Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to 1st quarter 2023 earnings call. This call is being recorded. Your line will be muted for the duration of the call. We will now go live to the presentation. Please stand by. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to JPMorgan Chase's Chairman and CEO, Jamie Dimon, and Chief Financial Officer, Jeremy Barnum. Mr. Barnum, please go ahead.
Thanks, and good morning, everyone. The presentation is available on our website, and please refer to the disclaimer on the back. Starting on page one, the firm reported net income of $12.6 billion, EPS of $4.10 on revenue of $39.3 billion, and delivered an ROTCE of 23%. These results included $868 million of net investment securities losses in corporate. Before reviewing our results for the quarter, let's talk about the recent bank failures. Jamie has addressed a number of the important themes in his shareholder letter and a recent televised interview, so I will go straight to the specific impacts on the firm. As you would expect, we saw significant new account opening activity and meaningful deposit and money market fund inflows, most significantly in the commercial bank, business banking, and AWM.
Regarding the deposit inflows at the firm-wide level, average deposits were down 3% quarter-on-quarter, while end-of-period deposits were up 2% quarter-on-quarter, implying an intra-quarter reversal of the recent outflow trend as a consequence of the March events. We estimate that we have retained approximately $50 billion of these deposit inflows at quarter end. It's important to note that while the sequential period end deposit increase is higher than we would have otherwise expected, our current full year NII outlook, which I will address at the end, still assumes modest deposit outflows from here. We expect these outflows to be driven by the same factors as last quarter, as well as the expectation that we will not retain all of this quarter's inflows. Back to the quarter, touching on a few highlights. We grew our IB fee wallet share.
Consumer spending remains solid with combined debit and credit card spend up 10% year-on-year. Credit continues to normalize, but actual performance remains strong across the company. On page two, we have some more detail. Revenue of $39.3 billion was up $7.7 billion or 25% year-on-year. NII ex. Markets was up $9.2 billion or 78%, driven by higher rates, partially offset by lower deposit balances. NII ex. Markets was down $1.1 billion or 10%, driven by the securities losses previously mentioned, as well as lower IB fees and lower auto lease income on lower volume. Markets revenue was down $371 million or 4% year-on-year.
Expenses of $20.1 billion were up $916 million or 5% year-over-year, driven by compensation related costs reflecting the annualization of last year's headcount growth and wage inflation. These results include the impact of the higher FDIC assessment I mentioned last quarter, which of course, is unrelated to recent events. Credit costs of $2.3 billion included net charge-offs of $1.1 billion, predominantly in card. The net reserve build of $1.1 billion was largely driven by deterioration in our weighted average economic outlook. Onto balance sheet and capital on page three. We ended the quarter with a CET1 ratio of 13.8%, up about 60 basis points, which was primarily driven by the benefit of net income less distributions and AOCI gains.
In line with what we previously said, we resumed stock buybacks this quarter and distributed a total of $1.9 billion in net repurchases back to shareholders. Let's go to our businesses, starting with CCB on page four. Touching quickly on the health of U.S. consumers and small businesses based on our data. Both continue to show resilience and remain on the path to normalization as expected, but we continue to monitor their activity closely. Spend remains solid, and we have not observed any notable pullback throughout the quarter. Moving to financial results, CCB reported net income of $5.2 billion on revenue of $16 .5 billion, which was up 35% year-on-year. In banking and wealth management, revenue was up 67% year-on-year, driven by higher NII on higher rates.
Average deposits were down 2% quarter-on-quarter in line with recent trends. Throughout the quarter, we continued to see customer flows to higher yielding products as you would expect, but we're encouraged by what we are capturing in CDs and our wealth management offerings. Client investment assets were down 1% year-on-year, but up 7% quarter-on-quarter, driven by market performance as well as strong net inflows. In home lending, revenue was down 38% year-on-year, largely driven by lower net interest income from tighter loan spreads and lower production revenue. Moving to card services and auto, revenue was up 14% year-on-year, largely driven by higher card services NII on higher revolving balances, partially offset by lower auto lease income. Credit card spend was up 13% year-on-year.
Card outstandings were up 21%, driven by strong new account growth and revolve normalization. In auto, originations were $9.2 billion, up 10% year-on-year. Expenses of $8.1 billion were up 5% year-on-year, reflecting the impact of wage inflation and a higher headcount. In terms of credit performance this quarter, credit costs were $1.4 billion, reflecting reserve builds of $300 million in card and $50 million in home lending. Net charge-offs were $1.1 billion, up about $500 million year-on-year, in line with expectations as delinquency levels continue to normalize across portfolios. Next, the CIB on page five. CIB reported net income of $4.4 billion on revenue of $13.6 billion. Investment banking revenue of $1.6 billion was down 24% year-on-year.
