The interviewer is just stroking his ego in a puff piece. What ever happened to critical, tough, insightful journalism? How does Diemon square his position on the Basel III endgame which will make banks safer for the public (likely reducing the chances of giant bailouts which cause inflation) with his purported worries about inflation? How can he say he cares about the American public while shying away from real opportunities to serve the people and not a private bank?
Protecting your capital is much more important than making money. Basically because if you lose your capital, making money is much harder. ''Missing the train'' vs. ''losing your money''. There are a lot of trains, but if your money is gone, it's over.
Wall Street pitched so-called quality stocks with high profitability and low debt, as a kind of insurance against whatever the economy might throw at you. Quality stocks have underperformed the S&P500 this year, My $200k portfolio is down by approximately 20 %, any recommendations to scale up my returns on investment
Nobody knows anything You need to create your own process, manage risk and stick to the plan, through thick or thin While also continuously learning from mistakes and improving.
Exactly why i enjoy market decisions being guided by a pro , seeing that their entire skillset is built around going long and short at the same time both employing risk management and market experience , been using a portfolio-coach for over 2years+ and I've netted over $3million in that time frame.
'Carol Vivian Constable, a highly respected figure in her field. I suggest delving deeper into her credentials, as she possesses extensive experience and serves as a valuable resource for individuals seeking guidance in navigating the financial market.
In light of the ongoing global economic crisis, it is crucial for everyone to prioritize investing in diverse sources of income that are not reliant on the government. This includes exploring opportunities in stocks, gold, silver, and digital currencies. Despite the challenging economic situation, it remains a favorable time to consider these investments.
The pathway to substantial returns doesn't solely rely on stocks with significant movements. Instead, it revolves around effectively managing risk relative to reward. By appropriately sizing your positions and capitalizing on your advantage repeatedly, you can progressively work towards achieving your financial goals. This principle applies across various investment approaches, whether it be long-term investing or day trading.
Even with the right strategies and appropriate assets, investment returns can differ among investors. Recognizing the vital role of experience in investment success is crucial. Personally, I understood this significance and sought guidance from a market analyst, significantly growing my account to nearly a million. Strategically withdrawing profits just before the market correction, I'm now seizing buying opportunities once again.
Our economy struggling with uncertainties, housing issues, foreclosures, global fluctuations, and pandemic aftermath, causing instability. Rising inflation, sluggish growth, and trade disruptions need urgent attention from all sectors to restore stability and stimulate growth.
With the US dollar losing value to inflation and other currencies gaining traction, uncertainty looms. Yet, many still trust in the Dollar's perceived safety. Worried about my $420,000 retirement savings losing value, I seek alternative security for my money.
With my demanding job, I lack time for investment analysis. For seven years, a fiduciary has managed my portfolio, adapting to market conditions, enabling successful navigation and informed decisions. Consider a similar approach.
this is definitely considerable! think you could suggest any professional/advisors i can get on the phone with? i'm in dire need of proper portfolio allocation
I appreciate it. After searching her name online and reviewing her credentials, I'm quite impressed. I've contacted her as I could use all the help I can get. A call has been scheduled.
I think I am with Jamie on this. I foresee a recession lasting 2-3 years, and if inflation continues to surge, the Federal Reserve will likely raise interest rates soon. Inflation is causing various issues worldwide, such as food shortages, scarcities of diesel and heating fuel, and significant spikes in housing prices, leading to a potential financial market crash. This global downturn could have long-lasting repercussions. Given the current inflation rate of approximately 9%, my main worry is how to optimize my savings and retirement fund, which has remained stagnant at around $300,000, yielding almost no gains for quite some time.
There are many other interesting stocks in many industries that you might follow. You don't have to act on every forecast, so I'll suggest that you work with a financial advisor who can help you choose the best times to purchase and sell the shares or ETFs you want to acquire.
