JPMorgan's Earnings Quietly Signal Housing Rebound
NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- As a signal of the economy, Main Street may trump Wall Street in JPMorgan Chase's(JPM) second quarter earnings.
Hidden within earnings that contained a 'London Whale' trading loss, which shaved shaved $4.4 billion from JPMorgan Chase's(JPM) $5 billion second quarter profit is a crucial sign of a housing rebound.
In spite of reporting earnings colored by a trading loss at JPMorgan's Chief Investment Office and a $459 million restatement of first quarter earnings, a surge in lending at JPMorgan's mortgage unit and similar second quarter results from Wells Fargo(WFC) bode well for the recovering housing market.
Amid recovering new and existing home sales, JPMorgan said that its mortgage loan origination revenue grew nearly 30% year-over-year and 14% sequentially to $43.9 billion. Wells Fargo's mortgage also grew in the second quarter and nearly doubled relative to year-ago levels, reinforcing what may be a widespread recovery in the housing market.
For both banks, mortgage lending stood out as a strong point in a generally weak quarter for revenue, as interest-based earnings declined.
JPMorgan reported adjusted second quarter earnings of $1.09 a share, beating estimates, on higher than expected revenue of $22.9 billion. However, the bank benefitted from a one-time $2.1 billion release of loan loss reserves at its consumer lending operations, which outweighed investment banking unit results that were in-line with expectations.
Overall, the bank reported a second-quarter profit of $5 billion, down 9% from this time in 2011.
Analysts polled by Bloomberg had estimated that the bank would earn 76 cents in EPS on $21.6 billion in revenue. Excluding accounting gains on the widening of its credit spreads, JPMorgan's profit was $1.09, beating estimates; however that number included 42 cents in one-time EPS gains from loan-loss reserve cuts and a Bear Stearns-related gain.
