JPMorgan Chase increased originations by 21% over the fourth quarter of 2020, but compressed margins ate away at the bank’s mortgage profits in the first quarter of 2021.
The New York-headquartered bank originated $39.3 billion in home loans during the first quarter, a big jump from the $32.5 billion originated in the prior quarter. Notably, JPMorgan grew mortgage originations in both its retail division – $23 billion in Q1, up 14% from $20.1 billion in Q4 – and its correspondent channel, which rose to $16.3 billion in Q1 from $12.4 billion in the fourth quarter (31%).
Production revenue from mortgage fees and related income declined to $757 million from $803 million in the fourth quarter. It had 178,776 home loans on its balance sheet at the end of the quarter.
According to its earnings statement, JPMorgan posted revenue of $1.458 billion in the first quarter, roughly even with the fourth quarter (overall revenue in its consumer business, which includes credit cards and auto loans, declined 6%).
Gain-on-sale margins on home loans fell to 193 basis points in the fourth quarter, a drop of 54 basis points from the fourth quarter. Its mortgage servicing rights valuation was up 38% from the prior quarter, above Wall Street’s expectations. The bank also pared back its allowance for credit losses in home lending to $1.4 billion.
Bose George, an analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, said in a note Wednesday that the decline in margins was mostly due to market factors as primary/secondary spreads narrowed considerably during the quarter. He also partly attributed the decline to the share of retail – a higher margin business – to correspondent, a lower margin line.
According to recently released HMDA data, JPMorgan Chase’s mortgage origination volume for single-family lending issued 224,833 loans totaling $95.6 billion. The company’s average loan size in 2020 was $425,306, highest among the top 50 single-family lenders of 2020.
In a note to shareholders last week, CEO Jamie Dimon said he believes the economy is about to enter a “Goldilocks moment” of rapid growth alongside slowly rising inflation and interest rates.
Though JPMorgan’s mortgage origination business didn’t catch fire in the first quarter, the bank made a record $3 billion in investment-banking fees.
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