PNC is latest bank to say costs will rise alongside revenue

- Key insight: Executives at both banks see major opportunities ahead, but expect to bear higher expenses in order to harness them.
- Supporting data: PNC raised its guidance for non-interest expense from up roughly 7% to up approximately 8.5%.
- Expert quote: “Some expenses, if you account for them as investments, they have very good returns, but they’re expense in the short run.” — Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorganChase
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You have to spend money to make money.
That was one of the messages from executives at
PNC dialed up its 2026 full-year outlook for net interest income, noninterest income and total revenue. But it also increased its forecast for adjusted non-interest expense, from up roughly 7% to up approximately 8.5%.
Similarly, on Tuesday
During their earnings calls, the two banks used roughly the same argument to explain these rising costs: Expenses will have to increase in order to power revenue growth.
“In the end, we’re investing,”
PNC also boasted notable growth in profits and revenues. In the second quarter, net income for the Pittsburgh-based lender was $2.1 billion, marking a 25% leap from one year ago. Total revenue for the $616 billion-asset bank was $6.9 billion, up 21% year over year.
But for both companies, these earnings did not come without cost. In the second quarter,
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“The growth reflected increased business activity, higher marketing spend, as well as continued investments,” PNC CFO Rob Reilly said during Wednesday’s call.
Not every big bank drew a link between rising costs and rising revenue. But that’s partly because not every bank offered guidance on their expenses — Bank of America and Goldman Sachs, for example, both stayed mum on their expected costs.
“When we have an opportunity to spend more money in marketing with a positive [return on investment], we’re going to do it,”