I agree, that's the more reason I prefer my day to day investment decisions being guided by an advisor seeing that their entire skillset is built around going long and short at the same time both employing risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying off risk as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, coupled with the exclusive information/analysis they have, it's near impossible to not out-perform, been using my advisor for over 2years+ and I've netted over 2.8million.
MICHELE KATHERINE SINGH is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
Most recessions last 11 months - in likelihood that’s what we’ll see here. We may have entered recession last month as Q reads from stocks have been disappointing summer numbers won’t meet expectations winter will freeze up and next March/April we’ll pull out of it.
Although I disagree with 50-60% of what's said in this interview I can always respect his desire to view things as objectively as possible before viewing it subjectively. A bright and calculated man who seems self-reflective. I could fault the dissolution displayed in certain statements but it's understandable from the communities he interacts with.
Ouch... Where do you live? Monaco? I just spent $175 at Costco and will feed my family of 6 for a week with chicken, ground beef, fish, fruits and vegetables.
There's no way you spent 300 dollars for two bags of groceries unless you filled them with steaks. I don't spend more than 100 dollars on groceries per week (for 2 people). Try eating like a normal healthy person. Vegetables, chicken, salmon, rice, grains, etc. Buy meats in bulk and freeze most of it. You obviously aren't too bright.
Jamie Dimon said year and a half ago that consumers will run out of money. Never expect them to tell you the truth ,they will only tell you what they want you to hear.
@aidancollins1591 He has all the financial data on the palm of his hand and you think he had bad judgment ? Also , JP Morgan bought Bitcoin when they said they will fire anyone who does . Does it look he is misleading you , or guiding you ? If you cant wake up to the fact that there is a huge propaganda machine going on…. Well good luck.
Probably because he’s getting ready to rob you as well. Then play dumb. That’s how it starts. Get your money out of that bank before it’s gone. Numerous people are being robbed by these POS.
He only really made the point that the bottom 20% has done pretty badly for 2 decades. This is probably more like the bottom 50% have done pretty badly, the middle-top 25% are hanging in there and the top 24%, minus the top 1%, are still doing fine, and the top 1% are absolutely killing it and stealing everyone else's money.
@@LoveForBluebirdsSo as usual, 75% of Americans are struggling and the remaining 24% and 1% are doing amazing. Middle class surely doesn’t exist that much anymore, huh.
Consumer is in good shape doesnt mean that people are in good financial shape, but that the general consumer is still spending. I cant believe how many people here, probably 3/4 in the comment, seem to be illiterate.
2019: investment year for me - $220K in raw profits 2024 alone: $170K so far in profits The constant: Algorithmic trading Doesn’t matter who the president is! Only your strategy matters.
She’s quite the obvious choice here. You’ve gotta check her out. She’s a whiz at turning your financial dreams into reality! She got a really down-to-earth vibe and almost prophetic insight
The problem is that consumers out in the job market DO have options, but wages have stagnated. In simple words: jobs have increased, but not wages. It is very misleading. Their purchasing power isn’t the same as before. This is rubbish
This comment is spot on it's called stagflation. We are becoming wage slaves with no solutions, when basic needs are priced skyhigh it leaves little money left over for other endeavors. Being just a millionaire is now considered middle class .
Yes. Employment should be measured by quality of jobs people have, not just overall unemployment. Also need to stop the outsourcing of jobs, any jobs, manufacturing and tech, this started in the 90s and needs to stop to start to generate good jobs again.
