Financial Results
JP Morgan Reports Higher Asset, Wealth Net Income

As is customary, the US-listed group started the quarterly financial reporting season.
JP Morgan kicked
off the fourth quarter of the 2023 reporting season by announcing
that net income in its asset and wealth management arm –
including its private bank – rose 7 per cent year-on-year to
$1.217 billion. Net revenue in the AWM business rose 11 per cent
to $5.095 billion.
Last year, JP Morgan bought crisis-hit First Republic (one of
several banks, such as Silicon Valley Bank) that was hit by the
impact of rising interest rates, among other factors. When the
First Republic acquisition is taken out, net revenue rose 2 per
cent on a year ago, the US bank said in a statement on
Friday.
Revenue rose on the back of higher management fees resulting
from strong net inflows and higher average market levels,
although lower net interest income offset some of that impact. On
the cost side of the equation, noninterest rose 12 per cent, or
11 per cent excluding the First Republic deal, driven by higher
compensation, growth in private banker advisor teams, and the
effect of closing the JP Morgan Asset Management China
acquisition.
Total assets under management stood at $3.4 trillion; total
client assets were $5 trillion at the end of December 2023, each
rising 24 per cent.
Across the JP Morgan business, covering all divisions, net income
fell 15 per cent on a year ago in Q4 2023, to $9.307
billion. Net revenue rose 12 per cent to $38.574 billion,
the firm said.
At the end of December JP Morgan had a Common Equity Tier 1 ratio
– a standard measure of a bank’s capital buffer – of 15 per cent
on an advanced basis. The bank had a return on common equity of
12 per cent, down from 16 per cent a year earlier.