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JPMorgan Chase’s chief executive Jamie Dimon warned that the US economy was facing “considerable turbulence” as market tumult boosted the Wall Street bank’s trading business at the start of 2025.
The largest US lender on Friday said net income in the first quarter rose 9 per cent from the previous year to $14.6bn, exceeding the $13.6bn analysts had expected.
“The economy is facing considerable turbulence (including geopolitics), with the potential positives of tax reform and deregulation and the potential negatives of tariffs and ‘trade wars’, ongoing sticky inflation, high fiscal deficits and still rather high asset prices and volatility,” Dimon said.
Dimon predicted that earnings estimates for US blue-chip companies would fall and many management teams would pull their financial guidance in upcoming first-quarter earnings in the weeks ahead. JPMorgan is among the first big US companies to report their quarterly figures.
He said the issues around China, which is facing US tariffs of 145 per cent, were “a significant change that we’ve never seen in our lives”.
Dimon added that clients were holding back on making deals due to the economic uncertainties from the White House’s trade policies and the ensuing volatility. “That’s M&A, M&A with middle market companies, people’s hiring plans,” Dimon said. “People have to adjust to this new environment.”
The warnings from Dimon, one of the most influential voices on Wall Street, come at a time of acute volatility in US financial markets, sparked by President Donald Trump’s tariffs on trading partners including China.
Trump earlier this week cited a television interview in which Dimon said the US was probably headed for recession when explaining his decision to pause most of his sweeping tariffs on imports.
Still, the market tumult in the early months of Trump’s administration was good for JPMorgan’s trading business in the first quarter.
Equities trading was JPMorgan’s standout unit, with revenues rising 48 per cent from a year earlier to $3.8bn, far higher than analysts had anticipated and its best quarter on record.
The strong trading performance was echoed by rival Morgan Stanley, where equities trading revenues surged 45 per cent surge to a record $4.1bn in the first quarter.
JPMorgan’s fixed income trading was also up 8 per cent at $5.8bn. Investment banking fees rose 12 per cent year on year to $2.2bn, a more modest increase than the mid-teens rise JPMorgan had predicted in mid-February, as the same market gyrations that boosted trading created a chill for dealmaking and new stock listings.
JPMorgan shares were up about 3 per cent in early trading.
The bank’s charge-off rate in the quarter — the portion of its loans marked as unrecoverable — was $2.3bn, up 19 per cent from a year earlier. Credit quality has worsened following a period of record low loan losses from government stimulus programmes during the Covid-19 pandemic.
JPMorgan set aside $3.3bn for potential loan losses, 75 per cent higher than a year earlier.
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