JPMorgan stock (NYSE: JPM) tanked nearly 5% on Tuesday after the bank’s consumer banking chief warned that 2026 expenses will reach $105 billion.
Wall Street wasn’t pricing in this magnitude of expense, as they are over 4% above market expectations.
Marianne Lake’s comments at the Goldman Sachs Financial Services Conference sent shockwaves through the banking sector, with Citigroup and Bank of America shares also tumbling.
Tuesday’s plunge marks the steepest intraday drop since April and raises some critical questions for investors.
JPMorgan cited “volume and growth-related expenses” as the primary driver of expenses next year.
It includes incentive compensation for financial advisors, product marketing, branch construction, and artificial intelligence investments.
It is to be noted that strategic investments and “structural impacts from inflation” rounded out the list.
What stung investors most was the magnitude of the miss. Consensus analyst estimates had pegged 2026 spending at roughly $101.1 billion, already steep.
JPMorgan’s $105 billion projection blew past even the highest Street estimates by $4 billion.
Lake tried to soften the blow by citing bright spots like investment banking fees, which is expected to rise in the low single digits.
Moreover, the market’s revenue is also climbing in the low teens, and credit card account additions are remaining on pace for 10.5 million accounts in 2025.
But these positives were overshadowed by the cost warning and Lake’s comment that the consumer environment remains “somewhat fragile.”
JPMorgan became the worst performer in the KBW Bank Index, with the stock plunging nearly 5% and high trading volume signaling institutional capitulation.
The contagion spread immediately, with Citigroup and Bank of America both declining over 1% as traders recalibrated expectations for the entire sector’s cost discipline.
The broader concern is margin compression. If JPMorgan can’t grow revenues proportionally to expense growth, return on equity, a key banking metric, could suffer.
The bank’s ROE stands around 15–17% already, and cost inflation threatens to pressure that figure in 2026.
Some analysts viewed the guidance as a necessary investment in technology and talent to maintain competitive positioning.
Others questioned whether $105 billion in spending signals management has lost grip on cost control.
One analyst flagged that the consumer banking division, which Lake oversees, is the “key driver” of cost growth, raising questions about whether volume gains justify the outlay.
The traders will closely watch the fourth-quarter earnings in January, which are expected to reveal if investment banking and trading momentum is materialising.
The investors will also track JPMorgan’s cost-to-income ratio and efficiency metrics closely as these will determine if spending is generating commensurate revenue growth.
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