By Saabira Chaudhuri
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. reported second-quarter profit that
beat expectations as trading revenue held up better than the bank
had forecast, sending shares higher.
J.P. Morgan reported a profit of $6 billion, or $1.46 a share,
compared with $6.5 billion, or $1.60 a share, a year earlier. The
latest earnings figures included a legal expense of 13 cents a
share.
Revenue was down 3% to $24.45 billion, and was down 2.3% on an
adjusted basis to $25.35 billion. Analysts polled by Thomson
Reuters expected a per-share profit of $1.29 on revenue of $23.76
billion.
Shares popped 2.8% in recent premarket trading as results beat
analyst estimates.
J.P. Morgan's earnings report comes just two weeks after Chief
Executive James Dimon publicly disclosed that he has throat cancer.
The 58-year-old Mr. Dimon has said he would continue to be actively
involved in the company during his treatment and that the cancer is
curable. He is expected to be on conference calls Tuesday morning
to discuss the quarterly results, his first public remarks since
announcing the diagnosis.
During the quarter, J.P. Morgan reported that its markets
revenue--which includes revenue from its large fixed income arm as
well as from equities trading--fell 14% from a year earlier to
$4.65 billion.
The decline was much less severe than the 20% that J.P. Morgan
in May had predicted and is roughly in line with the 15% decline
that rival Citigroup Inc. reported on Monday.
J.P. Morgan's better-than-expected trading results come after
analysts recently noted that the trading activity levels have
improved in recent weeks, with Citigroup analyst Keith Horowitz
predicting that markets revenue for the industry could be flat to
up in the second half of the year.
Revenue from fixed-income markets--one of J.P. Morgan's
traditional strengths--was down 15% from the prior year on what the
bank said was "historically low levels of volatility and lower
client activity across products. Equity Markets revenue of $1.2
billion was down 10% from the year earlier, on what J.P. Morgan
said was weaker derivatives revenue.
J.P. Morgan's litigation expense for the quarter was $700
million, flat with a year-earlier, but up from the first-quarter,
in which J.P. Morgan reported no material legal expenses.
Meanwhile, compensation expense dropped 5% from a year earlier
and 3.2% from the prior quarter to $7.61 billion.
Investors are expected to focus much of their attention on Mr.
Dimon's health. Few large banks associate their image with a strong
single leader as much as J.P. Morgan, where Mr. Dimon has been both
chairman and CEO since the end of 2006. Mr. Dimon's diagnosis has
raised questions both about the bank's succession plan as well as
the extent to which the CEO will have to pull back from regular
duties while undergoing treatment.
But J.P. Morgan got a leg up from investment banking fees, as
equity underwriting revenue jumped rose about 4% and advisory
revenue jumped 31%. That strength was somewhat offset by debt
underwriting revenue, which dropped about 6%.
The bank again showed weakness in its mortgage business as it,
like its peers, continues to reel from a sharp slowdown in
refinancing.
Mortgage originations of $16.8 billion fell 66% from the prior
year although these were roughly flat from the prior quarter.
Mortgage banking profit was $709 million, down $433 million from
the prior year.
Still, the bank in its second-quarter results highlighted
several positive signals from consumers and businesses. Average
loan balances in the commercial banking unit were $140.8 billion,
up 7% from a year earlier and 2% from the prior quarter.
J.P. Morgan has been reining in costs as a way of making up for
sluggish revenue growth. For the latest period, the bank said its
noninterest expense fell 2.7% from a year earlier to $15.43
billion. J.P. Morgan last month said it could cut pay for some of
its investment-bank employees if trading revenue stays weak, while
The Wall Street Journal recently reported that the bank's Chief
Operating Officer, Matt Zames, has redoubled the firm's focus on
cost cutting to include relocating employees, revising third-party
contracts and re-examining relationships dealing with market data,
among others,
The bank's results were hurt by higher provisions for loans that
could potentially sour. The credit-loss provision totaled $692
million, compared with a provision of $47 million a year
earlier.
--Emily Glazer contributed to this article.
Write to Saabira Chaudhuri at saabira.chaudhuri@wsj.com
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