mind as we head into earnings season for technology companies, where expectations are often very high. Apple is one of the first to report and will set the tone for the second quarter which is typically a weaker quarter in the technology sector.T

If we’re in a growth recession, the upcoming earnings season is going to be wild

If we’re in a growth recession, the upcoming earnings season is going to be wild

Right now economists are projecting that the U.S. economy didn’t slip into a recession in the second quarter that ended on June 30. But those same forecasts are looking for a further slowdown in economic growth in the quarter.

On July 3 the GDPNow forecast from the Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank put second quarter growth at an adjusted annual rate of 1.9%. That’s down from the model’s 2.2% forecast on Jone 30. And that rate of growth would be a further deceleration from the 2.0% growth rate (that was an upward revision from a first estimate of just a 1.3% growth rate) in the first quarter and the 2.6% growth in the fourth quarter of 2020. The very recent downward revision in the GDPNow forecast is a result of a drop in private domestic investment growth to 8.8% from 10.4%.So now recession–good news–but a further slowdown in the economy–expected with the Federal Reserve raising interest rates. And a continued drop in company profits.

Saturday Night Quarterback (on a Sunday) says, For the week ahead expect…

Parse this: Good news on big bank earnings sends big bank stocks up but everything else down

It is good, maybe great news this morning from three of the country’s biggest banks. JPMorgan Chase posted a surprise 2% increase in deposits and first-quarter net income surged 49%. Wells Fargo (WFC) saw net interest income rocket by 45%. Citigroup (C) reported a 23% gain in net interest income and a 4% increase in fixed-income trading. As of 2:30 p.m. New York time JPMorgan Chase shares were up 7.33%. Wells Fargo had tacked on a small 0.05% gain. And Citigroup was up 4.88%. And all the major stock indexes were significantly in the red.

Saturday Night Quarterback (on a Sunday) says, For the week ahead expect…

Sure smaller regional banks are most at risk from big unrealized bond losses, but the biggest losses are at much bigger banks–like Bank of America

Yesterday, March 14, Moody’s Investors Service placed First Republic Bank (FRC) and five other US lenders on review for downgrade because of worries over uninsured deposit funding and unrealized losses in their asset portfolios. (the other banks include Western Alliance Bancorp (WAL), Intrust Financial, UMB Financial (UMBF)., Zions Bancorp (ZION), and Comerica (CMA).) But these smaller banks aren’t the companies in the sector sitting on the biggest bond portfolios with unrealized losses.

Selling Truist Financial out of my Dividend Portfolio today, Friday, October 14

I don’t like the economic and financial environment looming ahead for banks. I see bad loans rising with a need to reserve more against bad loans. Slowing economies aren’t good for loan demand or credit card delinquencies either. So I’m taking advantage of this moment to sell Truist Financial out of this portfolio in spite of the stock’s hefty dividend. I’ve got a loss on this position of 4.07% since I added it to this portfolio on June 13, 2022. The stock is down 22.19% for 2022 to date as of the close on October 12.

JPMorgan Chase starts off big-bank earnings by knocking it out of the park (Go Phillies!)

Trimming bank stocks ahead of earnings: Selling WFC and KBWB ETF

Just want to make sure that no one missed the sell recommendations in yesterday’s Saturday Night Quarterback post. Big banks will kick off another earnings season beginning with JPMorgan Chase (JPM) on Wednesday, April 13. Citigroup (C) and Wells Fargo (WFC) follow on April 14. Bank of America (BAC) reports on April 18. Bank earnings forecasts present a complicated picture for the quarter–which is only appropriate since that’s true of Standard & Poor’s 500 earnings forecasts as a whole.

Saturday Night Quarterback (on a Sunday) says, For the week ahead expect…

Saturday Night Quarterback says, For the week ahead expect…

Big banks will kick off another earnings season beginning with JPMorgan Chase (JPM) on Wednesday, April 13. Citigroup (C) and Wells Fargo (WFC) follow on April 14. Bank of America (BAC) reports on April 18. Bank earnings forecasts present a complicated picture for the quarter–which is only appropriate since that’s true of Standard & Poor’s 500 earnings forecasts as a whole.

Flight to safety means selling anything today

Flight to safety means selling anything today

With Russian troops laying siege to Ukraine’s two largest cities, I certainly don’t blame financial markets for a high degree of anxiety. After all investors and traders are also looking at the consequences of massive sanctions piled on Russian banks including the country’s central bank, disruptions of the global grain trade, and energy shortages here, there, and everywhere. The selling today is fundamentally different from yesterday’s (as well as being greater). Some of the selling is an attempt to gain shelter from the Russia war and sanctions storm. Airlines stocks, which will take a hit from higher prices for jet fuel and any drop in the appetite for flying, were down with American Airlines (AL) off 5.57% and United Airlines (UAL) lower by 5.74%. Some of the selling seems a reasonable guess at where there might be problems. U.S. banks are down heavily even though various experts say they have little or no Russia exposure. JPMorgan Chase (JPM) was down 3.77% and Bank of America (BAC) was off 3.91%. But some of the selling is just selling, either to reduce risk or to raise cash, without any specific connection to Russia and the Russia sanctions. Tesla (TSLA) was down 0.70% at the close as and construction aggregate producer Vulcan Materials (VMC) was significantly lower by 3.86%. Fewer states will repave their roads because of the sanctions on Russia’s central bank?