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JPMorgan Beat on Revenue but Cut Its Net Interest Income Guidance. Here Is Why That Matters.

JPMorgan Chase reported Q1 2026 results this morning that beat on revenue but came with a cut to full-year net interest income guidance that sent the stock marginally lower despite the headline beat. Understanding the difference between those two data points is the key to understanding what this earnings season is actually telling the market about the health of the US economy.

April 14, 2026

The revenue beat reflected strong trading performance during a quarter that was, by any measure, one of the most volatile in recent years. When markets oscillate violently on daily geopolitical headlines, trading desks generate revenue. JPMorgan's markets business benefited from the elevated volatility across equities, commodities, and fixed income throughout March, and those revenues came in above what analysts had modeled.
The net interest income cut is a different signal entirely. NII is the spread between what a bank earns on loans and what it pays on deposits, and it is the most direct measure of how a bank profits from the interest rate environment. JPMorgan's management reduced its NII outlook because the rates environment is no longer moving in the direction they had modeled at the start of the year. As the Fed holds rates higher for longer, the rate that banks must pay to retain deposits has remained elevated, compressing the spread.
The Magnificent Seven's forward price-to-earnings ratio has declined to 1.2 times that of the S&P 500, down from 1.7 times previously, according to JPMorgan's own research. That valuation compression is the clearest statistical signal that the growth-over-value trade of the prior three years has undergone a meaningful reset. JPMorgan's quarter sets the tone. The rest of the banks this week will tell us whether it is an outlier or a template.

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Goldman Sachs Beat. JPMorgan Is Reporting Now. Here Is the AI Thread Running Through Both.

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Goldman Sachs Beat. JPMorgan Is Reporting Now. Here Is the AI Thread Running Through Both.

Goldman Sachs delivered Q1 results Monday that beat analyst expectations on both earnings per share and revenue, posting EPS of $17.55 against a consensus of $16.30 on revenue of $17.23 billion. But beneath the headline figures, the most interesting element of Goldman's quarter was not the trading revenue or investment banking pipeline. It was the language around AI.