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Analysts Boost JPMorgan Chase Price Target Amid Strong Earnings and Upgraded Growth Outlook

Published
17 Jul 24
Updated
02 Apr 26
Views
16.7k
02 Apr
US$312.37
AnalystConsensusTarget's Fair Value
US$337.75
7.5% undervalued intrinsic discount
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Author's Valuation

US$337.757.5% undervalued intrinsic discount

AnalystConsensusTarget Fair Value

Last Update 02 Apr 26

Fair value Decreased 2.04%

JPM: Future Spending On Branch And Card Expansion Will Sustain Earnings Power

JPMorgan Chase's updated analyst price target reflects a modest trim of about $7 per share to $337.75, as analysts factor in recent target reductions, a slightly lower implied future P/E, and ongoing conversations around spending, earnings power, and risk management across the large bank group.

Analyst Commentary

Recent research on JPMorgan Chase shows a mix of optimism and caution as analysts reassess price targets, earnings power, and spending plans. The updates cluster around the bank's investor communications, private credit exposure, and broader views on large diversified banks.

Bullish Takeaways

  • Bullish analysts highlight that large diversified banks, including JPMorgan, are viewed as well positioned to handle private credit loans, even as collateral values on certain software related exposures are written down. This supports confidence in risk management and balance sheet flexibility.
  • Some bullish analysts point to investor day commentary as a support for higher long term earnings assumptions. At least one firm has raised longer dated EPS views and kept price targets near or above the current group average, which feeds into more constructive views on JPMorgan's long term earnings capacity.
  • There is an ongoing argument from bullish analysts that JPMorgan continues to deliver what they describe as best in class results, with potential for further market share gains. They see this as justifying premium valuation multiples within the large bank group.
  • Several recent reports include raised or relatively high price targets, sometimes around or above US$350, as analysts factor in potential benefits from areas like card partnerships and broader capital markets activity. They see these factors as supporting growth and capital return potential over time.

Bearish Takeaways

  • Bearish analysts have lowered price targets by amounts ranging from single digits to over US$40. This signals that some see less upside at prior valuation levels and are recalibrating implied P/E multiples for JPMorgan.
  • There are concerns around higher spending, with some research focusing on whether management can convincingly show that elevated investment will translate into stronger earnings and returns. This introduces execution risk into long term models.
  • At least one firm has moved to a neutral or peer level rating, reinforcing the idea that not all analysts view the current risk reward as compelling, especially when comparing JPMorgan to other large banks where they see similar drivers for return on tangible equity and earnings growth.
  • Some cautious analysts frame recent target cuts across the sector as a signal that expectations for balance sheet growth, revenue mix, and margin recovery may need to be tempered. This can weigh on how much investors are willing to pay for future earnings at current prices.

What's in the News

  • JPMorgan Chase plans to open more than 160 new branches in over 30 states and renovate nearly 600 locations as part of a multibillion dollar effort to expand access to financial services, including low to moderate income and rural communities, with 1,100 new hires tied to this phase of growth (company event details / FT).
  • The bank is set to take over Apple’s credit card program from Goldman Sachs, adding roughly US$20b in balances to its credit card operation in a co branded program that has been in the works for over a year (WSJ).
  • JPMorgan is restricting some lending to private credit funds after markdowns on certain software related loans in their portfolios. This move has been reported as another sign of stress in the US$1.8t private credit market (Bloomberg).
  • JPMorgan issued a statement saying it believes President Trump’s lawsuit over account closures has no merit. The bank reiterated that it does not close accounts for political or religious reasons and cites legal or regulatory risk as the driver when accounts are closed (company event details / Bloomberg, NYT, CNBC, Fox News).
  • Naveen Mallela, global co head of JPMorgan’s blockchain unit Kinexys, is departing after 11 years at the bank. Kinexys continues to process large daily transaction volumes and expand services such as account validation through partners like Nacha’s Phixius network (Bloomberg, company event details).

Valuation Changes

  • Fair Value: Trimmed slightly from $344.78 to $337.75 per share, a reduction of about $7 or roughly 2%.
  • Discount Rate: Adjusted marginally from 8.019951% to 8.019198766732666%, effectively unchanged for most practical purposes.
  • Revenue Growth: Tweaked from 7.566233% to 7.640371253729583%, indicating a small uplift in the assumed long term growth rate for $ revenue.
  • Net Profit Margin: Shifted fractionally from 30.152038% to 30.150891008267116%, effectively stable in the updated model.
  • Future P/E: Reduced from 16.967322x to 16.587199641435923x, reflecting a slightly lower multiple applied to projected earnings.
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Key Takeaways

  • Broad-based growth in wealth management, payments, and digital banking underscores JPMorgan's strong fee revenue outlook, improved customer acquisition, and enhanced margins.
  • Investments in new financial technologies and balanced business expansion position the firm for sustained resilience and competitive gains across evolving market cycles.
  • Intensifying fintech competition, strict regulations, business line volatility, demographic challenges, and product commoditization threaten JPMorgan's growth, pricing power, and long-term profitability.

