High interest rates are getting more challenging for even the biggest banks
A key revenue source for three giant banks fell during the first three months of the year, showing that even the biggest financial institutions are struggling with the same challenges facing the rest of the industry as interest rates remain elevated.
JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Wells Fargo (WFC), and Citigroup (C) all said Friday that their net interest income dropped from the fourth quarter to the first quarter. It was down 4% at JPMorgan, 4% at Wells Fargo, and 2% at Citigroup.
For JPMorgan, it was its first sequential drop in nearly three years. Its stock fell by more than 6%, its largest single-day drop since 2020. The stock of Citigroup was down nearly 2%, while Wells Fargo was flat.
Net interest income is a critical measure for many banks, since it measures the difference between what banks earn on their assets and pay out on their deposits.
Smaller banks have struggled to boost this measure over the last year as interest rates and deposit costs soared. Now there are some signs in the first quarter that high rates are starting to weigh on growth even at the nation’s largest lenders.
JPMorgan said in a press release that its net interest income dropped due to “deposit margin compression and lower deposit balances.”
Depositors are seeking out higher yields, as they have at smaller banks, and moving their money into products such as certificates of deposits where JPMorgan has to pay a higher rate.
“As customers move out of checking and savings, they may choose to go into CDs,” CFO Jeremy Barnum told reporters Friday in response to a question from Yahoo Finance. “That means that the bank is paying more for the internal migration.”
“That is the sort of deposits migration that we’re expecting” for the rest of 2024, he added.
It is certainly still true that the big banks are better positioned than their rivals to withstand a period of elevated interest rates and that they will still be able to earn plenty of money from lending.
Citigroup’s net interest income in the first quarter, for example, was $1 billion higher than expected, and JPMorgan did boost an estimate of net interest income for all of 2024 to $89 billion, excluding trading, up from a previous estimate of $88 billion.
But that was flat when compared to 2023. Both Wells Fargo and Citigroup expect their net interest income to be down for the full year.