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JPMorgan Close To Overtaking Bank Of America As Biggest U.S. Bank

Jpmorgan Biggest Bank

First Posted: 07/07/11 06:51 PM ET Updated: 09/06/11 06:12 AM ET

NEW YORK (David Henry) - JPMorgan Chase & Co is close to vaulting past Bank of America Corp to become the biggest bank in the United States, but it will likely get there in an odd way -- by shrinking less than its rival.

Both JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America are getting smaller as they shake off the excesses of the years leading up to the financial crisis.

If JPMorgan becomes the biggest, chief executive Jamie Dimon could see the validation of his cautious management before and during the crisis. Bank of America's drop to second would illustrate how former Chief Executive Ken Lewis saddled the bank with bad acquisitions that are hampering current CEO Brian Moynihan.

But bigger might not be better. Being the largest does not necessarily translate to higher profitability, or a higher market value. Global banking regulators are imposing higher capital requirements on the largest banks and threatening even higher capital charges if they grow.

"Big is more a burden than it is a bragging right," said Gary Townsend, chief executive of asset manager Hill-Townsend Capital, a Chevy Chase, Maryland-based money manager that specializes in financial stocks and owns shares of both banks.

That is a switch from the years when Bank of America was buying up banks to cater to the American appetite for more and more borrowing, said Ray Soifer, a long-time bank analyst and now industry consultant at Soifer Consultant in Green Valley, Arizona.

"Bigger was better and banks were happy to be at the top," said Soifer.

JPMorgan has been gaining ground on Bank of America for three straight quarters. At the end of March, JPMorgan's $2.20 trillion of assets were just 3.4 percent short of Bank of America's $2.27 trillion. JPMorgan already is the most valuable bank in the stock market, with its equity worth nearly 50 percent more than Bank of America's.

Analysts differ as to how soon the switch could happen. Deutsche Bank's Matt O'Connor sees JPMorgan becoming the largest by year end. FBR Capital Markets' Paul Miller says it will be the next 12 to 18 months.

But however long it takes, analysts agree neither bank is going to be stretching.

"It is really going to be who shrinks the least," said Gerard Cassidy, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets.

Even if JPMorgan becomes the largest U.S. bank by assets, it would not be the biggest in the world. The bank is about $600 billion short of that title and there are six other banks between it and the biggest. That honor at last count went to BNP Paribas SA. (For a list of the biggest banks in the world, please double click: r.reuters.com/zyq52s )

JPMorgan spokesman Joseph Evangelisti declined to comment.

COUNTRYWIDE A BIG MISTAKE

The trend down in the U.S. might not follow a straight line. Banks sometimes temporarily pump up balance sheets to manage their interest rate risk, said Soifer. And there may be lending upturns along the way in borrowing by businesses, as just happened.

Federal Reserve data show the combined assets of 25 large U.S. banks grew by one-half of one percent in the second quarter, largely because of more lending to companies.

But in general, analysts said, banks are no more likely to grow now than their customers are to try to borrow their way to happiness on the strength of higher home prices.

Bank of America and JPMorgan have particular reasons to shrink. To start, they have portfolios of bad assets acquired just before or during the financial crisis. JPMorgan Chase still has more than $80 billion of low-credit quality mortgage and credit card loans, largely acquired when it took over failed lender Washington Mutual in 2008.

As of March 31, Bank of America had more than $100 billion of loans in runoff, mainly in a shrinking portfolio known as the legacy asset servicing division formed in January. Many of the assets are mortgages or home equity loans acquired from Countrywide Financial, which it bought in 2008.

Both banks are likely to let those loans mature without making new ones to replace them, a process known as "running off" assets.

The Countrywide acquisition was a particularly big mistake for Bank of America, FBR's Miller said. The deal has already cost the bank more than $20 billion of its capital, he said. Some of that money is going out the door in the bank's recent $8.5 billion settlement of warranty claims by more than 22 institutional investors over allegedly faulty mortgage-backed securities Countrywide sold.

Bank of America is selling assets and even closing some bank branches as it tries to strengthen its balance sheet by getting smaller.

The bank's goal is "to balance the appropriate amount of assets and risk," said Jerry Dubrowski, a Bank of America spokesman. "Having the largest amount of assets does not make you the best financial services provider and, right now, we're focused on that."

(Additional reporting by Joe Rauch in Charlotte, North Carolina; Editing by Andre Grenon)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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NEW YORK (David Henry) - JPMorgan Chase & Co is close to vaulting past Bank of America Corp to become the biggest bank in the United States, but it will likely get there in an odd way -- by shrink...
NEW YORK (David Henry) - JPMorgan Chase & Co is close to vaulting past Bank of America Corp to become the biggest bank in the United States, but it will likely get there in an odd way -- by shrink...
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12:02 PM on 07/10/2011
The unanswered question (even unasked) is:

Are these banksters too big to bail?

And where is the claw-back of citizen's (aka taxpayers) megabucks used to bail out these [expletive deleted]?

$2.6 billion in BONUSES? We all should read Michael Perino's The Hellhound of Wall Street, the story of how Ferdinand Pecora's investigation of the 1929 crash "forever changed American Finance."

