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						JP Morgan targets mid-sized firms in challenge to 
						European banks
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		 [December 05, 2018]   
		By Inti Landauro and David Henry 
 PARIS/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Thumbing through 
		a thick binder detailing European mid-sized and family-owned firms, JP 
		Morgan's <JPM.N> Doug Petno has his sights set on a business Europe's 
		banks have kept to themselves.
 
 "This list is heavily curated, handpicked," Petno, the New York-based 
		CEO of JP Morgan's commercial banking segment, told Reuters of the 1,500 
		companies it wants to become clients.
 
 The owners of these firms are often already wealth management customers 
		and JP Morgan's Petno is now looking to offer their businesses loans, 
		cash management, payment processing and other banking services.
 
 JP Morgan's challenge to the European banks in their traditional 
		stronghold is another example of the U.S. bank using its clout to try to 
		take business from competitors, after holding up much better than many 
		during the financial crisis.
 
 
		 
		JP Morgan is now targeting companies in France, Germany, Italy, the 
		Netherlands, Spain and Britain, with roughly $500 million to $2 billion 
		in annual revenue from recognized brands and long-established business, 
		plus international aspirations.
 
 Some already have businesses in the United States and use JP Morgan 
		there, while many are known by its European investment bankers while out 
		on the hunt for deals. The move comes as JP Morgan shifts dozens of 
		bankers to Paris to adapt to Brexit.
 
 Petno's prospect list was two years in the making and built by those 
		responsible for JP Morgan's affairs in each country.
 
 While it will take time to win clients and recruit staff, Petno is 
		convinced that JP Morgan can build a sustainable business in Europe 
		similar to its commercial bank in the United States, which last year 
		produced $8.6 billion of revenue.
 
 MARKET SHARE
 
 Petno declined to reveal his goals, but JP Morgan's expansion comes as 
		corporate lending is a rare bright spot for Europe's banks amid 
		rock-bottom interest rates and weak growth.
 
		
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			A sign of JP Morgan Chase Bank is seen in front of their 
			headquarters tower in Manhattan, New York, U.S., November 13, 2017. 
			REUTERS/Amr Alfiky 
             
In the first half of this year, the four top investment banks in continental 
Europe ranked by the size of the deals they have advised on are U.S. banks, data 
from Refinitiv shows. 
A combination of price cuts, product range and additional marketing have won JP 
Morgan market share in European capital markets, U.S. credit cards, commercial 
lending, asset management and securities services in recent years.
 But Francois-Xavier Deucher, Fitch Ratings' director for Financial Institutions 
in Paris, said it won't be easy for a bank without a dense branch network to 
make headway in Europe.
 
 "The profitable part of the business lies in services like cash management, 
rates or forex hedging, advisory, insurance or employee savings plans," Deucher 
said.
 
 "On export financing and on support on international markets, JP Morgan could 
have a competitive advantage," he said.
 
 With $2.6 trillion in assets, about a quarter of which are outside North 
America, JPMorgan's balance sheet is much larger than Europe's biggest banks. 
Its $24 billion net profit dwarfed BNP Paribas' <BNPP.PA> 7.8 billion euro net 
profit in 2017.
 
 Profit last year at Credit Agricole <CAGR.PA> and Banco Santander <SAN.MC>, 
continental Europe's second and fourth largest banks by assets, were 6.5 billion 
euros and 6.6 billion euros, while Deutsche Bank's <DBKGn.DE> was 1.3 billion 
euros.
 
 (Reporting by Inti Landauro in Paris and David Henry in New York; Editing by 
Alexander Smith)
 
				 
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