NEW YORK, Feb 7, 2026, 11:25 AM EST — The market is closed.
- JPMorgan finished Friday at $322.40, marking a 3.95% gain.
- The bank wrapped up a $3 billion subordinated notes sale, according to a Feb. 5 filing.
- On deck for next week: investors will be watching for delayed U.S. jobs numbers, fresh inflation figures, and an update from JPMorgan slated for Feb. 23.
JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM) jumped 3.95% to wrap up Friday at $322.40, capping the week with a solid gain for the nation’s largest bank. 1
A broad rally across U.S. stocks sent the Dow closing above 50,000 for the first time ever, with the S&P 500 jumping 1.97% and the Nasdaq climbing 2.18%. 2
The focus has shifted—it’s not just about company news now, but rates and where investors are putting their money. “Rotation is the dominant theme this year,” said Angelo Kourkafas, senior global investment strategist at Edward Jones. With the jobs report pushed back to Wednesday and a CPI reading coming Friday, it’s a loaded week that could shake up expectations for rate cuts. 3
The Dow’s record became news on its own. “What’s driven it recently has been the broadening … other than just the tech, AI trade,” said Chuck Carlson, chief executive at Horizon Investment Services. 4
JPMorgan jumped more than its major rivals on Friday. Bank of America climbed 2.89%, Wells Fargo tacked on 2.63%. Financial stocks broadly caught a lift from the rally. 5
JPMorgan, in an 8-K filing, said it wrapped up a $3 billion public sale of fixed-to-floating rate subordinated notes maturing in 2037. Subordinated notes rank behind other debt in the queue for repayment, and the “fixed-to-floating” label means the rate begins fixed before switching to a benchmark reset. 6
Bank stocks are still riding the macro wave. Jobless claims in the U.S. jumped higher than forecast last week, as winter weather took its toll. The Labor Department numbers landed ahead of January’s jobs report, which Reuters noted was postponed due to a short federal government shutdown. “We see the data as reflective of ongoing judicious hiring practices,” said Nationwide’s Oren Klachkin. 7
That next jobs report isn’t just a headline risk for JPMorgan. A weaker print could pull bond yields lower, putting pressure on lending margins. But if the number comes in strong, concerns about persistent inflation and higher funding costs could resurface fast.
The momentum driving the stock higher isn’t a one-way street. A fresh batch of data next week could easily reignite the growth jitters that rattled tech earlier, or a sharp turn in rate expectations might just as fast erase banks’ gains.
JPMorgan wrapped up the week trading under its 52-week high of $337.25, but still well clear of the $202.16 low, market data show. That doesn’t give the bank much leeway for disappointing numbers on the tape anytime soon. 8
Traders are already eyeing Feb. 23. That’s when JPMorgan has scheduled a “Company Update” event in New York, set for 4:30 p.m. Eastern—firm overview, executive Q&A, the works. 9