Shares of JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs are seeing strong returns Thursday morning, lifting the Dow Jones Industrial Average into positive territory.
JPMorgan Chase produced one of the best quarterly results of its peer growth relative to expectations. Learn more about JPM stock here.
JPMorgan Chase is out with its fourth-quarter results and it's a blowout report. Here are the highlights: Profit was up 50%. That amounted to $4.81 a share, well above what analysts polled by FactSet expected at $4.
How JPMorgan Chase performs in 2025 will largely depend on how economic conditions evolve. A backdrop of a firm labor market and durable credit conditions would support the bank's income growth. Investors comfortable with this baseline scenario have good reason to buy or hold the stock.
Activity on Wall Street helped buoy the bank’s fourth-quarter earnings.
JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs and Citi kicked off earnings season on Wednesday with their December-quarter results.
Senate Banking Committee member Elizabeth Warren is concerned the Federal Reserve may be “turning a blind eye” to alleged misconduct by America’s largest bank.
It’s Wall Street bonus season, and employees at JPMorgan Chase are learning whether they will get a pay bump. Some workers are already voicing their displeasure with the bank. This week ...
Read: JPMorgan Chase's Jamie Dimon plans to stick around 'for a few more years' as CEO Nearly two-thirds of analysts polled by FactSet rate JPM a buy or the equivalent, although their consensus 12 ...
JPMorgan’s net income soared 50% to more than $14 billion in the fourth quarter as the bank’s profit and revenue easily beat Wall Street forecasts, and other major banks reported banner earnings for the year.
JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said this week that asset prices, including stocks, were "kind of inflated, by any measure," during a CNBC interview at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
The P/E ratio measures a company's stock price relative to its earnings per share. A high P/E suggests that a stock has become expensive compared to its earnings - a crucial fundamental for a company - and is potentially overvalued.