JPMorgan Chase authorized a $50 billion share repurchase program and raised its quarterly dividend by 10% within hours of clearing the Federal Reserve's annual stress test. The dividend moves to $1.25 per share from $1.15, effective in the third quarter. The buyback authorization replaces the prior program and carries no expiration date.
The Federal Reserve released stress-test results confirming JPMorgan maintained capital ratios well above regulatory minimums under adverse scenarios including 10% unemployment and a 40% decline in commercial real estate values. The bank's Common Equity Tier 1 ratio remained above 13% throughout the hypothetical downturn, leaving management room to return capital without breaching buffers. JPMorgan executed the announcement before markets closed, a timing choice that reflects pre-cleared board approval and legal coordination ahead of the Fed's public release.
The immediate deployment matters because it sets the baseline for Wells Fargo, Bank of America, and Citigroup, all of which passed the same stress scenarios. JPMorgan's $50 billion authorization represents roughly 4% of its current market capitalization and exceeds the $30 billion program announced last year. The dividend increase marks the fifth consecutive year of raises following the pandemic pause, returning the payout ratio to levels last seen in early 2020. Allocators tracking yield-on-cost for legacy positions will see the effective yield climb to approximately 2.4% at current prices, a figure that remains competitive within the financials index but trails regional banks carrying higher payout ratios and lower absolute scale.
The timing also matters for credit spreads. JPMorgan's subordinated debt traded 8 basis points tighter in after-hours activity, reflecting reduced equity dilution risk and signaling that bondholders view the capital return as confirmation of earnings durability rather than balance-sheet stress. The bank's return on tangible common equity has held above 17% for three consecutive quarters, supported by net interest income that remains elevated despite deposit migration and commercial loan growth in the mid-single digits. Management has guided to full-year net interest income of approximately $89 billion, a figure that assumes two additional rate cuts by year-end and no recession.
Operators and allocators should watch for peer announcements over the next 72 hours, particularly from Bank of America and Wells Fargo, which are expected to authorize buybacks in the $25 billion to $35 billion range. Citigroup's announcement will carry more weight given its ongoing restructuring and lower capital ratios; any buyback above $15 billion would signal management confidence in the turnaround timeline. The next quarterly earnings cycle in mid-July will provide updated guidance on net interest income and loan loss reserves, both of which will determine whether the current buyback pace is sustainable into 2025.
The Federal Reserve's next stress-test cycle begins in February 2025 with scenario design, and the results will be released in June 2025. JPMorgan's current authorization provides flexibility to adjust repurchase velocity quarter by quarter without returning to the board, a structural advantage that smaller peers lack.