Jobs haven't even increased. Most of his "research" is based on outdated metrics that don't account for ghost jobs and corporations trying to lie about growth. In reality, the job market is a hellscape right now
what do you mean? the questions are very hard to answer "Do you think that the US position towards the Israel-Hamas war is the right one?" This question is impossible to answer. It is a problem with no solution. Not only is it inconceivable to come up with a possible solution to this question, it is undoubtable impossible and intractable to even evaluate if such solution is the optimal one. There are too many constraints and optimization variables in the geopolitics. If it wasn't hard, we would've had a solution "How should the US approach China" - you are telling me that this question is not hard? that's insane. Like the earlier question about the Middle East, this question is essentially mathematically intractable. You can try to simplify parts of this system with heuristics and try to model out the best solution, but this system is too complex and so difficult to analyze, how could even quantify a good answer is beyond me. The observations we receive and the control we as Americans have do not make this easy, and I don't blame Jamie Dimon for his answer
@@AntonioMac3301they are easy questions bc they are not answerable - ask a real question - what was your take on the Fed trading ahead of announcements ? How often do you sorely to the treasury secretary? How early into Covid did you know that the country would spend 7 trillion dollars ? How did Chase alter its investments in 2020 -2021. Which trader received the highest bonus this past year?
*END OF ROME* By the end of the third century, Rome had clearly reached a crisis. The state could no longer obtain sufficient resources even through compulsion and was forced to rely ever more heavily on debasement of the currency to raise revenue In the end, there was no money left to pay the army, build forts or ships, or protect the frontier. The barbarian invasions, which were the final blow to the Roman state in the fifth century, were simply the culmination of three centuries of deterioration in the fiscal capacity of the state to defend itself. Indeed, many Romans welcomed the barbarians as saviors from the onerous tax burden *Does this sound like we are here now ?* *Taxes - Inflation - Fiscal Deficit*
I would argue with Jamie Dimon’s opinion about Americans financial health as surging taxes along with insurance costs are crippling most Americans and then we have basic inflation of goods & services that are adding to the pain. When Americans don’t have the finances for basic needs it’s not likely they will have discretionary funds to keep the economy rolling.
A country only do well when not only the top 20 % do well, but bottom 20% as well. If the bottom 20% working class people is struggling to buy groceries, can’t buy home, drowning with debt just to get by then no matter what they say, doesn’t matter.
I'm a retiree, and I see that my pension doesn't change much. Prices change a lot, and for the worse. Burger-flippers are making $20/hr now, so no more fast food for me. My bills are closing in on double what they were 7 years ago, when I retired. My property taxes are going up because of all the little add-ons, which could eventually force me to sell. Eggs cost 5 times (!) what they did when I retired. I've cut soda, frozen foods of any kinds, juices, beverages, etc. Everyone seems to be getting more money, consideration and attention, except for people like me.
@@JEEDUHCHRI As I say, my pension does not change much, but it does change, i.e., there is a COLA. It's just not keeping up with inflation, and that's part of the point.
I'd bet my breakfast Jamie doesn't wake up at 4:30 routinely (would be happy to take him out for breakfast even though I largely don't agree with his outlook). His face says 6:30 am, skimming papers not entire sections, and likely more Pilates than finance. Also, you can't really have it both ways: On the whole, you care about the American public and are excited to serve in the cabinet or you run a private big bank and it's selfish interests come first. Can't say you care about the public and be too afraid to get into politics because of what the public says. Also, the 'I'm not a politician' is the ultimate farcical political answer. Inflation is a real issue and we agree there, but Diemon criticizes the Basel III endgame which will make banks safer and reduce the chances of giant bailout spending packages which increase inflation. His actions and words don't exactly align in my book.
The problem with Basel 3 is quite simple even though it increases the capital banks have to hold and it makes them safer, it reduces the amount of money banks can loan out so it makes it more expensive and harder to loan it out to smaller and medium-sized businesses thereby eliminating a lot of them
I don’t think he said that he would be willing to be a cabinet secretary, he said that he would be willing to assist either president. That could be construed to mean a cabinet position, as he didn’t specifically rule out Commerce (an obvious position for someone of his background) the way he did Treasury or Fed Chair, but it more likely means he would be willing to serve as an economic advisor or on a council of economic advisors as we have seen many CEOs do in the past. Those wouldn’t be cabinet level positions and would allow him to continue to still serve in his role at JP Morgan while also serving the country in an advisory position- similar to the way CEOs often serve on other corporations corporate boards.
