Bank Earnings Round 2: JPM, WFC Report On Tuesday

 | Jan 14, 2019 11:53AM ET

Earnings season starts to pick up the pace this week, with reports from JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) and Wells Fargo & Company (NYSE:WFC) scheduled before market open on Tuesday, Jan. 15.

Between the Fed’s rate-hike path, growing concerns regarding global economies and future growth, and geopolitical uncertainty, there’s plenty for executives to discuss on tomorrow’s earnings calls.

Beyond whether the banks beat, meet, or miss projections, it could be interesting to tune in to earning’s calls to see whether executives discuss their outlook for interest rates. The yield on the 10-year Treasury has pulled back to well under the key 3% rate as investors have sought the relative safety of U.S. government debt. At the same time, there have been worries about the potential inversion of the yield curve, an out-of-the-ordinary formation that has preceded recessions in the past.

In addition to interest rate movement, global uncertainty regarding economic growth and geopolitics has been a regular topic in recent quarterly calls. Still, executives haven’t seemed too worried yet that any of it might start to dampen loan and deposit growth in the immediate future.

At an Axios event recently, JPM CEO Jamie Dimon said “2019 could be the fastest global growth year on record,” although he did mention that a slowdown in 2020 seemed likely. The International Monetary Fund expects global growth to come in at 3.7% in 2019, lower than their previous 3.9% estimate. The World Bank is less optimistic, expecting global growth to slow to 2.9% this year.

h3 JP Morgan Earnings And Options Activity/h3

For Q4, JPM is expected to report EPS of $2.25 on revenue of $27.28 billion, according to third-party consensus analyst estimates. In the same quarter last year, EPS came in at $1.76 on revenue of $25.45 billion.

When JPM last reported, net revenue from its consumer and community banking operations increased 10% year over year (YoY), to $13.29 billion. Within that segment, consumer and business banking grew 18% to $6.4 billion; and the card, merchant services and auto division increased 10% to $5.6 billion. Analysts are again widely expecting similar strength from this division.

Where there is some uncertainty is how the corporate and investment bank division performed in Q4. In Q3, JPM reported revenue in this segment increased 2% YoY to $8.81 billion, but was down 11% compared to the second quarter, when the company reported $9.9 billion in revenue in that division. JPM reported that fixed income markets revenue declined 10% YoY to $2.8 billion in Q3, which wasn’t offset by a 17% increase in equity markets revenue. Given the heightened volatility across many asset classes in Q4, it remains to be seen how that impacted trading operations, as well as debt and equity underwriting.

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