UPDATE: JPMorgan Credit-Card Results Suggest More Pain Ahead
October 14 2009 - 1:57PM
Dow Jones News
JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s (JPM) credit-card unit swung to a
loss of $700 million in the third quarter from a profit of $292
million a year earlier, suggesting hopes for a smooth turnaround in
the U.S. economy may be premature.
The latest earnings Wednesday from a top U.S. credit-card issuer
indicate that consumers continue to struggle to find their
financial footing amid high joblessness. Credit-card companies face
the prospect of more borrowers falling behind on payments as
strapped consumers, heading into the holiday season, increase
spending on their plastic.
"Card is having a tough time," Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said
of JPMorgan's credit-card business during a conference call
Wednesday with investors.
The U.S. unemployment rate rose to a 26-year high of 9.8% in
September.
Not all consumer-lending lines are hurting at JPMorgan. New auto
loans totaled $6.9 billion in the third quarter, up 82% from a year
ago and 30% from the second quarter, fueled by the government's
"cash for clunkers" rebate program. The clunkers program offered as
much as $4,500 to customers who traded in old vehicles for new,
more fuel-efficient models.
But credit-card issuers are battling more than the recession.
These companies, including Capital One Financial Corp. (COF), Bank
of America Corp. (BAC), Citigroup Inc. (C), Discover Financial
Services Inc. (DFS) and American Express Co. (AXP), are coping with
sweeping legislation to protect consumers that will bite into
income.
To fight the losses, card issuers are scaling back on credit and
getting tougher on whom they lend to. At JPMorgan, credit cards
issued through its retail bank branches were down 16% from a year
ago and 18% from the prior quarter.
"Broadly speaking, you can't expect significant improvement in
credit metrics given these pressures," said Sanjay Sakhrani, an
analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods. Sakhrani doesn't cover
JPMorgan.
The $700 million net loss at JPMorgan's card-services unit was
fueled by an increasing volume of souring credit-card loans and
higher reserves as the financial services giant squirreled away
more funds to cushion against potential future losses. Net revenue
of $5.2 billion, a 33% jump from a year ago due to the acquisition
of Washington Mutual and wider loan spreads, offset some red
ink.
Borrowers at least a month behind on their card payments
increased to 5.38% in the third quarter from 5.27% in the second
quarter and 3.69% a year ago. Rising delinquencies, a key gauge of
future losses, are a red flag for issuers because higher
delinquencies force them to put more capital aside to offset
potential losses; ultimately, companies must write off loans if
customers can't pay up.
JPMorgan Chase and its peers have been hurt by cutbacks in card
spending, which dent the fees earned through credit-card
transactions.
JPMorgan Chase wrote off 9.41% of its card loans, including
those packaged into bonds, compared with 8.97% in the second
quarter and 5% a year ago.
Its portfolio of average-managed credit-card loans, including
those packaged into securities, shrunk 3% from the second quarter
to $169.2 billion.
JPMorgan's results come a day ahead of when major U.S.
credit-card issuers will release monthly data on the performance of
credit-card loans.
-By Aparajita Saha-Bubna, Dow Jones Newswires; 617-654-6729;
aparajita.saha-bubna@dowjones.com
(Marshall Eckblad in New York contributed to this article.)