JPMorgan Chase delivered a solid Q4 2024, with net income of $14.0 billion and EPS of $4.81 on revenue of $43.7 billion, yielding ROTCE of 21% for the quarter. Management highlighted broad strength across the franchise, including record long-term net inflows in Asset & Wealth Management (AWM), strong Markets performance, and continued balance sheet resilience. Full-year 2024 metrics remained robust: net income of ~$54 billion on an ROTCE of ~20% excluding notable items, with revenue totaling around $173 billion. The firm ended the quarter with a CET1 ratio of 15.7%, up 40 bps sequentially, supported by earnings, lower risk-weighted assets, OCI dynamics, and capital returns (including $4 billion of net share repurchases).
Looking forward, 2025 guidance emphasizes a normalization trajectory for net interest income (NII) ex-markets to roughly $90 billion, with total firm NII near $94 billion as markets NII expands while non-interest income remains a key driver through asset management, payments, and advisory activity. Expenses are guided to ~ $95 billion in 2025, reflecting ongoing investment in growth initiatives, technology, risk, and completion of modernization efforts. Management cautions that NII normalization will likely occur, but may be tempered by rate paths and deposit dynamics. The long-run outlook remains constructive for JPMorgan given franchise breadth, operating scale, and capital strength, though investors should monitor regulatory developments, macro risk, and the pace of deposit growth.
Overall, JPM remains a premier, diversified financial franchise with strong capital adequacy, resilient cash generation, and a disciplined approach to capital allocation. The balance of high-return areas (CIB, card-related lending, wealth inflows) against ongoing regulatory and macro risks defines the near-term trajectory, with a constructive medium-term path anchored in franchise strength and disciplined capital management.