JPMorgan Chase & Co, the biggest US bank by assets, said it expected 2017 expenses to rise about 3.4 percent as it spends more on technology and in signing up new credit card accounts.
Total adjusted expenses for 2017 are expected to be about USD58 billion, up from USD56.1 billion in 2016, according to slides posted on the company's website as part of the bank's investors day on Tuesday.
Some investors expecting US banks' profits to surge have been counting on the lenders to hold expenses fairly steady so that more of each additional dollar of revenue goes to the bottom line.
For its long-term targets, the bank maintained its return on tangible common equity goal of about 15 percent.
JPMorgan delivered a 13 percent return in 2016, about the same as the two prior years.
Analyst Jason Goldberg of Barclays said in a report in advance of the meeting that he expected executives to show more clearly than last year how they will reach the return target.
As recently as 2014, JPMorgan had targeted a return in the range of 15-16 percent, but then cut back in the face of higher capital and liquidity requirements from regulators.
The return target disclosed on Tuesday was based on roughly the same capital base, as measured by regulatory standards, and common equity tier 1 ratio.
JPMorgan said it expected first-quarter markets revenue to grow modestly over a year earlier.
The lender's shares were down nearly 1 percent at USD89.61 in premarket trading. They had risen about 29 percent since the US presidential election on Nov. 8.
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