I don’t think that is necessarily true. You don’t get to the top without stepping over a few people to be sure, but I don’t buy the current narrative that every powerful person has a bunch of skeletons in their closets. I think the truth is much more simple than that. Powerful people are human just like the rest of us. They have families, they have feelings, they make mistakes, they do good things, and they sometimes do bad things. The mistakes and bad things that powerful people do just have bigger impacts and receive greater scrutiny than the problems that average people create.
@@user-fb8bo3ys2f My dad works as an assistant director in one of he top 4 banks. He said last last week one of the guys from the feds came over and had 2 hours meeting with all the CEOs and some of the directors. His bboss told him that they (the feds) will not plan to cut the rate until fall. This is what he told us over dinner but who knows.
Was telling my Dad the same thing the other day kind of crazy to see someone else say the same thing. Edit: A lot of his interviews seem to be more involved in geopolitical and societal factors rather than economic issues. Seems as if he's prepping campaign points for sure.
Lol he eats the best meals every day and flies on private jets and gets chauffeured in a rolls Royce wherever he needs to go. Of course he’s living an amazing life. But regardless, dude’s old and won’t be alive for much longer. All these parasitic boomers will be kicking the bucket in the next 10-15 years.
The low interest rates began well before Biden and government spending has been out if control for years. Blaming one politician for the problem is shortsighted.
Everytime the probably of a recession lessens like it has according to the media the last few months, history tells us the opposite is true. That it usually happens when people aren’t aware of it.
Yeah thats true, but that was caused by many other facrors. Not because of something like covid. Its like shaking a can of soda, covid is what shook the soda can and now the bubbles are fizzling down. Like jamie said the real problem is fiscal spending and america will be the next argentina/Venezuela if things dont change. But chase is part of the problem making capitalism a monopoly. We dont have a free market , we have a monopolized market thx to banks like chase. Socioeconomics!!!!
In 1960 the US economy was far and away the largest the world had ever seen with very little debt. Today it’s barely 25% with Massive Debts and Deficits!!!!!! If my household was like that it would cease to exist!!!!! Nice Ad for JP Morgan Chase!
getting trillions in government bailouts paid for by the working man so he can continue ripping off the working man. never realised shrewd businessmen meant organised crime.
Wow. It goes to show how disconnected these 1% ers are with how much consumers are struggling, middle class is being wiped out, massive debt, etc. Unbelievable.
You mean the guy that manipulated the global gold market to make $10 billion of illegal profit. That is the guy that has common sense? Jamie Dimon is a super grifter, stealing pennys on every transaction, adding no economic value, his company is a parasite on productive Americans
Why would the common man or woman in the USA or Western Europe fight in WW3? The great sacrifices, paid in blood and fear of WW1 & WW2 have resulted in a state of financial dictatorship, that has the seen a few super rich, hoard vast wealth, while throwing a few loaves to the middle classes and just a few crumbs to working classes.
@@plica06 Why would she challenge him on anything? What do you even mean? Dimon is there voluntarily. He doesn't have to be. This isn't a police interrogation.
So many ignoring his main point about the economy, Massive fiscal spending and QE hangover. I cannot believe how so many ignore this deficit spending and its effect on inflation. The public has become so conditioned to look for the Fed to play the cavalry and forget how limited they are when you have deficit spending like this. At least Jamie Dimon ‘hints’ at the real problem.
To be fair he is an expert on crashing an economy thru personal greed as his company was one of the major catalyst to the GFC crash. Somehow they got richer and didn't go to jail.
Mr. Dimon will be the 1st in the line looking for government handouts when banks get caught making bad decisions. We place too much emphasis on what bankers say.
Investment banking refers to a financial sector that facilitates the creation of capital for companies, governments, and other entities. This involves services like underwriting, mergers and acquisitions, securities trading, and offering financial advice. Investment banks help organizations raise funds through issuing stocks or bonds and also provide strategic guidance for corporate activities.