IB fees were down 19%. We ranked number one with first quarter wallet share of 8.7%. In advisory, fees were down 6% compared to a strong first quarter last year. Our underwriting businesses continued to be affected by market conditions, with fees down 34% for debt and 6% for equity. In terms of the outlook, the dynamics remain the same. Our pipeline is relatively robust, but conversion is sensitive to market conditions and the economic outlook. We expect the second quarter and the rest of the year to remain challenging. Moving to markets, total revenue was $8.4 billion, down 4% year-over-year. Fixed income was flat. Rates was strong during the rally early in the quarter, as well as through the elevated volatility in March.
Credit was up on the back of higher client flows, currencies in emerging markets was down relative to a very strong first quarter in the prior year. Equity markets was down 12%, driven by lower revenues and derivatives relative to a strong first quarter in the prior year, and lower client activity in cash. Payments revenue was $2.4 billion, up 26% year-on-year. Excluding the net impact of equity investments, primarily a gain in the prior year, it was up 55%, with the growth driven by higher rates, partially offset by lower deposit balances. Security services revenue of $1.1 billion was up 7% year-on-year, driven by higher rates, partially offset by lower deposit balances and market levels.
Expenses of $7.5 billion were up 2% year-on-year as higher headcount and wage inflation were largely offset by lower revenue-related compensation. Moving to the commercial bank on page six. Commercial banking reported net income of $1.3 billion. Revenue of $3.5 billion was up 46% year-on-year, driven by higher deposit margins. Payments revenue of $2 billion was up 98% year-on-year, driven by higher rates. Gross investment banking revenue of $881 million was up 21% year-on-year on increased M&A and bond underwriting from large deal activity. Expenses of $1.3 billion were up 16% year-on-year, largely driven by higher compensation expense, including front office hiring and technology investments, as well as higher volume-related expense.
Average deposits were down 16% year-on-year and 5% quarter-on-quarter, predominantly driven by continued attrition in non-operating deposits as well as seasonally lower balances. Loans were up 13% year-on-year and 1% sequentially. C&I loans were up 1% quarter-on-quarter, with somewhat different dynamics based on client size. In middle market banking, higher rates and recession concerns have decreased new loan demand and utilization, which is also leading to weakness in CapEx spending. In corporate client banking, utilization rates increased modestly quarter-on-quarter as capital market conditions led more clients to opt for bank debt. CRE loans were also up 1% sequentially, with higher rates creating headwinds for both originations and prepayments.
Given the recent focus on commercial real estate, let me remind you that our office sector exposure is less than 10% of our portfolio and is focused in urban dense markets, and nearly 2/3 of our loans are multifamily, primarily in supply-constrained markets. Finally, credit costs of $417 million included a net reserve build of $379 million, predominantly driven by what I mentioned up front. To complete our lines of business, AWM on page seven. Asset and wealth management reported net income of $1.4 billion, pre-tax margin of 35%.
Revenue of $4.8 billion was up 11% year-on-year, driven by higher deposit margins on lower balances and a valuation gain on our initial investment triggered by taking full ownership of our asset management joint venture in China, partially offset by the impact of lower average market levels on management fees and lower performance fees. Expenses of $3.1 billion were up 8% year-on-year, predominantly driven by compensation, reflecting growth in our private banking advisor teams, higher revenue-related compensation, and the run rate impact of acquisitions. For the quarter, net long-term inflows were $47 billion, led by fixed income and equities. In liquidity, we saw net inflows of $93 billion, inclusive of our ongoing deposit migration.
AUM of $3 trillion was up 2% year-on-year, overall client assets of $4.3 trillion were up 6%, driven by continued net inflows into liquidity and long-term products. Finally, loans were down 1% quarter-on-quarter, driven by lower securities-based lending, while average deposits were down 5%. Turning to corporate on page eight. Corporate reported net income of $244 million. Revenue was $985 million compared to a net loss of $881 million. Was $1.7 billion, up $2.3 billion year-on-year due to the impact of higher rates. NIR was a loss of $755 million, compared with a loss of $345 million in the prior year, and included the net investment securities losses I mentioned earlier.
Expenses of $160 million were down $24 million year-on-year. Credit costs of $370 million were driven by reserve builds on a couple of single name exposures. Next, the outlook on page nine. We now expect 2023 NII and NII ex. Markets to be approximately $81 billion. This increase in guidance is primarily driven by lower rate paid assumptions across both consumer and wholesale in light of the expectation of Fed cuts later in the year, as well as slightly higher card revolving balances. Note that in line with my comments at the outset, recent deposit balance increases are not a meaningful contributor to the upward revision in the NII outlook, given that we expect a meaningful portion of the recent inflows to reverse later in the year. I would point out that this outlook still embeds significant reprice lags.
