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U.S. Bank Profits Hit $80.5 Billion As Consumer Loans Slip

Published May 28, 2026
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Summary:
  • US bank profits rose 3.6% in Q1 2026 to $80.5 billion, per the FDIC.
  • Deposits grew for the seventh straight quarter.
  • Past due levels stayed high for credit cards, auto loans, and multifamily real estate.

Banks just had one of their stronger quarters in a while. Profits rose, deposits rose, and capital stayed strong.

There's one small crack in the loan book. It's the corner closest to consumers.

The Headline Numbers

US banks made $80.5 billion in profit in Q1 2026. That's a 3.6% jump, per the FDIC.

Deposits grew for the seventh straight quarter. That streak quietly helps banks fund new loans.

Cheaper deposits mean banks can lend at a better spread. Net income gets a quiet boost.

Provisions are the money banks set aside for expected loan losses. They rose 2.3% in the quarter.

That's still lower than a year ago. FDIC Chair Travis Hill said bank capital stayed strong.

He also said liquidity stayed strong. Liquidity just means how much cash a bank can move quickly.

After two years of recession warnings, the bigger story across the bank stocks sector is how quiet things actually are.

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Where The Cracks Are

The picture gets less clean when you zoom into specific loans. Past due levels stayed high for credit cards.

They also stayed high for auto loans and multifamily real estate. Home loans and other commercial real estate ticked up too.

Total past due loans still fell a bit. The pain is narrow, not broad.

That said, credit card debt has been a leading sign for the broader consumer in past cycles. It's the line worth watching from here.

The report also follows months of warnings from regional banks about commercial real estate. The risk isn't gone, but it's also not getting worse fast.

Banks have been writing down some of these loans for over a year. That work shows up in the numbers as smaller losses now.

Worth Noting

Banks spent the last two years bracing for losses that never fully showed up. Profits are climbing, deposits are stable, and the worst-case scenarios from 2024 haven't played out.

The consumer loan side just hasn't fully healed.

The FDIC report covers more than 4,000 US banks. It's a quarterly snapshot of how the whole system is doing.

That makes it one of the cleaner reads of consumer health investors can get. The next report lands in late summer.

Big bank stocks like JPMorgan and Bank of America already moved on Q1 earnings weeks ago. Regional banks lag the big names by a few weeks.

If the past due numbers on credit cards and autos keep climbing, that's the line to flag. If they level off, the all-clear holds.

For now, the data tells a quiet story. Banks are making more money.

Consumers are paying their bills. And the bigger names in the sector keep raising buybacks.

That's the story for Q1, anyway. The second-quarter print will say whether it holds.

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