With this, what's the optimal strategy to capitalize on the stock market? I'm contemplating diversifying my $400k stock portfolio to maximize returns while minimizing risk.
There are strategies that could be put in place for solid gains regardless of economy situation, but such execution is usually carried out by an investment specialist
Accurate asset allocation is crucial, and some individuals use hedging strategies or allocate part of their portfOlio to defensive assets for market downturns. Expert guidance is vital for achieving this. This approach has helped me stay finan-cially secure for over five years, yielding nearly $1 million in returns on invest-ments.
I expected Jamie to be a LOT more vile and contentious to be fair. Well conducted interview and good insights into how he has made up his conclusions on a macro scale. I disagree with Jamie a lot but I gotta respect deep insight (from a macro level) when I see it. I would have thought he would be pro-Russia, but there we go, thanks for taking a stand and even explaining it towards a greater good for the economy! (which I agree on)
Algorithmic trading, predatory economics, birth gap and pyramid social programs. The A.I. and automaton replacement curve. Wealth gap and class system. Countries debts and fiat money.
He is correct on the issue of deficits. If you keep marketing this debt, you have to attract buyers. You must pay attractive interest to keep debt buyers happy.
The very fact that the head of the most important global systematic bank is openly discussing geo politics is worrying. Either things are getting really bad, or the powers at be have decided the near future and his position will become increasingly the norm as the world adapts to that future.
I don't think this guy is nearly as stupid as a politician actually.. up until 3:40 he does no dancing around the economic outlook and macro outlook is not good.. you can casually listen to him and feel soothed but nothing about anything he says should literally cause calm.. he says with a little tonal deafness that people were looking through rose colored glasses in 1972, then 1973 was quite bad.. then immediately says that there's going to be some positive in the short and mid-term which is factually true but.. This man is probably a master of saying things that are legally representative but that also sound smooth, because here he speaks to what everyone is thinking and he says that the bottom 20% of economic people cannot afford a house, and you can find that a mere 26% of people in the population are age 20-35 which is where the majority of the economic hardship is occurring, and he does not miss the fetanyl the suicide rate et al.. So you can watch him speak and miss that he understands it and then you can see a professionalism that he's still looking for the positives
In other words low income folks can afford food with their EBT,middle income folks can get their Amazon goods within a day and the 1% are raking in billions of dollars!
We all know that J.P. Morgan is recruiting sociology and social work majors. Thank you, Mr. Dimon for leading the youth of America down the right path.
You can't be a successful major bank CEO by being emotional. You can tell he's very calculated and deliberate. He does not buy into hypes and rhetoric. I think Dimon is more than smart enough to not run for any political office. Politics nowadays is all about popularism, just giving constituents whatever they want. Dimon is the type of people that wouldn't hesitate to go against people's will if he thinks it creates long-term value. He'll be destroyed as a politician, and he knows it. Some people say he didn't get any hard questions, that's not true. Maybe they are just used to political bickering where neither side wanted to resolve any issues, they just want to one-up the other side. Financial reporters don't care for that stuff. They care a lot more about which direction is Dimon taking JP Morgan going forward. He dodged some of the more political questions, too.
Politics determines how wealth is distributed within a country, while wars and diplomacy determine how wealth is distributed between countries. These are all direct consequences of government policies for the majority of the US population: Economic inequality, inflation, stagnant real wages for the last fifty years, costly healthcare, an expensive education system, student loan debt totaling $1.7 trillion with an average balance of $38,000, poor public transportation systems, racial inequality, mass incarceration, the militarization of police, deteriorating infrastructure, housing affordability, homelessness, the opioid epidemic, and gun violence. Instead of prioritizing the welfare of their people, they meddle in other countries to spread their version of democracy.