We think a more sustainable NII ex. Markets run rate in the medium term is well below this quarter's $84 billion, as well as below the $80 billion that is implied for the rest of the year by our full year guidance. While we don't know exactly when this lower run rate will be reached, when it happens, we believe it will be around the mid-$70s billion. Of course, as we mentioned last quarter, this NII outlook remains highly sensitive to the uncertainty associated with the timing and the extent of deposit reprice, investment portfolio decisions, the dynamics of QT and RRP, the trajectory of Fed funds, as well as the broader macroeconomic environment, including its impact on loan growth. Separately, it's worth noting that markets NII may start to trend slightly positive towards the end of the year as a function of mix and rate effects.
Moving to expenses, our outlook for 2023 continues to be about $81 billion. Importantly, this does not currently include the impact of the pending FDIC special assessment. On credit, we continue to expect the 2023 card net charge-off rate to be approximately 2.6%. To wrap up, our strong results this quarter once again highlight the earnings power of this diversified franchise. We have benefited from our fortress principles and commitment to invest, which we will continue to do as we head into an increasingly uncertain environment. With that, operator, please open the line for Q&A.
From the line of Steven Chubak with Wolfe Research is now open.
Hey, good morning.
Morning, Steve.
Jamie, I was actually hoping to get your perspective on how you see the recent developments with SVB impacting the regulatory landscape for the big banks. In your letter, you spent a fair amount of time highlighting the consequences of overly stringent capital requirements, the risk of steering more activities to the less regulated non-banks. What are some of the changes that you're scenario planning for, whether it's higher capital, increase in FDIC assessment fees? Along those same lines, how you're thinking about the buyback, given continued strong capital build, but a lot of macro uncertainty at the moment.
I think you were already kind of complete with answering your own question there. Look, you know, we're hoping that everyone just takes a deep breath and looks at what happened and the breadth and depth of regulations already in place. You know, obviously, when something happens like this, you should adjust, think about it. I think down the road, there may be some limitations on held to maturity, you know, maybe more TLAC for certain type size banks and, you know, more scrutiny on interest rate exposure, stuff like that. It doesn't have to be a revamp of the whole system. It's just recalibrating things the right way. I think it should be done knowing what you want the outcome to be. The outcome you should want is very strong community and regional banks.
You know, certain actions are taken which are drastic. It could actually make them weaker. That's all it is. You know, we do expect higher capital from Basel IV, effectively, and obviously, there's going to be an FDIC assessment. That'll be what it is.
Just in terms of appetite for the buyback, just given.
Oh, yeah.
Elevated macro uncertainty.
Look, we've told you, I think we've told you that we're kind of penciling in $12 billion for this year. Obviously, capital is more than that, but, and we did a little bit of buyback this quarter. You know, we're going to wait and see. You know, we don't mind keeping our powder dry. You've seen us do that with investment portfolios, and we're also going to do it with capital.
That's great. I'll hop back in the queue. Thanks so much for taking my questions.
Okay.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Ken Usdin with Jefferies. You may proceed.
Hey, thanks. Good morning. Hey, Jeremy, I was just wondering if you can just give us a little bit more detail on those lower funding expectation points that you made and just in terms of, you know, is it, is it because of like, what you can offer the client that might allow you to kind of keep that beta lower? Maybe you can just kind of wrap it into what your overall beta expectations are in that revised update. Thank you.
Yeah, sure. Let me just summarize the drivers of the change in the outlook. The primary driver really is lower deposit rate paid expectations across both consumer and wholesale, which as you mentioned, is driven by a couple of factors. The change in the rate environment, you know, with cuts coming sooner in the outlook, all else equal does take some pressure off the reprice. As you said, we're getting a lot of positive feedback from the field on our product offerings. The short-term CD in particular, is really getting a lot of positive feedback from our folks in the branches. It's been very attractive to yield-seeking customers. That's kind of working well. On the asset side, we are seeing a little bit higher card revolve, which is helping.
I'll just remind you that at a conference in February, I suggested that we were already starting to feel like some of the uncertainties we mentioned when giving the guidance had started all moving in the same direction. That was one of the things that contributed to the upward revision. Like, all the uncertainty kind of went the same way. As Jamie's pointed out, like, you know, that those uncertainties are all still there. We highlight them on the page. As we look forward to this year and into next year in the medium term, we remain very focused on those.
Yeah. As a follow-up on the point about rate expectations coming now in and potentially getting cut sooner, how do you take a look at what that might mean just for the broader economy? Is that, do you think it's more just because inflation's coming down? Do you think it's because the Fed's just got to react to an even tougher economy and still some of those storm clouds that might be out there? Just kind of, you know, just your general thinking about the other read-throughs of what, you know, lower rates quicker, you know, will mean for the broader economy.
