Chase CEO Jamie Dimon tells people worried about tariffs and inflation to ‘get over it’ - ‘National security trumps a little bit more inflation,’ CEO said at World Economic Forum
In response to external attacks on DEI at big-name financial firms, JPMorgan Chase CEO and Chair Jamie Dimon had a few choice words regarding the activists: “Bring them on.” The comments were made Wednesday on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” program, filmed at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
President Trump just put Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase on notice over allegations that the banks have shuttered accounts and denied customers over their political beliefs.
Jamie Dimon reaffirmed JPMorgan's DEI commitments after pressure from an activist shareholder.
Jamie Dimon, the billionaire head of the U.S.’ biggest bank, lauded Tesla CEO Elon Musk, the richest man on the planet and a key part of President Donald Trump’s administration, on Wednesday, squashing a long-running beef between the billionaires’ companies as Dimon becomes the latest billionaire warming to Musk or Trump.
Jamie Dimon’s comments follow JPMorgan’s decision late last year to drop a case filed against Tesla in 2021, which had sought $162.2 million plus fees over a dispute regarding stock warrant transactions.
JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Operating Officer Daniel Pinto said private credit’s financing of small businesses warrants attention, given the booming industry has yet to experience the fallout from an economic deterioration.
Jamie Dimon remains steadfast in JPMorgan's DEI efforts, despite facing challenges from conservative activist investors and Trump's recent crackdown on DEI initiatives.
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon on Wednesday said the U.S. stock market is overvalued and explained why he’s a little more pessimistic about the global economy than your average Wall Street insider.
The U.N. chief ratcheted up his warning about climate change and said the world’s thirst for fossil fuels is a “Frankenstein monster” that spares no one, while calling for greater attention to risks posed by artificial intelligence if its ascent goes ungoverned.
A version of this article originally appeared in Quartz’s Need to Know: Davos newsletter. To get updates on the World Economic Forum delivered straight to your inbox all week, sign up here.