In the past consumers used cheap credit to subsidize their income to continue lifestyles above their means. Now expensive credit to subsidize their income. Inflation makes it difficult to keep up with cost of living. Many do not want to cut back or change lifestyle are raiding their retirement accounts early or taking our home equity loans.
Watch the full, wide-ranging interview with JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon here: on.wsj.com/4aWntus
The interviewer is just stroking his ego in a puff piece. What ever happened to critical, tough, insightful journalism? How does Diemon square his position on the Basel III endgame which will make banks safer for the public (likely reducing the chances of giant bailouts which cause inflation) with his purported worries about inflation? How can he say he cares about the American public while shying away from real opportunities to serve the people and not a private bank?
Economy grow but only in top 20%.
The interviewer seems to have a big ego. She should stay at home and look after the children
😅
Ahhh, the economic hitman who has taken down many countries! Owned and “handled”! Another puppet!
Protecting your capital is much more important than making money. Basically because if you lose your capital, making money is much harder. ''Missing the train'' vs. ''losing your money''. There are a lot of trains, but if your money is gone, it's over.
Wall Street pitched so-called quality stocks with high profitability and low debt, as a kind of insurance against whatever the economy might throw at you. Quality stocks have underperformed the S&P500 this year, My $200k portfolio is down by approximately 20 %, any recommendations to scale up my returns on investment
Nobody knows anything You need to create your own process, manage risk and stick to the plan, through thick or thin While also continuously learning from mistakes and improving.
Exactly why i enjoy market decisions being guided by a pro , seeing that their entire skillset is built around going long and short at the same time both employing risk management and market experience , been using a portfolio-coach for over 2years+ and I've netted over $3million in that time frame.
Do you mind sharing info on the adviser who assisted you? I'm 39 now and would love to grow my stock portfolio and plan my retirement
'Carol Vivian Constable, a highly respected figure in her field. I suggest delving deeper into her credentials, as she possesses extensive experience and serves as a valuable resource for individuals seeking guidance in navigating the financial market.
In light of the ongoing global economic crisis, it is crucial for everyone to prioritize investing in diverse sources of income that are not reliant on the government. This includes exploring opportunities in stocks, gold, silver, and digital currencies. Despite the challenging economic situation, it remains a favorable time to consider these investments.
The pathway to substantial returns doesn't solely rely on stocks with significant movements. Instead, it revolves around effectively managing risk relative to reward. By appropriately sizing your positions and capitalizing on your advantage repeatedly, you can progressively work towards achieving your financial goals. This principle applies across various investment approaches, whether it be long-term investing or day trading.
Even with the right strategies and appropriate assets, investment returns can differ among investors. Recognizing the vital role of experience in investment success is crucial. Personally, I understood this significance and sought guidance from a market analyst, significantly growing my account to nearly a million. Strategically withdrawing profits just before the market correction, I'm now seizing buying opportunities once again.
@@ThomasChai05who is your advisor please, if you don't mind me asking?
*Izella Annette Anderson* maintains an online presence. Just make a simple search for her name online.
I copied her whole name and pasted it into my browser; her website appeared immediately, and her qualifications are excellent; thank you for sharing.
Our economy struggling with uncertainties, housing issues, foreclosures, global fluctuations, and pandemic aftermath, causing instability. Rising inflation, sluggish growth, and trade disruptions need urgent attention from all sectors to restore stability and stimulate growth.
With the US dollar losing value to inflation and other currencies gaining traction, uncertainty looms. Yet, many still trust in the Dollar's perceived safety. Worried about my $420,000 retirement savings losing value, I seek alternative security for my money.
With my demanding job, I lack time for investment analysis. For seven years, a fiduciary has managed my portfolio, adapting to market conditions, enabling successful navigation and informed decisions. Consider a similar approach.
this is definitely considerable! think you could suggest any professional/advisors i can get on the phone with? i'm in dire need of proper portfolio allocation
Monica Shawn Marti is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with to set up an appointment
I appreciate it. After searching her name online and reviewing her credentials, I'm quite impressed. I've contacted her as I could use all the help I can get. A call has been scheduled.