Well, first of all, I don't quite believe it. You know, the Fed has the rate curve, the forward short-term rate curve, you know, almost 1% higher than what the market has. You know, one of the things you got to always prepare for is it could be anything. We don't know what the rate curve is going to be in a year. You know, we're quite cautious in that and quite thoughtful about that. You know, obviously the short-term read is higher recessionary risk, you know, but, you know, and then inflation coming down. I think inflation will come down a little bit. It could easily be stickier than people think, and therefore, the rate curve will have to go up a little bit.
Okay. Thank you very much.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of John McDonald with Autonomous Research. You may proceed.
Hi. Thanks. Jeremy, wanted to follow up again on the drivers of the NII revision and the lower rates paid assumption. You mentioned the Fed cuts coming sooner and positive feedback on the customer offers. What about the March events? Do the bank failures there that happened in March, in your view, do they slow the reprice intensity because folks are moving other than price reasons, or they intensify it industry-wide because smaller banks have to reprice to keep their deposits? How do those events influence your view of the reprice?
Yeah. John, it's a really good question, and we've obviously thought about that. As we sit here today, I guess I have two answers to that. One is it's not meaningfully affecting our current outlook. We don't see it as a major driver. I think in terms of the larger dynamics that you lay out, it's just a little too early to tell. From where we are right now, the base case is no real impact.
Okay. Then I wanted to ask Jamie, there's a narrative out there that the industry could see a credit crunch. Banks are going to stop lending. Even Jay Powell mentioned that as a risk. Do you see that in terms of anything you look at in terms of lending, that and is that a reaction that makes sense that banks might be retrenching a lot here? Do you worry about that for the economy in terms of credit crunch? Thanks.
I wouldn't use the word credit crunch if I were you. I obviously, there's going to be a little bit of tightening. Most of that will be around certain real estate things. We've heard it from, you know, real estate investors already. You know, I just look at that as a kind of a thumb on the scale. It just makes the finance conditions be a little bit tighter. You know, increases the odds of a recession. That's what that is. It's not like a credit crunch.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Erika Najarian with UBS. You may proceed.
Hi. Good morning. My first question is, you mentioned that, your reserve build was driven mostly by worse economic assumptions. I'm wondering if you could update us on what unemployment rate you're assuming in your reserve.
Yeah. Erika, as you know, I'm not going to go into a lot of detail here, but we take, you know, the outlook from our economists. We run a bunch of different scenarios, and we probability weight those. The central case outlook from our research team hasn't actually changed. We felt that in line with what Jamie just said in terms of a little bit of tightening as a result of the events of March, it made sense to add a little bit of weight to our relative adverse case. We did that, which changed the weighted average expectation. I think that a weighted average peak unemployment that we're using now is something like 5.8%.
As we think about all of what you've just told us, so $81 billion of NII this year, and who knows when medium term is going to happen of mid-70s. The clear strength of the franchise producing 23% ROTCE in a quarter where your CET1 is 13.8% and a reserve that already reflects 5.8% unemployment. As we think about recession and what JP Morgan can earn in a recession, do you think you can hit 17% ROTCE even in 2024, assuming we do have a recession, you know, in 2024 as everybody's expecting, given all these revenue dynamics and how prepared you are on the reserve?
Yeah, I mean, that's an interesting question, Erika. I guess I'll say a couple things.
It's a great question. I want to see how Jeremy answers it.
Let's take a crack. Let's see what the boss thinks. I think number one, we believe, have said, continue to believe that this is fundamentally a 17% through the cycle ROTCE franchise. Number one. Number two, as Jamie always says, we run this company for all different scenarios and to have it be as resilient as possible across all different scenarios. On the particular question of ROTCE expectations in 2024 contingent on the particular economic outlook, obviously it depends a lot on the nature of the recession. I think we feel really good about how the company is positioned for a recession, we're a bank. A very serious recession is, of course, going to be a headwind for returns. We think even in a fairly severe recession, we'll deliver very good returns.
Whether that's 17% or not is, you know, too much detail for now.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Jim Mitchell with Seaport Global Securities. You may proceed.
Hey, good morning. Maybe just a little bit on the deposit, your thought process there. You've seen some inflows. Why do you think you lose them going forward? Just maybe talk a little bit about the dynamic in pricing. Do you feel like, given the inflows, do you see some pricing power for the larger banks?
Yeah, a couple of things there. First of all, we don't know, right? The deposits just came in. We don't know. We're guessing. Number two, the deposits just came in. By definition, these are somewhat flighty deposits because they just came into us. It's prudent and appropriate for us to assume that they won't be particularly stable. Number three, there's a natural amount of internal migration of deposits to money funds. You have to overlay that, and that's embedded in our assumptions. Number four, it's a competitive market. You know, it's entirely possible that people temporarily come to us and then over time decide to go elsewhere. For all of those reasons, you know, we're just being realistic about the stickiness of those.
