JP Morgan's Dimon Says a 'Complex Set of Risks' Threatens a Strong US Economy
Geopolitics, trade, and high public debt are among the risks threatening the economy, according to Jamie Dimon.
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Key Takeaways
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The U.S. economy remains resilient, but “an increasingly complex set of risks” threatens its stability, wrote Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, on Tuesday.
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Executives at many of America’s largest banks have lately noted the economy’s strength, but warn that the economy has yet to feel the full effects of high oil prices.
Despite a rough start to 2026, the U.S. economy is still standing. Tectonic shifts underfoot could change that, according to the heads of America’s biggest banks.
“The U.S. economy remained resilient in the [first] quarter, with consumers still earning and spending and businesses still healthy,” wrote JPMorgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon on Tuesday. But it faces “an increasingly complex set of risks,” including geopolitical tensions, volatile energy prices, an evolving trade regime, large government debts, and high assets prices, Dimon wrote.
Dimon’s comments echoed his annual letter to shareholders last week, in which he warned that even resilient economies have a “tipping point.” That warning came just before President Trump’s deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face “decimation,” when oil prices were at multi-year highs and investors struggled to see a way out of the Middle East conflict. A tenuous ceasefire has since pushed oil prices lower and buoyed stocks.
Why This Is Important
The U.S. economy has weathered an array of headwinds over the past year, including ever-shifting trade policy, geopolitical tensions, and uncertainty about the impact of AI. Bank executives see that resilience holding for now, but warn that an accumulation of economic pressures can have unpredictable consequences.
Goldman Sachs (GS) chief David Solomon struck a similar tone during his bank’s earnings call Monday. Solomon noted uncertainty created by the war had caused a slowdown in IPO activity and that an extended period of elevated oil prices would weigh on growth, though “at this point, the underlying economy still remains relatively robust.”
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“We still see continued resiliency in the underlying economy and the financial health of the consumers and businesses we serve remains strong,” wrote Charlie Scharf, CEO of Wells Fargo (WFC), in the bank’s quarterly results Tuesday. The economy has, however, yet to feel the full impact of higher oil prices, he warned.
Resurgent inflation is one of the biggest risks for which investors and economists are bracing, but economic data so far has painted a murky picture of the inflation outlook. Consumer prices rose 0.9% in March, a sharp increase driven by the largest one-month increase in energy prices on record. Yet wholesale prices, which can foretell where consumer prices are headed, increased half as much as economists expected last month.
Investors are hopeful that negotiations can deliver a lasting resolution of the U.S.-Iran conflict, which was paused by a two-week ceasefire last Wednesday. Stocks were sharply higher and oil prices lower Tuesday following reports that the U.S. has proposed a 20-year moratorium on uranium enrichment in Iran, a more modest ask than the permanent ban officials have publicly demanded.
With Tuesday’s gains, the S&P 500 was trading less than a percentage point off its record close.
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