I think I am with Jamie on this. I foresee a recession lasting 2-3 years, and if inflation continues to surge, the Federal Reserve will likely raise interest rates soon. Inflation is causing various issues worldwide, such as food shortages, scarcities of diesel and heating fuel, and significant spikes in housing prices, leading to a potential financial market crash. This global downturn could have long-lasting repercussions. Given the current inflation rate of approximately 9%, my main worry is how to optimize my savings and retirement fund, which has remained stagnant at around $300,000, yielding almost no gains for quite some time.
There are many other interesting stocks in many industries that you might follow. You don't have to act on every forecast, so I'll suggest that you work with a financial advisor who can help you choose the best times to purchase and sell the shares or ETFs you want to acquire.
I agree, that's the more reason I prefer my day to day investment decisions being guided by an advisor seeing that their entire skillset is built around going long and short at the same time both employing risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying off risk as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, coupled with the exclusive information/analysis they have, it's near impossible to not out-perform, been using my advisor for over 2years+ and I've netted over 2.8million.
MICHELE KATHERINE SINGH is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
Most recessions last 11 months - in likelihood that’s what we’ll see here. We may have entered recession last month as Q reads from stocks have been disappointing summer numbers won’t meet expectations winter will freeze up and next March/April we’ll pull out of it.
Imagine having 300k and being worried. If you’re really that worried buy some land with that money, and build a life for yourself.
J.P Morgan stood up in his grave and applauded.
LOL
@@rn8605 what type of ugly a emoji
@@Karuska22ps welcome to the world of an android user
@@spiralsagelmao
“the consumer is in pretty good shape right now” i dont feel in pretty good shape
He's in really good shape right now so everyone else must be doing just fine too !
you are "a" consumer, not "the" consumer
You don't "feel" good but you still have to spend more, even go into debt for that spending. That's his definition of "good"
like he has said, some are in good, some are in bad.
He hangs with elites, not common folk
I love when millionaires tell how the working class population feel itself.
Legendary comment.
@@neo5973Legendary response
Correction billionaire
What part are u reffering to
He bases his argument on the numbers thats the fundamental of his job. It’s not about the rich or poor gap.
Although I disagree with 50-60% of what's said in this interview I can always respect his desire to view things as objectively as possible before viewing it subjectively. A bright and calculated man who seems self-reflective. I could fault the dissolution displayed in certain statements but it's understandable from the communities he interacts with.
Couldn’t have said it better. Great objective take.
Wise comment Amadeus!
the consumer is in pretty good shape
as I spend 300 dollars for 2 bags of groceries
$300 for 2 bags? How big were they? Do you eat gold for breakfast?
@@hamzamahmood9565 2 paper bags, literally nothing fancy except for the butcher shop meats.
Ouch... Where do you live? Monaco?
I just spent $175 at Costco and will feed my family of 6 for a week with chicken, ground beef, fish, fruits and vegetables.
There's no way you spent 300 dollars for two bags of groceries unless you filled them with steaks. I don't spend more than 100 dollars on groceries per week (for 2 people). Try eating like a normal healthy person. Vegetables, chicken, salmon, rice, grains, etc. Buy meats in bulk and freeze most of it. You obviously aren't too bright.
😂😊
Jamie Dimon said year and a half ago that consumers will run out of money. Never expect them to tell you the truth ,they will only tell you what they want you to hear.
💯
People have run out of money. Savings accounts are at the lowest. Highest credit card debt levels. What am I missing?
@@saiki1989 You are missing some propaganda brainwashing from the mainstream media :)
He runs a bank, he does not run the economy
@aidancollins1591 He has all the financial data on the palm of his hand and you think he had bad judgment ? Also , JP Morgan bought Bitcoin when they said they will fire anyone who does . Does it look he is misleading you , or guiding you ? If you cant wake up to the fact that there is a huge propaganda machine going on…. Well good luck.