If I add, I wouldn't say categorically, there's no pricing power that the bigger banks have. Because if you look at the pricing, and we look at pricing sheets all the time, every bank is in a slightly different position, and every bank is competing in three-month, six-month, nine-month savings rates. Then you have the online banks, you got Treasury bills, you got money market funds. There's no pricing power for the bank. Obviously, we all have different franchises. We're all in a slightly different position.
No, fair. All fair points. Maybe just to follow up on John's question on the lending environment. You talked about the industry likely pulling back. Are you changing your underwriting standards in any way? Just trying to think through, is there potential for some market share gains given your strengths of capital and liquidity, or how are you thinking about the loan environment?
I'd say very modestly, but, you know, we look at that all the time.
Yeah. You know, we always say, right, we underwrite through the cycle. I think notably, we didn't loosen our underwriting standards when all the numbers looked crazy good during the pandemic. We're not going to like, you know, to overreact now and tighten unreasonably. Some of that correction happens naturally. You know, credit metrics deteriorate for borrowers, whether in consumer or wholesale, and that might make them leave our preexisting risk appetite. We're not running around aggressively tightening standards right now.
Okay, great. Thanks.
The next question comes from the line of Gerard Cassidy with RBC Capital Markets. You may proceed.
Thank you. Hi, Jeremy.
Hey, Gerard.
In your comments about your CET1 ratio obviously came in strong at 13.8%. You've got the GSIB buffers obviously going up next year. We have this, the stress test coming this summer or in June, the results which maybe will lead to banks, including yours, having a higher stress capital buffer. Where should we think about that CET1 ratio being by the end of the year, do you think?
Yeah. A few things in there, Gerard. You know, we have previously said that we were targeting 13.5 in the first quarter of 2024 as a function of assuming an unchanged SCB, the increased GSIB step, and operating with a 50 basis point buffer. To the point that Jamie made a second ago, in light of the environment, Basel IV, dry powder, you know, who knows how we'll tweak that, you know, going forward. That's still our base case assumption. Specifically on the stress test, you know, contrary to what I've heard some people argue, our ability to predict the SCB ahead of time from running our own process is actually quite limited.
You'll remember last year that even though we did predict an increase, we were off by almost a factor of two in terms of how big it wound up being, and that was a big surprise for the whole industry. We want to be quite humble about our ability to predict the SCB. Having said that, for right now, we are assuming it will be unchanged. There are some tailwinds in there, through the OCI, but we believe there will likely be some offsets in harsher credit shocks in the number. For planning purposes right now, we're assuming flat for SCB, and we'll know soon enough, you know, what the actual number is.
Sure. Just as a follow-up, if I heard you correctly, can you give us a little more color? I think you mentioned in building the loan loss reserve this quarter, you identified some one-off credits. I don't know if that's how you said it. Some larger credits. Were they commercial real estate orientated? Were they commercial? Any more color there?
No, it wasn't commercial real estate. It was just a couple of single name items in the corporate segment.
Leverage loan type items or just regular corporate credits?
Regular corporate credits. I'd rather not get into too much detail.
Okay. Okay. Very good.
Sorry. Thanks.
Thank you.
The next question comes from the line of Ebrahim Poonawala with Bank of America Merrill Lynch. You may proceed.
Good morning. I guess, maybe one question, Jeremy. You reminded us of the relatively low office exposure for JPM, but obviously you're big players in the CRE market. Give us a sense of when you look at the two pressure points on CRE, one, how much is oversupply? That probably goes beyond office into apartments. How much of a issue is oversupply in the market as we think about the next few years going into a weakening economy? How much of a risk is higher for longer rates in that if the central banks can't cut rates in the next year or two, we will see a ton of more pain because of the refi wall that's coming up?
Yes, Ebrahim. Let me sort of respond narrowly in connection with our portfolio and our exposure, right? Really the large majority of our commercial real estate exposure is multi-family lending in supply constrained markets. And I think it's quite important to recognize the difference between that and sort of higher end, higher price point, non-rent controlled, not supply constrained markets. Our space is really quite different in that respect, and I think that's a big part of the reason the performance has been so good for so long. Of course, we watch it very carefully, and we don't assume that past performance predicts future results here. I think our multifamily lending portfolio is, you know, quite low risk in the scheme of things.
Can I just add also, housing is in short supply in America, so it's not massively oversupplied like you saw, in 2008.
