JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM) shares climbed Wednesday morning as investors positioned themselves ahead of the Federal Reserve's afternoon decision. While a 25-basis-point cut is essentially baked into market expectations, the real action lies in what the Fed signals about 2026. Enter the "hawkish cut"—a rate reduction now paired with hints of a potential pause down the road.
Why Rate Cuts Aren't the Usual Headwind for JPMorgan
Conventional wisdom says rate cuts hurt banks. The logic makes sense: when the Fed lowers rates, the yield banks earn on variable-rate loans drops, squeezing Net Interest Income. The spread between what banks pay depositors and what they collect from borrowers gets compressed.
But JPMorgan isn't your typical bank. For a diversified giant like this, the NII erosion story misses the bigger picture. The primary bullish catalyst here is what happens to capital markets when rates come down.
High interest rates essentially freeze deal-making. When capital costs stabilize through rate cuts, you unlock a massive backlog of M&A activity and IPOs that have been sitting on the sidelines. As the industry leader in investment banking, JPMorgan stands to capture substantial fee revenue that likely dwarfs any marginal dips in interest income.
The Balance Sheet Benefits
There's another angle worth considering. Lower rates act as a defensive mechanism for JPMorgan's balance sheet. When debt-servicing costs fall for consumers and businesses, defaults decrease. That means the bank can release billions held in loan loss reserves directly into profits.
Additionally, as rates decline, the market value of JPMorgan's vast bond portfolio rises, immediately boosting tangible book value. So you get this dual benefit: lower credit risk and higher asset values.
The "hawkish cut" scenario could deliver the best of both worlds—rates low enough to restart deal flow and reduce credit stress, yet high enough to maintain healthy lending margins. It's that sweet spot that has investors excited.
What the Charts Say
JPMorgan shares were trading at $305.92, up 1.78% at the time of publication. The stock boasts a Momentum score of 72.30, suggesting sustained buying pressure despite some mixed shorter-term signals.
Technically, the stock is hovering near its 50-day moving average, which could present resistance around $306.55. If shares break through that level, the next target is the 52-week high of $322.25. On the downside, the psychological $300 level provides support, with $298.45 marking the recent session low.
Traders are watching whether JPMorgan can hold above $300 and push toward new highs, or whether profit-taking kicks in ahead of the Fed announcement. Either way, the bank's positioning heading into this rate decision looks considerably stronger than the typical bank stock playbook would suggest.