- Key Insight: Nonperforming assets declined year-over-year at U.S. Bancorp, mirroring the first-quarter results at other large financial institutions
- Supporting data: U.S. Bancorp reported 1.4 million small business clients at the end of the first quarter. The company is looking to grow that number through a partnership with Amazon.
- Expert quote: “Disciplined expense management has become foundational to how we operate.” — Chief Financial Officer John Stern
Minneapolis-based
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Earnings per share of $1.18 were up 15% year over year, exceeding investor expectations by four cents, according to S&P Capital IQ. Net revenue of $7.29 billion increased 4.7%.
“These results demonstrate continued execution within our medium-term financial target ranges and strong momentum across the franchise,” CEO Gunjan Kedia said in a press release. “With disciplined risk management and consistent execution, we are positioned to deliver sustainable returns and long-term value.”
The $701 billion-asset company reported first-quarter net income of $1.95 billion. Loans increased by 5%, and noninterest income rose by 5.7%.
Capital markets revenue totaled $377 million, up 29% from the previous-year first quarter. Other regional and money center banks, including
Capital Markets revenue at
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Boosted by the growth in loans, net interest income totaled $4.3 billion, a 4.1% increase from 2025’s first quarter. Deposits also increased, climbing 3% year-over-year to $528.2 billion on March 31.
Though
“Disciplined expense management has become foundational to how we operate,” Stern said.
While first-quarter net charge-offs of $546 million were virtually level with the 2025 figure, nonperforming loans declined 11.5%, totaling $1.53 billion on March 31.
“Credit quality remained stable, underscoring our clients’ resilience in an uncertain environment,”
Small businesses currently generate about 9% of the bank’s revenue and represent “a compelling long-term opportunity for us,” Kedia said. Partnering with Amazon should “meaningfully expand our small business relationships,” she added.