Yeah. In terms of the office space, as you note, our exposure is quite small. Yes. You know, Jamie's also mentioned all the refi dynamics that you mentioned too are something that the office space is processing one way or the other. Our office exposure is quite modest, very concentrated in class A buildings in sort of dense urban locations where, you know, the return to the office narrative is one of the drivers, is generally in favor of high occupancy. Again, watching it, there are obviously specific things here and there to pay attention to, but in the scheme of things for us, not a big issue.
All right. Just as a follow-up, I think, the other risk from higher for longer rates, I think is just the ability of the economy, the financial markets, to sustain a 5% plus Fed funds for a long period of time. Like, what are the other areas you're watching if duration mismatch on bank balance sheets being one, CRE market being one? Are you worried about non-banks that have grown exponentially over the last decade in terms of risks at the non-banks if rates don't get cut? If you can talk to the transmission mechanism of that coming back and hitting banks, given the leverage that banks provide to the non-banks.
Yeah. I'd like to answer that. Don't just think of just the Fed funds rate, because I think you should, I, you know, for our planning, I'd be thinking more about it could be six and then think about the five and 10-year rate, which could be five. I think if those things happen, I'm not saying they're gonna happen, I just think people should prepare for them. They saw what just happened when rates went up beyond people's expectations. You had the gilt problem in London, you had some of the banks here. People need to be prepared for the potential of higher rates for longer.
If and when that happens, it will undress problems in the economy for those who are too exposed to floating rates or those who are too exposed to refi risk. Those exposures will be in multiple parts of the economy. I say to all of our clients, now would be the time to fix it. Do not put yourself in a position where that risk is excessive for your company, your business, your investment pools, et cetera. That's answer number one. Number two is it will not come back to JPMorgan. Okay? While we do provide credit to what you call shadow banks, we think it's very, very secure. That does not mean it won't come back to other credit providers.
Got it. Very helpful. Thank you.
The next question comes from the line of Mike Mayo with Wells Fargo Securities. You may proceed.
Hey, Jeremy. You mentioned a degree of reintermediation to the lending markets. You said capital markets activity has gone to bank lending. I'm just wondering, as part of your $7 billion increased NII guide, are you assuming better loan spreads? On the topic of loan pricing, why aren't your credit card yields going higher than where they are today? Thanks.
Yeah, Mike. I think, yeah, you're referring to my comments that I made in the commercial bank about the fact that the larger corporate segment within the commercial bank that would generally have access to capital markets, but also access to bank lending at the margin is choosing to draw down on revolvers right now rather than access the capital markets. That is not a particularly meaningful driver of the increase in NII guidance. There's a lot of odds and ends in there, but the major drivers are the ones that I called out. To be honest, I haven't actually specifically checked what's happening with card yields. I would imagine that they've gone up a little bit in line with rates, but I don't know. We should follow that up.
All right. One for you, Jamie. I guess taking the 10,000 foot level, I guess when you look at asset liability management or ALM, you could call this nightmare on Elm Street, and you've seen some big problems at banks. I guess how would you evaluate yourself, I guess, with the $7 billion higher NI guide? Probably is good, but to what degree are you willing to sacrifice JPM shareholder money to help rescue problem banks that do not get their asset liability management correctly?
Well, there's two really different questions. We've been quite cautious on interest rates for quite a while. How we invest our portfolio, what our expectations are, our stress testing. You know, the stress test, the CCAR stress test, as you know, had rates going down. I always looked at rates going up and being prepared for that, whether or not you think it's going to happen. We've been quite conservative ourselves, and we don't mind continuing to do that because, you know, I remind people that having excess capital, you haven't lost it. It's kind of earnings in store. You get to deploy it later and maybe at a more opportune time when the time comes. We're not you know, look, we like to help the system when it needs help, if we can reasonably.
We're not the only ones. You saw a lot of banks do that. You know, I was proud of them. I was proud of all. I think all of us did the right thing. Whether, you know, ultimately it works out or not, we'll, you know, we'll you can second-guess that when it happens. The fact is, you know, I think people want to help the system. This whole banking thing was bad for banks. You know, I knew that the second I saw the headline, you know, and then you have Credit Suisse. We want healthy community banks. We want healthy regional banks. We want to help them get through this. We have you know, remember, Mike, if you as you pointed out, we have the best financial system world's ever seen. That does not mean it won't have problems.
It doesn't mean there shouldn't be changes made. I think it's reasonable for people to help each other in times of need. We've got you know, all of us did that during COVID. All of us did that. If you could, those who could, did it during, you know, the great financial crisis. I would expect, you know, people do that going forward.
Hey, Jamie, your CEO letter said the banking crisis isn't over. What do you mean by that? Was that dated two weeks later? Are you talking contagion or what?
