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JPMorgan Chase: Inside America's Largest Bank by the Numbers

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A plain-English look at JPMorgan Chase's revenue, profit, assets, and market value, drawn entirely from public financial data.

A Bank Built Over Half a Century

JPMorgan Chase & Co traces its roots to 1968, with shares first sold to the public in March 1969. More than five decades later, it has grown into a global financial services firm headquartered in New York, New York, operating in 66 countries and employing approximately 320,079 people.

What the Bank Actually Does

The company organizes its business around three core segments: consumer and community banking, the commercial and investment bank, and asset and wealth management. It serves millions of everyday customers through more than 5,000 U.S. branches while also ranking first globally in investment banking fees, holding an 8.4% market share in that business.

The Scale of the Balance Sheet

JPMorgan Chase reports total assets of $4.4 trillion, a figure that places it among the largest financial institutions in the country. Its broader balance sheet, described in company filings, reaches $4.9 trillion, supported by $2.68 trillion in deposits as of March 2026.

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Why Size Matters Here

For a bank, the size of the balance sheet reflects the volume of lending, deposit-taking, and trading activity it can support. A larger asset base generally means the firm touches a wider slice of the economy, from consumer checking accounts to large corporate financing deals.

Revenue and Profit in FY2025

In its most recent fiscal year, JPMorgan Chase generated $182.4 billion in revenue and produced net income of $57.0 billion. That combination means the company converted a substantial share of every revenue dollar into bottom-line profit, a sign of consistent profitability rather than a one-off result.

Five Years of Growth

Looking back over a longer stretch, revenue grew 53% from FY2020 to FY2025. That kind of expansion over five years points to a business that has scaled meaningfully rather than staying flat, even as it operates in a mature, heavily regulated industry.

How the Market Values the Company

JPMorgan Chase currently carries a market capitalization of $837.0 billion, with shares recently trading at $336.47 on a 15-minute delayed basis. The stock is trading near its 52-week high, and the company's price-to-earnings ratio sits at 16.8, a measure of how the market values its profits relative to its share price.

Dividend and Trading Details

The company also pays a dividend yielding about 1.78% annually, and its shares trade publicly on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker JPM. These figures give investors and observers reference points for how the market currently prices the firm's earnings and cash distributions.

Putting the Numbers Together

Taken as a whole, the picture is one of a large, profitable financial institution: tens of billions in annual profit, trillions in assets, and steady revenue growth over half a decade. The company's classification places it squarely in the Financial Services industry, competing at scale in banking, trading, and wealth management.

A Note on This Report

This article presents factual reporting drawn from public filings and market data, not investment advice.

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