Tuesday was not just the day before the Federal Reserve announced its latest rate cut. It was also the day that the leader of U.S. bank stocks dropped like a rock.
JPMorgan (JPM) fell by 4.66% on the day, after the CEO of its Consumer & Community Banking unit startled traders by explaining that its expenses are likely to rise next year. The culprits: inflation and competition. The result? A lot of lost market cap.
One has to wonder if the concerns about the broader economy and market conditions expressed by CEO Jamie Dimon are starting to hit home.
JPM still trades at a reasonable valuation, at under 16x trailing and forward earnings. And it has been almost like a backup government entity at times of crisis, such as in 2008 and again during the more recent regional bank crisis a few years ago. But is its own house in order?
Wall Street analysts tend to think so. “Strong Buy” ratings dominate, and have for a while. However, I personally take those grades with a grain of salt. They tend to be cheerleaders and front-runners, and only as good as a bull market. We’ll put that to the test in just about a month, when JPM again acts as a sort of leadoff hitter for earnings season.
The daily looks a lot like many other large cap stocks I track. That is, rangebound. Or, more bluntly, very boring and not the stuff of which confident decisions can currently be made. But with the Fed rate cut announced Wednesday, and likely days of follow-on reaction to come, we might get a clue soon.
After all, at stake is the next major bend in the yield curve. That is, while we know rates are more likely to come down in the intermediate term than go up, the longer-term part of the bond market is still very much up for grabs.
A tug of war exists between the case for higher rates (U.S. debt is too high and not being dealt with, plus lingering inflation) and lower rates (recession concerns and flight to quality). JPM, as a systemically important bank, is likely a beneficiary of higher long-term rates. Because it can lend at higher rates while short-term borrowing costs from the Fed drop.