Catalysts

About JPMorgan Chase
    Operates as a financial services company worldwide.
What are the underlying business or industry changes driving this perspective?
  • Continued strong growth in client investment assets (+14% YoY) and assets under management (+18% YoY) in both Wealth and Asset Management, supported by rising global wealth and healthy inflows, points to JPMorgan's ability to capture expanding demand for sophisticated financial services; this should drive higher fee revenue and support long-term earnings growth.
  • Higher Payments revenue (up 3% YoY) and ongoing card fee/NII growth (Card revenue up 15% YoY with 9% growth in card outstandings and strong new card acquisition), reflect effective digital banking expansion; ongoing investment and leadership in digital platforms are expected to drive lower operating costs, stronger customer acquisition, and improved net margins.
  • Ongoing investment and active participation in tokenization, stablecoins, and payment innovations (as detailed in the deposit token discussion) positions JPMorgan to benefit competitively from the next wave of technology adoption in banking and payments, likely supporting both future revenue resilience and margin improvement.
  • The firm's diversified model (noted by balanced growth across CIB, Card, Asset/Wealth Management, and international expansion) along with robust deal pipelines, positions it to gain share and demonstrate resilience across macro cycles; this should underpin stable or increasing earnings even as economic conditions shift.
  • Management's confidence in organic and inorganic growth, ongoing capital deployment into new business lines (e.g., innovation economy middle market banking, international expansion), and ability to reinvest at high ROTCE levels, create a platform for structurally higher long-term revenue and earnings, even as regulatory frameworks evolve.
JPMorgan Chase Earnings and Revenue Growth

JPMorgan Chase Future Earnings and Revenue Growth

Assumptions

How have these above catalysts been quantified?

  • Analysts are assuming JPMorgan Chase's revenue will grow by 7.6% annually over the next 3 years.
  • Analysts assume that profit margins will shrink from 33.1% today to 30.2% in 3 years time.
  • Analysts expect earnings to reach $63.3 billion (and earnings per share of $25.79) by about April 2029, up from $55.7 billion today. The analysts are largely in agreement about this estimate.
  • In order for the above numbers to justify the price target of the analysts, the company would need to trade at a PE ratio of 16.6x on those 2029 earnings, up from 14.3x today. This future PE is greater than the current PE for the US Banks industry at 11.4x.
  • Analysts expect the number of shares outstanding to decline by 2.95% per year for the next 3 years.
  • To value all of this in today's terms, we will use a discount rate of 8.02%, as per the Simply Wall St company report.

Risks

What could happen that would invalidate this narrative?
  • The continued acceleration of digital disruption and fintech competition-including stablecoins, open banking, and payment innovation-poses a risk to JPMorgan's ability to defend its market share and fee-based revenue, as both management and analysts note growing activity from fintechs, stablecoin providers, and challenges related to interoperable digital solutions.
  • Increased regulatory scrutiny, complexity, and evolving capital rules such as G-SIB, LCR, SLR, CCAR, and the Basel III endgame could drive up compliance and operational costs, constrain capital deployment, and limit JPMorgan's flexibility, thereby putting long-term downward pressure on net margins and profitability.
  • There is a risk of overreliance on volatile business lines such as investment banking, trading, and markets revenues, where strong recent performance could prove unsustainable in less favorable macro or market cycles, increasing earnings and net margin volatility.
  • Prolonged demographic shifts in developed markets, such as aging populations and flat or declining deposit growth, may constrain the growth of core consumer banking and wealth management products, potentially capping revenue expansion over the long term.
  • Commoditization risk in lending and deposit products-including through open banking, price aggregation, and growing private credit markets-could further reduce JPMorgan's pricing power, compress net interest margins, and challenge efforts to sustain revenue and earnings growth.

Valuation

How have all the factors above been brought together to estimate a fair value?

  • The analysts have a consensus price target of $337.75 for JPMorgan Chase based on their expectations of its future earnings growth, profit margins and other risk factors.
  • However, there is a degree of disagreement amongst analysts, with the most bullish reporting a price target of $400.0, and the most bearish reporting a price target of just $288.0.
  • In order for you to agree with the analysts, you'd need to believe that by 2029, revenues will be $209.8 billion, earnings will come to $63.3 billion, and it would be trading on a PE ratio of 16.6x, assuming you use a discount rate of 8.0%.
  • Given the current share price of $295.38, the analyst price target of $337.75 is 12.5% higher.
  • We always encourage you to reach your own conclusions though. So sense check these analyst numbers against your own assumptions and expectations based on your understanding of the business and what you believe is probable.

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Disclaimer

AnalystConsensusTarget is a tool utilizing a Large Language Model (LLM) that ingests data on consensus price targets, forecasted revenue and earnings figures, as well as the transcripts of earnings calls to produce qualitative analysis. The narratives produced by AnalystConsensusTarget are general in nature and are based solely on analyst data and publicly-available material published by the respective companies. These scenarios are not indicative of the company's future performance and are exploratory in nature. Simply Wall St has no position in the company(s) mentioned. Simply Wall St may provide the securities issuer or related entities with website advertising services for a fee, on an arm's length basis. These relationships have no impact on the way we conduct our business, the content we host, or how our content is served to users. The price targets and estimates used are consensus data, and do not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and they do not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. Note that AnalystConsensusTarget's analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material.

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