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One comment overshadows record haul
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Quarterly bank earnings give us a window into how the big lenders are doing, as well as a chance to see how their customers are faring. Today, Paige Smith gives us the rundown. Plus: You can trace a lot of angst around earnings season to the legendary Jack Welch, and when you’re ready to get away from it all, try this ski resort.

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The biggest US banks announced their financial results over the past two days, and by all basic measures, they’re riding high. All of the giants—JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs Group and Citigroup—reported some sort of record earnings metric for the three months through September. Collectively, they pulled in billions of dollars of net income.

Yet one insect-related comment sent ripples through the finance sector. JPMorgan Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon told Wall Street that he’s on the lookout for cockroaches.

These days, the largest US banks rarely, if ever, give loans directly to customers on the lower end of the credit-score spectrum, but they do lend to firms known as nonbank financial institutions, and those companies may very well count subprime borrowers among their customers. Such was the case for JPMorgan—the biggest bank in the country—and that’s where Dimon found his first pest.

JPMorgan worked with the subprime auto lender Tricolor Holdings and was forced to report a $170 million charge-off after the Dallas-based company went bankrupt.

“I probably shouldn’t say this, but when you see one cockroach, there are probably more,” Dimon told analysts on a conference call yesterday. “Everyone should be forewarned on this one.”

Dimon. Photograph: Bloomberg

Dimon’s company wasn’t alone: Barclays and Fifth Third Bancorp also reported exposure to Tricolor through warehouse lending—loans to other lenders, that is—while UBS disclosed its vulnerability to First Brands Group, an auto-parts company that also filed for bankruptcy last month. Bank of America is part of a First Brands loan, too, but “we feel pretty good about our position there” given BofA’s seniority in the pecking order, finance chief Alastair Borthwick told reporters today.

For now, it seems, the pain is isolated to those idiosyncratic cracks in the market, and a broader collapse in consumer finance doesn’t seem to be looming. After all, the financial pain of less-affluent consumers isn’t anything new. It’s a demographic that’s long struggled with high costs of living, including pricey automobiles, even if they’re still collecting a paycheck.

And in the red-hot corner of private credit—lenders that aren’t traditional banks—the major players would like to keep stoking the fires.

Marc Lipschultz, co-CEO of asset manager Blue Owl Capital, derided Dimon’s comments and hinted that perhaps it’s JPMorgan that actually has a bug problem.

“I guess he’s saying there might be a lot more cockroaches at JPMorgan. I’m not sure I know what he’s saying,” Lipschultz said at a conference yesterday. “It’s not a private credit issue. It’s a liquid credit market.”

In short, anyone doing a checkup on the financial health of the American consumer is getting some pretty mixed messages. Unemployment remains relatively low, people are still splurging on $895 Amex Platinum credit cards, and spending generally remains resilient. But there’s Dimon’s warning, even if it may be overblown.

As JPMorgan finance chief Jeremy Barnum said, “The fact that things are fine now doesn’t mean they’re guaranteed to be great forever.”

In Brief

  • Argentina’s sovereign bonds jumped after media outlets reported that US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent outlined financial aid that would total $40 billion.
  • A redistricting fight in California would merge counties a world apart. Democrats say they need more seats in Congress to counter President Donald Trump, but rural Republicans say they’re being silenced.
  • Trump said he might stop trade in cooking oil with China, injecting fresh tensions into the relationship between the world’s two largest economies.

Scrapping Quarterly Reports?

Photo illustration: Benjamin Freedman for Bloomberg Businessweek

“You have to be an idiot to miss a Wall Street estimate.”

This was Jack Welch’s 2¢ on quarterly earnings expectations—part of the mandatory opening of the books public companies do every 90 days. Businesses have long decried the regulatory requirement as onerous, expensive and something that hangs over every decision they make like the mythological sword of Damocles.

It looks as if their pleas have finally been answered. Paul Atkins, US Securities and Exchange Commission chairman, recently announced a proposal to scrap quarterly earnings and, instead, require public companies to disclose financials only twice a year.

Businesses, as you might imagine, are thrilled.

Stacey Vanek Smith writes about how GE’s legacy still colors how we look at earnings reports and why the company’s legendary boss eventually came around to the idea that the focus on short-term results was a harmful distraction: Trump Wants to End Quarterly Reporting. Jack Welch Would Approve.

Listen to Everybody’s Business: Stacey Vanek Smith and her co-host, Max Chafkin, take a look at the week’s business news and break down what you need to know, with the help of Bloomberg Businessweek journalists, experts, and the people and businesses trying to navigate the economy every day. Go here for new episodes of the podcast, available Fridays.

A Hidden Gem in the Alps (Really)

The writer's partner, Tess, cuts fresh tracks in the Silvretta Montafon backcountry. Photographer: Cassie Floto-Warner for Bloomberg Businessweek

I’d been in Austria’s Montafon Valley only a few hours when my partner, Tess, and I found ourselves sitting inside a wood-paneled tavern in the village of Schruns. Across from me was Hannes Schneider, who was to be our ski guide for the next few days. Schneider, a fit and cheerful man with patchy black stubble, slid a tablet across the table, its glowing screen filled with the topographic lines of peaks and valleys. With one finger he traced a route over the tablet, mapping the ski tour we’d take a few days later. With the other hand he lifted a weiss bier to his lips and took a sip. I asked Schneider, who grew up in the valley and has guided here for four years, if he’d ever led an American through these mountains before. “No, never,” he responded. “We don’t see many Americans here.”

It was just what I wanted to hear. I’d been drawn to Montafon precisely because the valley in Austria’s Vorarlberg region is unknown to most Americans—most tourists, in fact. It wasn’t until a few years ago, after a friend had stumbled upon the place, that I first heard of it, and I write about skiing for a living. My friend told me that Gargellen, one of the five ski areas in the valley, “is like Alta on steroids.” Invoking the name of the Utah resort, one of the great skiers’ mountains, known for its copious powder and challenging terrain, is catnip for someone like me. Then he sealed the deal: “Nobody goes there. The slopes are practically empty.”

That kind of description is rare these days but especially so in Europe, Gordy Megroz writes for Bloomberg Pursuits. Keep reading for Skiing’s Best Kept Secret.

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Way Off Track

$432 million
That’s the size of New York City’s transit system’s potential budget shortfall this year. The subway, bus and commuter rail operator may need to wait until 2026 to get reimbursed from federal money owed for cleaning costs during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Racing to Rebuild

“We made a conscious decision to downsize because of the, quote, peace dividend from the Cold War. Well, guess what? It didn’t work out well.”
James Foggo
Retired admiral who served for 40 years and commanded the USS Oklahoma City attack submarine
Go inside the effort to deliver a “transformational improvement” in how the US builds submarines, vital to preserving its undersea advantage. Read the full story here.

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