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JPM's Winding Road to 'Organic' Growth Focuses on Tech, Job Cuts

FEB 26, 2013 6:02pm ET
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Even for the biggest and strongest of banks, thriving these days involves two steps forward and one step back.

JPMorgan Chase (JPM), the country's largest bank, on Tuesday convened its top executives to discuss its growth strategies. A major component: cutting a net 17,000 jobs over the next two years.

But more notable than the job cuts, composed largely of planned attrition in JPMorgan's consumer bank and about 15,000 cuts in its mortgage operations, was the bank's resigned attitude about boosting business while waiting for interest rates, regulatory pressures and the overall economy to improve.

In 2013, JPMorgan will have to grow "organically and meet a wave of our regulatory demands," Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said at the end of the event. "Just doing those two things will tax even JPMorgan," widely considered to be one of the country's strongest banks.

Dimon added that any sort of significant acquisition is "off the table" for the year. "If we accomplish those two things, we'll be in great shape," he told a crowd of almost 250 investors and reporters gathered at the bank's Park Avenue headquarters in New York.

But during the day, which involved more than six hours of presentations by Dimon and his recently reorganized senior leadership team, executives were largely upbeat. They unveiled several plans for eventual, if slow, growth in the bank's diverse business lines.

"There will be positives from some of these changes. … My guess is four years from now we make a lot more money," Dimon said.

The bank is rethinking its branch strategy, balancing its desire to get even more business from wealthy customers with the shrinking foot traffic to physical locations. More and more customers are using ATMs and technology, including mobile and online banking, to do business that once would have brought them into a branch. About 500,000 people every month are using JPMorgan's digital banking options, executives said; the diminished foot traffic is allowing the bank to cut, largely by attrition, about one employee per branch.

But JPMorgan is actually expanding its overall branch network by about 2%, planning to add about 100 net branches annually for the next two years. It currently has over 5,600 physical locations, and is using them to offer more complicated services, like private banking and asset management, to wealthy customers.

"We realize that how customers are using banks is changing," Ryan McInerney, head of consumer banking, said.

The annual investor meeting was an attempt at a sort of fresh start for JPMorgan and its leader, after a year of fallout from its $6 billion trading loss. The London Whale affair led to a round of regulatory scrutiny, congressional hearings and senior leadership departures in the past several months, although Dimon on Tuesday said the executive reorganization had been largely in the works already.

The event was also a bit of a public debut for Marianne Lake, the company's new chief financial officer, who gave the day's first extended presentation. She was followed by Consumer and Community Banking CEO Gordon Smith and his deputies; Commercial Banking CEO Doug Petno; Asset Management CEO Mary Erdoes; and Daniel Pinto and Mike Cavanagh, the co-CEOs of the Corporate and Investment Bank.

Matt Zames and Frank Bisignano, who became co-chief operating officers last year, did not give presentations but were in the room. So was chief risk officer John Hogan, who interrupted his four-month leave of absence to attend the day's presentation. Dimon introduced Hogan, and expressed his jealousy of his subordinate's "sabbatical" by calling Hogan a rather salty name, to laughter.

JPMorgan Chase also used the day to announce a new partnership with Visa (NYSE:V), the world's largest payments network. Executives said the deal will allow JPMorgan to negotiate directly with merchants over how they process payments on Chase credit and debit cards.

"It will enable Chase to build direct relationships with merchants… and to negotiate pricing," says Eileen Serra, the CEO of JPMorgan's card services unit.

"We pay Visa an amount of money and we build our own direct relationship with the merchant," Smith said during his presentation.

The deal appears to be a bid by JPMorgan to gain more control over the processing of payments on its credit and debit cards; Dimon famously dislikes paying outside vendors to do functions that JPMorgan Chase could do in-house.

But JPMorgan executives also framed the partnership as an attempt to help improve its dealings with the retail industry, which has long protested the prices it must pay and the rules it must follow in order to accept credit and debit cards. Visa CEO Charlie Scharf, a longtime JPMorgan executive and Dimon protégé who took over the card network in November, has said that he is trying to expand the industry's "flexibility" and to improve its relationship with merchants.

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Comments (7)
Chase is leading the way. Consumer and Community Banking CEO Gordon Smith gets kudos for resolving to not provide "direct deposit advance payday loans to their customers because it is bad for customers". This is in contrast to Wells Fargo, Us Bank , and Regions Bank that believe that charging customers hundreds of % interest on these payday loans is "good". Whom do you respect?
Posted by frankarauscher | Wednesday, February 27 2013 at 12:24PM ET
JPMorgan recognition that how customers are using banks is a positive. One hour or less in a bank branch would reveal that high net worth, wealthy customers are not visiting bank branches to conduct their banking business or to get advice on how to manage their wealth. Sophisticated, wealthy customers want to do banking business when, where and how they want, and this translates into a technology that is fast, convenient and intuitive. I would suggest that a better investment to attract these customers is an investment in technology and not in the opening of an additional 100 branches. This is especially true when internal data shows that branch traffic is down.
Posted by jsell | Wednesday, February 27 2013 at 12:59PM ET
The decline in transaction volume at the branches should not in any way call into question the decision to add branches. They understand that branch presence is an important--and in most cases, necessary--component of an effect delivery strategy, even for those who prefer to use technology channels on a regular basis. What part of "...when, where and how they want..." says "don't even offer them branches"? The fact that they are taking staffing cost out of the branches, while investing in new self-service technologies, would seem to indicate that they have this pretty well figured out.
Posted by TJR Easton | Wednesday, February 27 2013 at 2:32PM ET
Not to enter into a debate but the point I was making is that JPMorgan with 5,000 branches would appear to have satisfied the need for branches without adding additional branches. This is a bank that aggressively added branches over the past several years only to find that branch foot traffic has declined. Their strategy statement, "The bank is rethinking its branch strategy, balancing its desire to get even more business from wealthy customers with the shrinking foot traffic to physical locations. More and more customers are using ATMs and technology, including mobile and online banking, to do business that once would have brought them into a branch." It is somewhat confusing given the above statement to find it followed by fact that it is expanding its branch network. Consumer behavior is indeed changing especially for wealthy customers. Banks in general have been slow to adapt to this changing behavior.
Posted by jsell | Thursday, February 28 2013 at 9:26AM ET
There is a wide range of customer behavior that a Retail bank needs to address. The wealthy (the 30% that have 80% of the money - including the 1% that have over 40% of the money)have their differences as well. The upper class has been served in many ways other than a branch lobby for over half a century. We must assume that Chase has researched what their existing and prospective customers want.
Posted by frankarauscher | Thursday, February 28 2013 at 10:21AM ET
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