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JPMorgan Sounds the Alarm: Prepare for a Financial Tsunami

EDITOR'S NOTES

In a stark and foreboding move, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo are quietly preparing for a financial crisis. They’re setting aside billions to cover potential losses from a surge in credit card and loan defaults. With consumer debt reaching unprecedented levels and delinquency rates climbing, these banks see the storm coming. Commercial real estate is in trouble, and U.S. household debt has soared to a staggering $17.69 trillion. As the economy precariously hovers on the brink of a critical juncture, the question isn’t if the financial fallout will hit, but when. JPMorgan Chase leads the way in increasing capital reserves for potential credit card and loan losses. Learn more about the banks’ preparations for customers’ inability to pay bills.

JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Wells Fargo are boosting their financial defenses, preparing for customers to increasingly lose the ability to pay their bills.

In their new Q2 2024 reports, the banks say they’re significantly increasing the amount of capital they’re holding to cover potential losses from credit card and loan insolvencies – collectively setting aside billions of dollars in emergency provisions.

JPMorgan Chase is leading the way, increasing its provisions from $1.88 billion in the first quarter of this year to $3.05 billion – a $1.17 billion jump.

Meanwhile, Bank of America has set aside $1.5 billion, up from $1.3 billion in the previous quarter, and Wells Fargo set aside $1.24 billion, up from $938 million in the previous quarter.

The increasing balances show banks are anticipating increasing economic risk in the months ahead as commercial real estate flounders and as consumers pile up a whopping $1.02 trillion in credit card balances, according to TransUnion.

Delinquency rates across various types of debt are already on the rise, and the New York Federal Reserve says total US household debt hit $17.69 trillion in the first quarter of this year, an increase of $184 billion from the previous quarter.

The number includes mortgage balances, which rose by $190 billion to $12.44 trillion, and auto loans, which increased by $9 billion to $1.62 trillion.

This article originally appeared on The Daily Hodl.