New York, July 11, 2026, 15:05 (EDT)
U.S. markets were shut Saturday. JPMorgan Chase & Co. NYSE:JPM finished Friday’s session at $336.47, about 2% off its 52-week high from June 25 at $343.4485. At a $901.58 billion market cap on Friday, regaining that high would tack on around $18.7 billion in value, topping the $16.5 billion JPMorgan booked in Q1.
JPMorgan is set to report Q2 earnings Tuesday, with results expected before 7 a.m. ET and a call scheduled for 8:30 a.m. June inflation numbers are also out that day, plus Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s first policy update to Congress. Bank headlines and rate speculation will both move the stock.
The gap is narrow in percentage terms, but it’s big in dollar value.
| JPMorgan valuation measure | Amount |
|---|---|
| Friday’s close | $336.47 |
| 52-week peak | $343.4485 |
| To hit high, gain needed | 2.1% |
| Market cap at close | $901.6 billion |
| Market cap rise at high | About $18.7 billion |
| Q1 net income | $16.5 billion |
JPMorgan picked up 0.6% from the close on July 2 to Friday, trailing the S&P 500’s 1.2% weekly move. Just 6.3 million shares traded Friday, which is 31% less than its 65-day average. The slow trading shows investors mostly held their positions near the high, without piling into the stock late. It’s a signal, not proof.
The Goldman Sachs Group Inc. NYSE:GS went into earnings week with the most momentum among the big banks. Bank of America Corp. NYSE:BAC closed a bit nearer to its 52-week high than JPMorgan. Citigroup Inc. NYSE:C logged the smallest drop in Friday trading volume.
| Stock | Friday close | Change since July 2 | Below 52-week high | Friday volume vs. 65-day average |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| JPMorgan | $336.47 | up 0.6% | 2.0% under | down 31% |
| Bank of America | $59.67 | up 1.6% | 1.9% below | off 39% |
| Citigroup | $140.79 | up 0.6% | 4.8% below | down 13% |
| Goldman Sachs | $1,055.18 | up 3.3% | 6.2% shy | down 48% |
July 2 marks the starting date since U.S. markets didn’t open July 3. Numbers are based on FactSet’s closing, volume, and 52-week price data.
JPMorgan sits close to the top on valuation, but it didn’t lead on momentum this week. The company turned in a solid quarter, likely enough to support its stock price. To push past the June high, management may have to raise guidance for trading, investment banking, loan growth or costs. Right now, just beating forecasts may not be enough.
Revenue is up. Coalition Greenwich expects market revenue at the biggest global banks to climb at least 15% from last year. Global investment-banking revenue rose 24% to $61.4 billion for the first half. JPMorgan kept its top spot for investment-banking revenue. Jamie Vickers at Coalition Greenwich called equities “the primary engine of growth.” But Morningstar’s Sean Dunlop warned the strong trading might not last after a very volatile first quarter. Reuters
Profit forecasts across the S&P 500 are steep, with analysts expecting second-quarter growth of 23.7%, based on LSEG numbers. Michael Reynolds, Glenmede’s investment strategy vice president, said there’s “a lot of factors coming to a head all at once” and cautioned that companies will need to post solid results to meet what the market has priced in. Reuters
Traders will get their first read on Tuesday, but markets may focus more on loan demand, credit-card losses and net interest income. Net interest income—the spread between what banks make from loans and securities and what they pay depositors—remains a key metric. A strong inflation print could lift hopes for higher rates, which would boost net interest income in the short run but pile on more strain for borrowers. Ameriprise chief market strategist Anthony Saglimbene said stubborn inflation could “push odds of a rate increase higher by year end.” Reuters
But investors are still watching costs and credit risk on the downside. JPMorgan bumped its 2026 expense goal up to around $106 billion from $105 billion in May. Argus Research’s Stephan Biggar said any increase in spending makes the market nervous. CEO Jamie Dimon warned there’s “a lot of exuberance out there.” If JPMorgan spends more, makes bigger provisions for bad loans, or trading drops off hard, the shares could fall from the top even if earnings come in strong. Reuters
Tuesday’s key test for JPMorgan goes beyond just an earnings beat. The market wants to see strong capital-markets revenue, stable credit, and that expense guidance holds. Inflation and Warsh could add noise to the results. If the stock tops its 52-week high, that would signal more than it normally does. If it doesn’t, it suggests the good news was priced in.