It's just the number of banks offsides you can count on your hands in terms of like too much interest rate exposure, too much ATM, too much uninsured deposits. There may be additional bank deposits, I mean, bank failures, something like that, which we don't know. You're going to see next week regional banks have pretty good numbers. A lot of people are going to, you know, can take actions to, you know, remediate some of the issues they may have going forward. You've already seen things calm down quite a bit, particularly in deposit flows. Warren Buffett was on TV talking about that he would bet $1 million on himself that no depositor will lose money in America. He's willing to bet his own money. Of course, you know, he's a very bright man.
This crisis is not away. It will pass. The one thing I pointed out is when I answered the question just before about interest rates, people need to be prepared. They shouldn't pray that they don't go up. They should prepare for them going up. If it doesn't happen, serendipity.
All right. Thank you.
Yep.
The next question comes from the line of Betsy Graseck with Morgan Stanley. You may proceed.
Hi. Good morning.
Hey, Betsy.
I do want to unpack the question here on the possibility of higher for longer rates and how that impacts you in your non-markets NII.
Betsy, did we just lose you? I feel like you just dropped.
Can you hear me? Hello?
Yeah, you're back now.
I just wanted to unpack the higher for longer rate possibility as to how it impacts your NII, because your NII guide is assuming the forward curve, if I understand correctly. In the event that you get that higher for longer, you know, just how much does that impact the NII ex. Markets? You know, I'm trying to triangulate here about maybe you lose some deposits, but if we have higher for longer, shouldn't we expect the trajectory goes up from this quarter as opposed to down? That's the question.
Go ahead, Jeremy, and then I'll-
Sure. Betsy Graseck, your question is very good. I would say that, you know, as like, if you look at the evolution of our outlook last year, it was pretty clear that we were very asset sensitive, certainly in terms of the sort of one-year forward EAR type measure. You also obviously know that our current EAR actually shows us like negative numbers. A tiny bit liability sensitive, and I won't get into all the nuances about why that may or may not be a great predictor in the short term. The point is that the level of rates now is of course very different from what it was last year. At this level of rates, the relationship between our short-term NII evolution and the curve is not always going to be clear in any given moment.
It's quite tricky, and it can behave in somewhat wonky ways as a function of, again, what I've alluded to a couple times on this call, the competitive environment for deposits, which is not, in fact, a sort of mathematically predictable thing as a function of the rate curve. That's why we're emphasizing all the different drivers of uncertainty in the NII outlook. Yeah.
I just add, next quarter we kind of know already. Two quarters out, we know a little bit less. Three quarters out, we know a little bit less. In 2024, we know very little. That number, you can imagine this is a little inside baseball now. The number that we're talking about for 2024 is not based upon an implied curve. Is based upon us looking at multiple potential scenarios, leveling them kind of out and saying, "This is kind of a range." You're absolutely correct. You could have an environment of higher for longer that might be better than that. Remember, higher for longer comes with a lot of other things attached to it. You know, like, you know, maybe a recession, stagflation, lower vibes. I wouldn't look at that as higher for longer as a positive.
It might be a slight positive in that line. It probably would be negative in other lines.
Yep, got it. Okay, that's super helpful to understand how you think through that. The follow-up is just on the buybacks. Do I take your comments to mean that you're on pause now? If that's the case, what would be the driver of restarting?
We're not on pause now. We're doing a little bit now. We obviously have a lot of excess capital. We also like to buy our stock when it's cheap, not just when it's available. We're also peering ahead, looking at those little bit of storm clouds, we're gonna be kind of cautious. We, we're gonna make this decision every day. We also don't like to tell the market what we're doing, just so you know.
Yeah. Then can you give us any sense of what Basel IV endgame means to you and your RWAs? How much should we be baking in for this?
Betsy Graseck, we really don't have any new information there, right? I mean, I think clearly if you go back, like, one year, we were maybe a little bit more optimistic that it might be across all the different levers and all the different pieces of it, closer to capital neutral. I think now it feels like it's likely to be worse than that. Hopefully, it's not too much worse than that. I would just remind you that there are a lot of different levers, so in any, you know, when the NPR comes, that's only gonna be part of it. There's gonna be other pieces, the holistic review, and it's gonna take a lot of time to phase in, and we're gonna have time to adjust. You know, we'll know when we know.
They were supposed to be positive there about how they looked at banks relative to the global economy, which are getting smaller. GCIB is supposed to be adjusted for that. You know, we're expecting to go up, but there are a lot of reasons why it shouldn't go up. JP Morgan, there's so much capital. I mean, so, you know, you can't look at JP Morgan and say, "Well, it's a capital issue." Even the banks, by the way, when you look at it, even though some of the banks who are in trouble have plenty of capital. Their issue wasn't capital. It was other things. You know, I'm just hoping regulators are very thoughtful.