But actually, it didn't. Not forever. Not hardly.

For a while, maybe, with Glass-Steagle enacted. Maybe even a good long while, 1933 through, what, 1980? 1990?

But I'd say, having read the the Pecora story, we're pretty much right back where we started, with little regulation, a "trust us; we're your eleemosynary, fiduciary "wealth protectors". Horse puckey.
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Douglas Day
02:55 AM on 07/10/2011
i cant understand why anyone banks with these big banks (also citibank, wells fargo etc)...they do nothing but manipulate your funds to steal...theres nothing their "service" provides that cant be used better with a smaller bank or credit union
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
05:31 AM on 07/09/2011
chase and boa are the most corrupt in the nation.. i will never give them a dimees worth of business... i will not show their bank owned properties to my customers... they are thieves. why should we work to help the same crooks responsible for creating this mess ?
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dm559
11:29 AM on 07/09/2011
Then you are doing a disservice to your customers. I just purchased a B of A foreclosure, got it for $50k below market, they did all FHA repairs, Pest 1 repairs and paid closing costs. B of A was on top of everything and closing just took a couple weeks with no problems. The banks aren't the only ones responsible for this mess. Idiot consumers are. People refinancing their homes and pulling out $300k to buy new cars and go on vacation or buying a new home and having a payment of $2,000 a month. They're the ones responsible for this mess. Yeah, the banks contributed but there wouldn't have been any business had it not been for greed of consumers.
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pcs5141
cut the crap
11:53 AM on 07/09/2011
Your story is the only positive thing I have ever heard about BoA.Of course they are all too happy to take your money.Just google BoA complaints to see how most of tthe customers are treated,sinful.I managed to sell my house after a year on the market,after getting jerked around trying to get a loan mod,so now I can tell BoA to eat s@@t.I had a Chase credit card which I fathfully paid on time,but they still closed it because of other credit probs.CREDIT UNION TIME.
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artofrebellion
04:32 AM on 07/09/2011
Aside from GE, the other companies that barely paid any taxes were American Electric Power, Dupont, Verizon, Boeing, Wells Fargo, FedEx, Honeywell, IBM, Yahoo!, United Technoloties and ExxonMobil.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
yahooserious
Texas....Just keep on keepin' on...
09:17 PM on 07/08/2011
CREDIT UNION!!!
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Captain Hindsight
Seeking the truth is my only agenda.
06:56 PM on 07/08/2011
Support Taxidermy for the rich!
05:59 PM on 07/08/2011
That should read "cheapest insurance rates", not rats.
05:58 PM on 07/08/2011
As a former Army officer, I have nothing but good to say about depositor owned USAA. They have constantly had the highest rated investments. great rates on their loans and interest-bearing accounts, and some of the cheapest insurance rats out their.

On a major down note on JP Morgan Chase, they have now actively gotten into the Student Loan scam, buying up loans from other originators to get their filthy hands on even more Federal money, and screwing over the borrowers every chance they can to get them to default so they can collect that Federal Guarantee on the loan principal.

TBTF Banks MUST be controlled and highly regulated, the future of our country hangs in the balance.
05:18 PM on 07/08/2011
Chase has opened 3 or 4 brand new branches in my area on the main hwy on a 5 mile stretch. This article doesn't tell me anything I already didn't know.
04:34 PM on 07/08/2011
The bigger they are the harder they fall.
05:16 PM on 07/08/2011
...will be the biggest failure of the Dodd-Frank Act as well!
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Captain Hindsight
Seeking the truth is my only agenda.
07:11 PM on 07/08/2011
The bigger they are the higher they build the walls around them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen1p
02:06 PM on 07/08/2011
CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL CRIMINAL Jamie Dimon
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Louis A Delgado
01:37 PM on 07/08/2011
This is no surprise look at the lousy interest they pay their depositors compared to the lousy fees they charge. They pay depositors practically less than 1% on savings, checking and retirement accounts. They won,t be happy until they drain every account and then they won't care if people put money in their bank or not.
12:58 PM on 07/08/2011
When your this big, who needs customer service?

http://www.businessinsider.com/chase-ikenna-njoku-2011-7
07:21 PM on 07/10/2011
those types of stories are no longer told on the aol huffington post for some reason.
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ifihadlegs
Green New Deal & Jill Stein 2012
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12:11 PM on 07/08/2011
JPMorgan is responsible for causing me to lose a fortune after they took over Washington Mutual and conveniently losing proving my ownership of properties. They forced me into spending another fortune in attorney fees.
05:20 PM on 07/08/2011
I thought Chase took over W.M., I had a W.M. mortgage that was taken over by Chase.
04:27 AM on 08/12/2011
Wamu had a ton of issues, including their record keeping (they obviously had issues, they went out of business). Chase had a ton of loans that went bad that came from Wamu, and excuse me, but asking you to prove that you own a property for which another bank has already loaned you thousands upon thousands of dollars, is not unreasonable. If you can't readily prove that then perhaps it's your record keeping that needs improvement.