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People walk inside JP Morgan headquarters in New York, October 25, 2013.Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

JPMorgan Chase & Co. posted a better-than-expected quarterly profit on Friday, easing fears slowing economic growth could weigh on its results.

The largest U.S. bank by assets showed strength across its businesses in the first quarter, driven by what chief executive Jamie Dimon described as solid U.S. economic growth, moderate inflation and strong consumer and business confidence.

U.S. bank stocks have underperformed the broader market in recent months on fears of an impending recession, with economists and investors citing concerns over a flattening yield curve and slowing housing market. But bank executives have downplayed concerns, pointing to continuing loan growth.

“There is no law that says it has to stop,” Mr. Dimon said when asked if the decade-long economic expansion is due to turn into a recession. “I wouldn’t count on there having to be a recession in the short run.”

Loans in JPMorgan’s consumer-banking division rose 4 per cent from a year ago. Overall revenue rose 4.7 per cent to US$29.85-billion. Analysts had expected revenue of US$28.44-billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

“We’ve been generally quite optimistic about the outlook for the economy,” chief financial officer Marianne Lake told reporters on a call to discuss the results. “It doesn’t diminish the fact that there are a number of risks out there. Right now, we don’t see that playing out in the data.”

The bank’s net interest margin, a key measure of loan profitability, edged up only 0.02 per cent point from the fourth quarter, a slower pace of improvement than in the two previous quarters.

Investors have been concerned that net interest margins may have peaked for the banks, since the U.S. Federal Reserve has signalled it is unlikely to raise short-term rates this year and the spread between short- and longer-term rates has narrowed.

While Ms. Lake did not directly answer if the lending spread had peaked after fuelling profit growth for years, she said it will likely not get any better in the coming quarters. The bank expects it to remain constant, she said.

Unlike Wells Fargo & Co., the other big U.S. bank to report earnings on Friday, JPMorgan stood by its outlook for net interest income (NII), a key driver of profits, which it expects to increase about 4 per cent this year over 2018.

Wells said it now expects its NII to decline 2 per cent to 5 per cent instead of landing in a range of plus or minus 2 per cent. The change sent Wells shares down as much 2.4 per cent.

Ms. Lake also reiterated the bank’s 17-per cent projection for return on average tangible common equity and said she does not anticipate the bank will raise it this year.

Ms. Lake downplayed questions about whether the bank’s US$90-million provision for credit losses in its commercial banking segment in the first quarter was a reason for concern.

“These downgrades were idiosyncratic. It was a handful of names” of diverse commercial and industrial borrowers, she said. “We are not seeing signs of deterioration.”

In the bank’s capital markets business, equity underwriting fell 13 per cent and bond-trading revenues fell 8 per cent from the year-ago quarter. Bank executives had signalled earlier in the quarter that capital markets revenue could fall by a greater amount.

The bank said net income rose to a record US$9.18-billion, or US$2.65 a share, in the quarter ended March 31, from US$8.71-billion, or US$2.37 a share, a year earlier.

Net interest income rose 8 per cent to US$14.6-billion, boosted by interest rate increases since the first quarter of last year.

Analysts had estimated earnings of US$2.35 a share, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

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Study and track financial data on any traded entity: click to open the full quote page. Data updated as of 19/04/24 4:10pm EDT.

SymbolName% changeLast
JPM-N
JP Morgan Chase & Company
+2.51%185.8

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