JAMIE DIMON WARNS: We’re getting a ‘bad recession’ plus ‘financial stress’ like the 2008 crisis

FAN Editor

Jamie Dimon, chief executive officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Giulia Marchi | Bloomberg | Getty Images

JPMorgan Chase chief Jamie Dimon said Monday he expects the coronavirus crisis to include a “bad recession” and elements of financial strain similar to the 2008 downturn.

The chairman and CEO of the biggest U.S. bank said that while JPMorgan entered the crisis from a position of strength and that lenders have prepared for this, the pandemic is playing out in ways that are “dramatically different” from the industry’s Federal Reserve stress tests.

“We don’t know exactly what the future will hold — but at a minimum, we assume that it will include a bad recession combined with some kind of financial stress similar to the global financial crisis of 2008,” Dimon said in his annual shareholders letter. “Our bank cannot be immune to the effects of this kind of stress.”

While the lender is fresh off a record year for revenue and profit, Dimon warned that the bank’s earnings “will be down meaningfully in 2020” because of the coronavirus. He also warned that in an “extremely adverse” downturn in the U.S. economy, JPMorgan Chase would probably consider suspending its dividend to preserve capital.

That message is likely to reverberate among bank investors and analysts. Executives have said that while the biggest U.S. banks voluntarily pulled back on share repurchases at the onset of the crisis, their dividends were safe. Now, with the leader of the world’s most valuable bank by market capitalization broaching the topic of a dividend cut, it would seem that most banks could also be vulnerable if the economy doesn’t recover later this year.

The bank’s 2020 submission to the annual Federal Reserve stress tests indicate that even in an “extremely adverse scenario,” JPMorgan can lend out an additional $150 billion for clients, Dimon said. The New York-based bank had $500 billion in total liquid assets and $300 billion in borrowing ability from Fed sources, he added.

But as the economy worsens and loan losses mount, regulations put in place after the last crisis a decade ago would begin to constrain the bank, Dimon warned.

“As we get closer to the extremely adverse scenario, current regulatory constraints will limit additional actions we can take to help clients,” Dimon said, “in spite of the extraordinary amount of capital and liquidity we could deploy.”

Dimon was forced to step back from JPMorgan last month when he had an acute aortic dissection, or a tear in the lining of a crucial blood vessel branching off the heart. His doctors declared the operation successful; he was discharged after a week in the hospital and returned to work as CEO last week.

Dimon added that while JPMorgan will “will participate in government programs to address the severe economic challenges, we will not request any regulatory relief for ourselves.”

“After the crisis subsides (and it will), our country should thoroughly review all aspects of our preparedness and response,” Dimon said. “And we should use the opportunity to closely review the economic response and determine whether any additional regulatory changes are warranted to improve our financial and economic system. There will be a time and place for that – but not now.”

He praised the Fed’s actions to relieve strains in financial markets, saying that the central bank could take several more steps, including additional lending facilities and relaxing capital and liquidity requirements to boost the system if needed. 

“We have the resources to emerge from this crisis as a stronger country,” Dimon said in the letter. “America is still the most prosperous nation the world has ever seen.”

Here’s the full letter.

Free America Network Articles

Leave a Reply

Next Post

3 in 4 US hospitals now facing coronavirus

WASHINGTON — Three out of four U.S. hospitals surveyed are already treating patients with confirmed or suspected COVID-19, according to a federal report that finds hospitals expect to be overwhelmed as cases rocket toward their projected peak. A report Monday from a federal watchdog agency warns that different, widely reported […]