The JVM runs the bytecode, and the compiler(s) reduce Java or Kotlin code to that bytecode. It's impossible that given a set of Java code, and a set of Kotlin code that is supposed to produce the same functionality, that they will always reduce to the exact same bytecode, so there is bound to be times where, under the hood, performance between the two languages is different.
It's a hopeful sign that Google has thrown support behind Kotlin, because that means when bugs / performance issues are reported, it's much more likely that they'll be addressed
Scala is another language that converted down to JVM bytecode, but it was plagued by performance issues that prevented it from performing as quickly (and with as little memory usage) as established Java code that was supposed to do the same thing.