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 Earnings season for Q2-2024

As usual, the first to report were the big banks. I always look at credit provisioning and charge offs as indicators of economic weakness. 

JP Morgan (JPM) confirmed guidance for the rest of the year for earnings and revenue; earnings growth will be less than 1%, while revenues will grow at a modest 5%. JPM did increase credit loss provisioning to $3.05Bn, higher than 2.8Bn earlier, this is also higher than 1.88Bn in Q1, and 2.9Bn in Q2. Charge offs (mainly on credit card delinquencies) were also higher by $820Mn at $2.2Bn. Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan, was cautious as usual, JPM tends to over-provide for losses and has been doing it for years.

Wells Fargo (WFC) didn’t need to increase provisioning, but its charge offs were also higher – net loan charge-offs, as a percentage of average total loans, increased to 0.57% from 0.50% in Q1 and 0.32% in Q2 2023.  WFC’s bigger problem is net interest income, it now expects full-year 2024 net interest income to fall 8%-9% from 2023’s $52.4B, compared with its prior guidance of down 7%-9%.

Citi (C) was mixed with higher charge offs but lower provisioning, and also commentary from the CEO, that lower FICO score customers are pulling back on spending. In addition, he’s seeing signs that delinquencies may be bending back down.

These don’t set off any alarm bells but does confirm what we’ve been hearing for most of the year, that outside of tech, the economy is lackluster, and that inflation is stunting growth, especially for lower and middle income groups.