https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/07/jamie-dimon-goes-missing-from-earnings-call-after-dumping-183-million-of-his-jpmorgan-chase-stock-earlier-this-year/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: July 17, 2024 ~

Jamie Dimon Sits in Front of Trading Monitor in his Office (Source -- 60
Minutes Interview, November 10, 2019)
Jamie Dimon Sits in Front of Trading Monitor in his Office (Source: 60
Minutes Interview, November 10, 2019)

We can’t remember a time when the Chairman and CEO of the largest, most
complex and scandal-ridden bank in the United States, Jamie Dimon of
JPMorgan Chase, was too busy to squeeze in an appearance at the company’s
heavily-scrutinized quarterly earnings call with analysts. That happened
last Friday.

When something happens for the first time at a bank that has racked up five
felony counts, has been doled out non-prosecution and deferred-prosecution
agreements by the U.S. Department of Justice in a steady drumbeat since
2014, and spent most of last year in the headlines for a decade of sluicing
tens of thousands of dollars per month in hard cash to the international
sex trafficker of children, Jeffrey Epstein, it pays to sit up and pay
attention.

Reuters’ reporter John Foley also found it “unusual” that Dimon had missed
the earnings call last Friday, writing that “neither throat cancer nor an
aortic dissection” had stopped Dimon from being present at earnings calls
in the past.

The official excuse for the absence was that Dimon was travelling. Forgive
us for the suspicion that Dimon might have wanted to avoid uncomfortable
questions about the quality of the bank’s earnings this past quarter and
what the bank had done with those earnings.

The only bank official on the call with analysts was JPMorgan Chase’s CFO
Jeremy Barnum, who got the sticky issue out of the way right up front. That
issue was that $7.9 billion of net income came from a net gain on the sale
of Visa stock, which the bank had held as an investment. Without that gain,
profits would have been down compared to the same quarter a year ago.

Barnum also fessed up to the fact that the bank had used $4.9 billion of
its net income to buy back JPMorgan Chase’s own stock – something that
Dimon has turned into an art form at the bank. From January 1, 2014 through
June 30, 2024, Dimon has plowed the astronomical sum of $124.5 billion into
buying back the bank’s own stock.

There are three critical facts you need to understand about using bank
profits to buy back the company’s own stock. First, when earnings are
retained as opposed to being used for buybacks, they increase the capital
of the bank, making megabanks far less susceptible to needing bailouts.
Dimon has been bullying his federal bank regulators this year and holding
high-powered meetings in Washington in an effort to get his regulators to
back off their demands for JPMorgan Chase (and other megabanks) to increase
their capital. While Dimon likes to brag about his bank’s “fortress balance
sheet,” bank regulators know all too well that something blew up in the
fourth quarter of 2019, necessitating JPMorgan Chase needing $2.59 trillion
in emergency repo loans from the Fed on a term-adjusted basis, in just that
one quarter. (See chart below.)

Fed's Repo Loans to Largest Borrowers, Q4 2019, Adjusted for Term of Loan

The second thing you need to understand is that stock buybacks are
prudently done when the stock is considered undervalued, and thus
represents a good investment. JPMorgan Chase’s stock has been trading at
its highest level in history in the past quarter.

And, finally, federally-insured/taxpayer backstopped banks like JPMorgan
Chase are supposed to be making loans to sound businesses and consumers in
order to grow the U.S. economy and create good jobs – not blowing their
profits on propping up their share price to make the CEO look good to his
Board of Directors so he can get fat bonuses.

In July of 2017, Thomas Hoenig, then Vice Chair of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC), sent a letter to the U.S. Senate Banking
Committee. He made the following points:

“[If] the 10 largest U.S. Bank Holding Companies [BHCs] were to retain a
greater share of their earnings earmarked for dividends and share buybacks
in 2017 they would be able to increase loans by more than $1 trillion,
which is greater than 5 percent of annual U.S. GDP.

“Four of the 10 BHCs will distribute more than 100 percent of their current
year’s earnings, which alone could support approximately $537 billion in
new loans to Main Street.

“If share buybacks of $83 billion, representing 72 percent of total payouts
for these 10 BHCs in 2017, were instead retained, they could, under current
capital rules, increase small business loans by three quarters of a
trillion dollars or mortgage loans by almost one and a half trillion
dollars.”

Another troubling aspect of Dimon missing his earnings call last Friday is
that he did something else quite noteworthy this year for the first time.
He sold a very large chunk of his stock in the bank. In February, Dimon
sold $150 million of JPMorgan Chase stock and another $32.8 million in
April, bringing his total sales this year to $182.8 million.

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