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Fed Stress Test 2026: 32/32 Pass; JPMorgan Adds $50B Buyback, +10% Dividend

Fed 2026 DFAST: all 32 banks pass; aggregate CET1 falls 12.8%→11.2% under stress; JPMorgan $50B buyback + dividend to $1.65; Goldman dividend +11% to $5.00.

TL;DR — All 32 big U.S. banks passed the Federal Reserve’s 2026 stress test, clearing the way for large capital returns — led by JPMorgan’s new $50B buyback and 10% dividend hike — even as the tested scenario modeled a 39% commercial-real-estate crash and 10% unemployment.

The Federal Reserve released its 2026 bank stress-test results on June 24, 2026. The outcome:

The results

All 32 banks in the Federal Reserve’s 2026 stress test passed. Under the hypothetical scenario — a 39% commercial-real-estate crash, a 30% drop in home prices and 10% unemployment — aggregate CET1 capital fell from 12.8% to 11.2%, staying well above the minimum, with projected loan losses topping $708 billion. With the test cleared, banks moved fast on capital returns.

Bank Capital action
JPMorgan Chase New $50B buyback; dividend +10% to $1.65
Goldman Sachs Dividend +11% to $5.00
Aggregate CET1 (stressed) 12.8% → 11.2%

The takeaway

The Fed said it would leave stress-capital-buffer requirements unchanged until the 2027 tests — a result the industry read as benign, freeing capital for buybacks and dividends across the sector.

Why it matters

  • Capital returns accelerate. Passing scores unlock tens of billions in buybacks and higher dividends.
  • Resilience, quantified. Even a modeled CRE crash left banks above minimums.
  • A friendlier regime. Unchanged buffers signal a lighter regulatory touch into 2027.

FAQ

What were the 2026 Fed stress-test results?

All 32 tested banks passed. Under a severe hypothetical scenario (a 39% commercial-real-estate crash, 30% home-price drop and 10% unemployment), aggregate CET1 capital fell from 12.8% to 11.2% but stayed above the regulatory minimum.

What did banks do after passing?

They announced large capital returns. JPMorgan unveiled a new $50 billion buyback and a 10% dividend increase to $1.65 per share, while Goldman Sachs raised its dividend 11% to $5.00.

Sources

Image: “JPMorgan Chase Tower, Houston” by Jim Evans, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

#federal-reserve#banks#stress-test#jpmorgan#dividends#finance

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