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JPMorgan stock slides after hours as private-credit jitters drag U.S. banks
28 February 2026
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JPMorgan stock slides after hours as private-credit jitters drag U.S. banks

New York, Feb 27, 2026, 18:02 EST — After-hours

  • JPMorgan stock slid 4.2%, trading at $300.30 after hours.
  • Bank shares dropped as investors grew anxious again about potential credit losses linked to private-credit transactions.
  • Next up: traders are eyeing the March 6 U.S. jobs report, hunting for fresh signals on rates.

Shares of JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) slipped on Friday, dropping 4.2% in after-hours to $300.30. Earlier, the stock had dipped as low as $295.16, closing sharply lower than Thursday’s finish at $313.39.

The action landed the largest U.S. bank squarely in the thick of a sweeping bank selloff. The KBW bank index dropped roughly 4.9%. Goldman Sachs tumbled 7.5%, while Wells Fargo and Morgan Stanley each slid around 6% as investors zeroed in on credit risk and what artificial intelligence could mean for borrowers.

Why it matters now: Investors have been rethinking the value of “private credit” — those loans pushed out by funds, not banks — following fresh concerns over where the risk lands when deals unravel. Goldman Sachs has told clients its private credit business is seeing fewer withdrawals than rivals, and flagged that it “does not underestimate the risk of AI disruption,” language that’s kept lenders and asset managers on edge. Reuters

Stocks took another leg down, catching a market that was already turning cautious as February wrapped up. “We were reminded there are still some cracks out there,” said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group, after the slide—blamed on AI disruption costs, tariff questions and persistent geopolitical worries. Reuters

Worries over asset-backed lending intensified after the collapse of Market Financial Solutions, a UK mortgage lender now under the microscope for its collateral practices. Administrators have raised the alarm: assets may have been pledged more than once, and there’s a possible 930 million-pound ($1.25 billion) hole in collateral. “We’re starting to continue to see these types of things pop up,” said Joe Saluzzi, co-head of equity trading at Themis Trading. Reuters

JPMorgan faced renewed legal scrutiny late in the session. A group of investors who purchased over $230 million in Tricolor asset-backed notes—securities tied to bundles of auto loans—filed a lawsuit against JPMorgan, Barclays, and Fifth Third in Manhattan federal court. The complaint accuses the banks of overlooking red flags and facilitating what investors call a “Ponzi-like fraud.” Reuters

The latest inflation numbers did little to lift sentiment. Producer prices climbed 0.5% in January, according to the Labor Department, with the “core” reading—stripping out food and energy—up a sharper 0.8%. Economists suggested this could keep the Federal Reserve on the sidelines. “Wider margins for producers could add some upside for consumer costs,” noted Ben Ayers, senior economist at Nationwide. Michael Hanson at JPMorgan flagged that the firmer print could stoke worries about persistent inflation. Reuters

Investors will get their hands on the U.S. jobs report next week, the first key data point ahead, and the focus is clear: how many job cuts are coming from AI, and how many are just part of the standard cycle? “There is still ‘back and forth about who might be the victim’” as companies roll out new AI tools, said Kristina Hooper, chief market strategist at Man Group. Reuters

The Bureau of Labor Statistics has marked 8:30 a.m. ET on March 6 for the February Employment Situation report, according to its official release calendar.

The January personal consumption expenditures (PCE) inflation report, which the Fed uses as its key inflation measure, has been pushed back and is now scheduled for release on March 13.

The Fed meets again on March 17-18.

JPMorgan Asset Management secured a green light from Chinese regulators for a product under the Mutual Recognition of Funds scheme, although the firm gave no specifics about the offering.

The risks are clear enough. Should fresh credit troubles emerge, bank shares could take another leg down—investors often don’t wait for the full damage to show up on the books, and legal stories can muddy the waters further. Jefferies stands out among the laggards; according to Bloomberg News, it held $135 million tied to Market Financial Solutions.

JPMorgan’s next big moment arrives March 6, with the jobs data landing premarket. That’s when traders will be forced to revisit their timelines for elevated rates.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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