JPMorgan Chase reports Q2 earnings July 14 with consensus EPS of $5.49, up 10.7% from a year earlier, as investors focus on net interest income guidance.
"The revisions trend is positive as a whole, with Q2 estimates for JPMorgan modestly moving higher," Zacks Investment Research said in its Earnings Trends report. The consensus has increased 1.9% over the past month and 3% over the last three months.
Revenue is expected at $48.7 billion, up 8.5% from a year earlier, with the consensus range spanning $48.6 billion to $49 billion. JPMorgan's full-year NII guidance stands at about $103 billion, or $95 billion excluding markets revenue, after the bank trimmed its outlook in the first quarter. In Q1, the bank posted net income of $16.5 billion and EPS of $5.94 on revenue of $49.8 billion, a 10% increase year over year. The stock trades at about 15 times expected earnings and yields 1.8%.
The Q2 print will set the tone for the entire bank earnings season. Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo report later in the same week. A second NII cut would likely pressure the sector, while stabilization could push JPMorgan's stock — near record highs — higher. The Finance sector accounts for 16.4% of the S&P 500's expected forward 12-month earnings, with Q2 sector earnings expected to rise 12.5% on 8.1% higher revenue.
The Bitcoin ETF subplot
JPMorgan held 8.3 million shares of BlackRock's IBIT Bitcoin ETF as of its latest filing, a 175% increase quarter over quarter. The bank has also filed for tokenized money market funds on Ethereum, signaling a broader push into blockchain-based financial infrastructure. CEO Jamie Dimon, a longtime crypto skeptic, has softened his stance on stablecoins as regulatory frameworks develop. Any comments on the digital asset strategy during the July 14 earnings call could provide a meaningful data point for institutional adoption narratives.
What's at stake for holders
The guidance raise in Q1 showed management expects loan growth and trading revenue to sustain momentum. Investors will watch the July 14 call for updated NII guidance and any commentary on credit quality, particularly around private-credit exposure to software and data-center industries. The direction of the NII number — raised, held or cut — will determine whether JPMorgan's stock can hold its recent highs.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.