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JPMorgan Chase & Co. Strategy & Business Analysis
Founded 2000• New York
JPMorgan Chase & Co. Revenue Breakdown & Fiscal Growth
A detailed chronological record of JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s revenue performance.
Key Takeaways
- Latest Performance: JPMorgan Chase & Co. reported strong revenue growth in their latest filings, driven by core product expansion.
- Margin Analysis: The company maintains healthy profitability ratios despite increasing operational costs in the sector.
- Long-term Trend: Chronological data confirms a consistent upward trajectory in annual income over the last decade.
Historical Revenue Timeline
Financial Narrative
JPMorgan Chase's financial performance across the past decade represents the most consistent record of earnings generation and capital return in global banking, driven by the diversification of its universal banking model and the management discipline that has maintained a fortress balance sheet through multiple economic cycles.
Net revenues reached approximately 158 billion USD in FY2024, a record level that reflected both the elevated net interest income environment sustained by Federal Reserve rate policy and the recovery in investment banking and markets revenues from the 2022 trough. Net income attributable to common shareholders reached approximately 58 billion USD in FY2024, generating a return on tangible common equity of approximately 21% — a profitability level that exceeds most global banking peers and approaches the returns generated by best-in-class consumer financial companies.
The interest rate environment has been the most important macroeconomic variable for JPMorgan Chase's earnings over the FY2022 to FY2024 period. The Federal Reserve's rate increases from near-zero to a 5.25 to 5.5 percent target range drove JPMorgan Chase's NII from approximately 56 billion USD in FY2021 to approximately 89 billion USD in FY2024 — a 59% increase over three years driven primarily by the repricing of assets while deposit costs lagged. This NII expansion has been the single largest driver of JPMorgan Chase's earnings growth over this period, exceeding the contribution of any individual business unit or strategic initiative.
Capital adequacy is managed with exceptional discipline relative to regulatory requirements. JPMorgan Chase's Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio stood at approximately 15.3% as of year-end FY2024, comfortably above the regulatory minimum of approximately 11.5% including applicable buffers. Management has historically operated with a capital buffer above regulatory minimums to preserve optionality for strategic acquisitions, economic downturns, and regulatory requirement changes — a conservatism that periodically draws criticism from shareholders who prefer more aggressive capital returns but that has proven its value in periods of market stress.
Capital return to shareholders has been substantial despite the capital conservation emphasis. JPMorgan Chase returned approximately 26 billion USD to shareholders in FY2024 through a combination of share repurchases and dividends — approximately 4.50 USD per share in dividends plus additional buybacks. The dividend has been increased consistently for over a decade, reflecting management's confidence in earnings sustainability and its commitment to rewarding long-term shareholders.
Credit quality has been managed conservatively through the economic cycle, with JPMorgan Chase's loan loss provisioning practices reflecting a through-the-cycle approach that builds reserves during growth periods rather than waiting for credit deterioration to become visible. Net charge-offs in the consumer loan portfolio have remained within historical norms even as credit card balances grew rapidly in the post-COVID normalization period, reflecting the quality of underwriting discipline maintained during the origination phase.
The First Republic Bank acquisition in May 2023 — completed as a government-facilitated transaction following First Republic's failure — added approximately 200 billion USD in assets, a high-quality jumbo mortgage portfolio, and a significant private wealth client base at favorable economic terms. This acquisition demonstrated JPMorgan Chase's continued ability to act as a buyer of last resort during banking system stress while simultaneously advancing its own strategic interests — specifically its expansion in private wealth management and California market presence.
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