said Friday that fourth-quarter declined after paying a $2.9 billion fee tied to the government seizures of failed regional banks last year.
Here's what the company reported versus what analysts surveyed by LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv, expected:
The bank quarterly earnings slipped 15% to $9.31 billion, or $3.04 per share, from a year earlier. Excluding the fee tied to the regional banking crisis and $743 million in investment losses, earnings would have been $3.97 per share, according to JPMorgan.
Revenue climbed 12% to $39.94 billion, edging out analysts' expectations.
JPMorgan CEO said full-year results hit a record because the largest U.S. bank by assets performed better than expected on net interest income and credit quality. The bank it generated nearly $50 billion of profit in 2023, $4.1 billion of which came from First Republic.
Just as it did during the 2008 financial crisis, JPMorgan emerged larger and more profitable from last year's regional banking chaos after First Republic, a midsize lender to wealthy coastal families. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation hit large U.S. banks with a special assessment to replenish losses from a fund that helped uninsured depositors of seized regional banks.
Shares of JPMorgan rose 1.9% during premarket trading.
Despite his bank's performance, Dimon struck a cautious note on the American economy.
"The U.S. economy continues to be resilient, with consumers still spending, and markets currently expect a soft landing," Dimon said in the release.
But deficit spending and supply chain adjustments "may lead inflation to be stickier and rates to be higher than markets expect," he said. Risks to markets and economies include central banks' steps to rein in support programs and wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, he added.
"These significant and somewhat unprecedented forces cause us to remain cautious," he said.
While the bank has navigated the rate environment capably since the Federal Reserve began raising rates in early 2022, smaller peers have seen their profits squeezed.
The industry has been forced to pay up for deposits as customers shift cash into higher-yielding instruments, squeezing margins. At the same time, rising yields mean the bonds owned by banks fell in value, creating unrealized losses that pressure capital levels.
Concern is also mounting over rising losses from commercial loans, especially office building debt, and higher defaults on credit cards.
Beyond guidance on net interest income and loan losses for this year, analysts will want to hear what Dimon has to say about banks' efforts to tone down coming in capital requirements.
Beaten-down shares of banks recovered in November on expectations that the Fed had successfully managed inflation and could cut rates this year.
Shares of JPMorgan jumped 27% last year, the best showing among big bank peers and outperforming the 5% decline of the KBW Bank Index.
This story is developing. Please check back for updates.
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