Date: October 14, 2025 (Europe/Berlin)
U.S. bank earnings season opened with a clean sweep of beats from JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo, all reporting Q3 2025 results on Tuesday. A resurgent deal calendar and steadier trading flows boosted results across the Street, while credit costs stayed manageable and management teams struck a cautiously optimistic tone about activity into year-end.
JPMorgan Chase (JPM)
- Headline results: Net income $14.39B, EPS $5.07, revenue $46.4B; all ahead of consensus. Markets revenue and investment banking both delivered double-digit growth.
- Notable items: A $170M charge-off tied to a bankrupt auto-dealer exposure; management acknowledged the misstep while emphasizing strong underlying momentum.
- Color: Consumer spend held up and card volumes rose; management balanced upbeat activity commentary with warnings about macro uncertainty and elevated asset prices.
Goldman Sachs (GS)
- Headline results: EPS $12.25; profit +37% YoY on a sharp rebound in investment banking fees (+42%) and solid asset & wealth management inflows. Assets under supervision reached a record, and trading remained resilient.
- Deal flow: Advisory fees jumped as mega-cap M&A and IPOs returned, reinforcing the firm’s operating leverage to capital-markets normalization.
Citigroup (C)
- Headline results: Net income $3.8B, EPS $1.86; adjusted EPS $2.24 excluding a $726M loss from the partial Banamex sale. Broad-based revenue strength with Banking +34% and Markets +16.7%. Reported ROTCE near 8% (about 9.7% on an adjusted basis).
- Strategy & capital: Citi continued buybacks and dividends and highlighted progress toward its 10–11% ROTCE target as simplification efforts continue.
Wells Fargo (WFC)
- Headline results: Net income $5.59B ($1.66 per share), beating estimates. Provision fell to $681M, and management raised its ROTCE target to 17–18% following regulatory tailwinds earlier this year.
- Investment banking: Fees up ~25% with robust pipelines and healthier credit quality. Shares outperformed peers intraday on the guidance raise.
What’s Driving the Beats
- Dealmaking and issuance are back: A rebound in M&A and underwriting pipelines lifted advisory and equity/debt capital-markets fees across the complex.
- Trading tailwinds: Equity and FICC activity stayed constructive, delivering mid- to high-teens growth for several desks despite calmer volatility.
- Credit still benign: Loan-loss provisions remained contained and consumer indicators were sturdy, though banks flagged pockets of risk and a few idiosyncratic losses.
- Costs under control: Operating discipline and headcount rationalization supported positive operating leverage even where revenue gains were modest.
Market Reaction (intraday snapshot)
Bank stocks traded mixed: Wells Fargo gained as investors rewarded the higher ROTCE target, while JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs eased after strong year-to-date runs—typical “sell-the-news” dynamics into a crowded earnings week.
Outlook: What to Watch Next
- Q4 pipeline visibility: Management commentary on December closings and fee-pool sustainability will set the tone for year-end.
- Net interest income (NII) sensitivity: With rate-cut expectations in flux, updated NII guideposts—especially at deposit-heavy franchises—remain key.
- Capital return: With earnings power rebuilt and stress-test headroom, buybacks and dividend trajectories are in focus, particularly at Citi and Wells.
- Next up: Bank of America and Morgan Stanley report Wednesday, Oct. 15, offering read-throughs to consumer trends (BAC) and wealth/FICC mix (MS).
Conclusion
The first wave of Q3 bank results landed squarely ahead of expectations, validating the thesis that a thaw in capital markets plus stable credit can re-energize earnings power. While executives aren’t blind to macro and valuation risks, the combination of robust pipelines, disciplined costs, and improved regulatory overhangs leaves the sector on firmer footing heading into year-end.
FAQ
Which U.S. banks reported today?
JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo.
Who posted the strongest YoY profit growth?
Goldman Sachs, with profit up roughly 37% on a powerful rebound in investment banking.
Did anyone raise targets or guidance?
Wells Fargo lifted its ROTCE target to 17–18%; others emphasized healthy pipelines rather than formal guidance.
Any red flags?
Select credit pockets and idiosyncratic losses (e.g., JPM’s auto-dealer charge-off), plus executive caution around elevated asset valuations.
Who reports tomorrow?
Bank of America and Morgan Stanley on Oct. 15 (pre-market).
Disclaimer
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, an offer, or a solicitation to buy or sell any securities. Banking results and market prices can change intraday; always review company filings, earnings materials, and official guidance before making investment decisions.