The other thing is they should a priori decide what they want in the banking system at this point. You know, I've made it clear, I can look at the banking system today and say that no bank should keep a loan if possible. That's how much capital is now being required for loans. The loans-
Yes, based on the current rule set.
Yeah, because the market is pricing, you know, it holds. The market would take loans at much lower capital ratios than banks are being forced to hold for them. I'm talking about just loans only, you know. That's why you're seeing a lot of capital go to, I mean, a lot of the credit go to non-banks, and dramatically, by the way. Rapidly and dramatically. If you're a regulator, you should be looking at it and saying, "Do I want that? Is that a good thing for the system?" If you believe it's a good thing for the system, raise the capital, and more credit will go out of the system. That's fine. If that's what they want, that's fine. They should do it with a forethought, not accidentally.
I like the NII from loans better than the gain on sale. I'll prefer the former, not the latter. Thanks. Appreciate it.
Yep.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Glenn Schorr with Evercore ISI. Your line is now open.
Thank you. You talked about, in your letter about regulators avoiding the knee-jerk reaction, which you addressed earlier. I'm curious on your thoughts around how customers have reacted and should react. My question is, consumers can move excess cash balances if they want more insurance. They can do that in a lot of different ways, move it, treasuries, money market, extra accounts, whatever. The question I have for you is on the corporate side. Have you seen big changes in how corporate treasurers or CFOs are adapting their cash balances and working capital, and should they need to? I appreciate your Warren Buffett comments.
Yeah. Glenn, in short, we really haven't seen big changes to speak of. I do think it's just worth saying, I think you're sort of hinting at this a little bit, when you talk about the behavior of corporates, that when we talk about responses to the recent events, through the lens of uninsured deposits, that's obviously very different. If you're talking about large balances of non-operating uninsured deposits from financial institutions or de facto financial institutions versus, you know, normal large corporate operating balances, which is, of course, like, core banking business for all of us.
You know, Glenn, when you saw it in commercial banking payments, investment banking, and custody, you did see money move, or I would call excess cash was moved out, but they have options. What I would call more like operational cash. Think even of a small retail, small companies, middle-market companies, et cetera, that tends to be fairly sticky because you have your loans there, you have your money there. You're getting more and more competitive in rates. That's why I think you see a lot of regional banks, they've got sticky middle-market deposits. If I lend you know, $30 million and you have $10 million, you're probably gonna be leaving it in my bank. You know, and they also are more competitive on the rate for that.
I think you shouldn't be looking at deposits like one class. There's a whole bunch of different types and, you know, analytically, you go through each one and try to figure out what the stickiness is and et cetera and so on. I think As the Fed has raised rates, you've already seen that's the reason we expected outflows, both from consumers and corporate customers.
Interesting. Just follow up. The other thing that caught my eye in the letter is you mentioned that you're exploring new capital optimization strategies, including partnerships and securitizations. What's different than what you've already been doing for the last 30 years?
We've got our smartest people, gonna figure out every angle to reduce capital requirements for JP Morgan. That's the difference. We've been doing it, but, you know, there are securitizations, there are partnerships. You've seen a lot of the private equity do the life insurance companies and, you know, I expect that we're gonna come up with a whole bunch of different things over time. We'll shed certain assets too.
Yeah. Thanks, Jamie.
Our final question comes from the line of Matt O'Connor with Deutsche Bank. You may proceed.
Good morning. You guys talked about one of the drivers of the higher net interest income guide this year is due to likely higher credit card balances. I was just wondering if you could flush out, you know, what changed there on the outlook, say, versus three months ago. I guess is it a good or bad thing that those balances will be higher than you thought?
The story there is kind of the same story we've been talking about for a while. It's just a matter of degree. You know, we had revolving balances obviously drop a lot during the pandemic period, we talked about having them recover in absolute dollar terms to the same level as we'd had pre-pandemic, which I think happened last quarter. The remaining narrative is just the further normalization of the revolve per account because we also have seen some account growth, and that continues to happen. You know, we also, to Mike's question earlier, we're seeing a higher yield there as well. On your question of whether it's good or bad, you know, obviously there is a point at which the consumers have too much leverage.
We don't see that yet, so.
It's normalization.
Yeah.
It's a good thing for us.
Okay. Just separately to squeeze in, you guys took some security losses again this quarter. In the past, you've talked about, you know, really just going security by security, looking for kind of pricing opportunities. Is that kind of what drove it again this quarter, or is there some kind of broader overarching...
That'll be every quarter for rest of our lives. Sell what we find rich, and we buy what we think is dear.
Cheap.
Cheap.
Okay. All right. Thank you.
We have no further questions.
Excellent. Folks, thank you very much.
That concludes today's conference. Thank you all for your participation. You may disconnect at this time.