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Posted January 16, 2026 at 12:23 pm
Wall Street’s biggest banks just wrapped up Q4 2025, and the message is crystal clear: markets and fee businesses are booming, while traditional banking is solid but less exciting. At the same time, The White House’s proposed 10% cap on credit card interest is a reminder that policy risk is suddenly front and center for the sector.
Across the large US banks, 2025 was a banner year. Collectively, the majors generated record revenue and profit, with the real engine coming from Wall Street activity such as dealmaking, trading, and investment-related fees, rather than old-school spread banking.
In short, the system is healthy, profitable, and well-capitalized, just more market-driven than loan-driven right now.
JPMorgan posted Q4 net income of $13.0 billion ($4.63 per share, or $5.23 adjusted) with revenue up 7% year-over-year (y/y) to $46.8 billion. Full-year 2025 net income reached $57.5 billion with earnings per share (EPS) of $20.18. Resilient consumers, strong card and payments, and robust equities trading (up 40%) all helped offset a $2.2 billion reserve build for the Apple Card portfolio acquisition. Investment banking fees declined 5% in Q4 due to deal deferrals into 2026, but management expects net interest income of approximately $103 billion for 2026. It remains the reference point for scale and diversification.
Bank of America earned $7.6 billion in Q4 (up 12% y/y) on $28.5 billion of revenue (up 7%). Full-year 2025 net income was $30.5 billion, up 13%. Net interest income surged 10% to $15.9 billion, while equities trading jumped 23% and fixed income trading rose modestly. The bank guided for 5-7% net interest income (NII) growth in 2026. The big NII tailwind of 2022-2023 is fading as funding costs normalize, but the bank projects continued growth from balance sheet expansion and asset repricing.
Citi delivered Q4 adjusted EPS of $1.81 that beat estimates, though reported net income fell 13% to $2.47 billion due to a $1.1 billion after-tax loss on divesting its Russian operations. Excluding this charge, profit was $3.6 billion. Revenue excluding Russia impacts rose 8% to $21.0 billion, with net interest income up 14% to $15.67 billion. For the full year, both revenue and net income improved as the firm pushes through CEO Jane Fraser’s “Project Bora Bora” simplification and exits non-core markets. Management committed to reaching at least 10% returns in 2026, with aspirations for higher levels beyond.
Wells reported Q4 net income of $5.4 billion ($1.62 per share, or $1.76 adjusted) on $21.3 billion in revenue (up 4%). Full-year 2025 net income was $21.3 billion with EPS up 17%. Following the June 2025 removal of the Fed’s asset cap, loans grew and trading assets increased 50%. Return on tangible common equity reached 15% for 2025, with a target of 17-18% ahead. Revenue came in slightly below expectations, and mortgage-related profits and guidance held things back. After years of cleanup, markets are watching carefully to see how durable this new growth story really is. Management expects net interest income of approximately $50 billion for 2026.
Both firms are clear beneficiaries of reviving IPO, M&A, and capital-markets pipelines, plus ongoing growth in wealth management flows.

Taken together, these earnings point to a few big themes:
In other words, US large banks are exiting 2025 from a position of strength, but the sources of that strength are increasingly fee- and market-driven.
That is the earnings story. Now comes the political twist.
The White House proposed a one-year 10% cap on credit card interest rates on January 10, 2026, with implementation set for January 20, 2026. Average US card APRs today are north of 20%, and for the universal banks—JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citi, and Wells—cards are among the highest-return products they offer.
A cap at 10% goes straight at that profit pool.
A few key points:
From the banks’ perspective, the message is blunt. If enacted as described, it would hit card economics hard. Card portfolios are priced assuming:
Cut the yield in half and banks either slash risk, by tightening underwriting, trimming limits, and pulling back from higher-risk borrowers, or recoup the economics elsewhere, via higher fees, thinner rewards, shorter teaser periods, or shifting borrowing into products not covered by the cap.
If some version of a cap actually makes it into law, likely responses include:
We are already seeing marketing responses at the margin, such as cards advertising 10% promotional APRs in line with the idea, followed by much higher rates later on. That underscores the core point: a temporary statutory cap does not change the underlying risk math, it just changes where and how banks try to earn their return.
Right now, the picture looks like this:
The big banks almost certainly have the earnings power to absorb a one-year shock if they have to, but it’s unlikely they will just quietly eat it.
For investors and policymakers, the key questions now are:
The answers will determine whether this ends up as a one-off squeeze on card margins in an otherwise healthy sector, or the opening chapter in a more fundamental rewrite of how US consumer credit and big-bank profitability are structured.
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Goldman Sachs looks like the best pick.