New York, March 3, 2026, 17:17 EST — After-hours trading.
- JPMorgan shares ticked up in after-hours trade, with investors eyeing the inflation threats stemming from war.
- Rising Treasury yields and slimmer odds on rate cuts created conditions that typically lend support to major banks.
- Key U.S. jobs numbers land March 6, with traders already watching for signals ahead of the Fed’s March policy gathering.
JPMorgan Chase & Co climbed 0.9% in after-hours action Tuesday, settling at $300.26. The day’s range ran from $289.99 up to $302.36, with roughly 10.3 million shares changing hands.
Wall Street closed lower as renewed concerns over the Middle East conflict stoked fears of stubbornly high energy prices, clouding the inflation outlook. The S&P 500 slipped 0.94%. Traders, reacting to the shift in sentiment, moved bets on a 25-basis-point Fed rate cut out to September instead of July, with the 10-year Treasury yield climbing to a one-week peak, LSEG data showed. 1
Higher Treasury yields, basically the rate investors want for holding U.S. government debt, often help out big banks if returns on loans and securities outpace what they’re paying depositors. Still, this dynamic may also hint at stubborn inflation and weaker growth—conditions that typically spell trouble for credit quality.
Financials held up better than the broader market. The Financial Select Sector SPDR ETF dipped just 0.1%, compared with a 0.9% decline for the SPDR S&P 500 ETF. Bank of America picked up slightly, Wells Fargo barely moved, and Citigroup lost ground.
Pressure in rates markets stood out. “It’s a dash for cash,” said Jan Nevruzi, rates strategist at TD Securities, summing up the rush as traders offloaded government bonds and scaled back expectations for imminent rate cuts with Brent crude surging to $82.14 a barrel. 2
JPMorgan’s chief executive Jamie Dimon is warning that markets might not be fully accounting for inflation and global tensions. “There’s kind of a lot of complacency in the market,” Dimon said in a Monday interview with Bloomberg TV. 3
JPMorgan’s focus stays squarely on net interest income—the spread between returns on loans and securities and the cost of deposits. That metric can fuel sharper intraday moves in bank shares, even if headline indexes appear steady.
That dynamic can flip fast. Should the conflict persist and rising energy prices start cutting into both corporate margins and what consumers spend, loan demand could falter for lenders, charge-offs might tick up, and investors may no longer see higher yields as an easy win.
Friday brings the February U.S. employment report at 8:30 a.m. ET, and traders will be watching it closely for any shifts in rate expectations and how bank shares could respond. 4
Keep an eye on the Federal Reserve’s March 17-18 meeting, the key hurdle ahead. Their rate call, plus fresh projections, mark the next big catalyst for rates trades that have been driving moves in bank stocks. 5