Tell Jamie I can’t login to my Chase account
Probably because he’s getting ready to rob you as well. Then play dumb. That’s how it starts. Get your money out of that bank before it’s gone. Numerous people are being robbed by these POS.
This is most likely an id 10 T error.
"the consumer is in pretty good shape, they can't afford bread, but they can eat cake instead, they have options". - Jamie Diman billionaire
Nailed it!
He only really made the point that the bottom 20% has done pretty badly for 2 decades. This is probably more like the bottom 50% have done pretty badly, the middle-top 25% are hanging in there and the top 24%, minus the top 1%, are still doing fine, and the top 1% are absolutely killing it and stealing everyone else's money.
@@LoveForBluebirdsSo as usual, 75% of Americans are struggling and the remaining 24% and 1% are doing amazing. Middle class surely doesn’t exist that much anymore, huh.
Consumer is in good shape doesnt mean that people are in good financial shape, but that the general consumer is still spending. I cant believe how many people here, probably 3/4 in the comment, seem to be illiterate.
@@theonlycaulfield another cake eater. they always say the same before each disaster.
2019: investment year for me - $220K in raw profits
2024 alone: $170K so far in profits
The constant: Algorithmic trading
Doesn’t matter who the president is! Only your strategy matters.
how does it work exactly? Curious to know more.
Hook into some else's account. Trades get copied to yours in real time. Trick is to know whose and what account to plug into
Where do you run this? I’ve used something similar before, so I’m wondering how it compares.
Lisa Wilson Ashlin.
She’s quite the obvious choice here. You’ve gotta check her out. She’s a whiz at turning your financial dreams into reality! She got a really down-to-earth vibe and almost prophetic insight
When you control the game board, the rules, the playing field and you tell the players how they’re doing.
He knows a lot but people are not good. They are hungry and at each others’ throat on the low level
The problem is that consumers out in the job market DO have options, but wages have stagnated. In simple words: jobs have increased, but not wages. It is very misleading. Their purchasing power isn’t the same as before. This is rubbish
This comment is spot on it's called stagflation. We are becoming wage slaves with no solutions, when basic needs are priced skyhigh it leaves little money left over for other endeavors. Being just a millionaire is now considered middle class .
Yes. Employment should be measured by quality of jobs people have, not just overall unemployment. Also need to stop the outsourcing of jobs, any jobs, manufacturing and tech, this started in the 90s and needs to stop to start to generate good jobs again.
Jobs haven't even increased. Most of his "research" is based on outdated metrics that don't account for ghost jobs and corporations trying to lie about growth. In reality, the job market is a hellscape right now
as usual a suck up interview with no hard questions.
what do you mean? the questions are very hard to answer
"Do you think that the US position towards the Israel-Hamas war is the right one?" This question is impossible to answer. It is a problem with no solution. Not only is it inconceivable to come up with a possible solution to this question, it is undoubtable impossible and intractable to even evaluate if such solution is the optimal one. There are too many constraints and optimization variables in the geopolitics. If it wasn't hard, we would've had a solution
"How should the US approach China" - you are telling me that this question is not hard? that's insane. Like the earlier question about the Middle East, this question is essentially mathematically intractable. You can try to simplify parts of this system with heuristics and try to model out the best solution, but this system is too complex and so difficult to analyze, how could even quantify a good answer is beyond me. The observations we receive and the control we as Americans have do not make this easy, and I don't blame Jamie Dimon for his answer
Despicable -
@@AntonioMac3301they are easy questions bc they are not answerable - ask a real question - what was your take on the Fed trading ahead of announcements ? How often do you sorely to the treasury secretary? How early into Covid did you know that the country would spend 7 trillion dollars ? How did Chase alter its investments in 2020 -2021. Which trader received the highest bonus this past year?
No follow up questions or challenging him on his answers.
This same guy said bitcoin was a scam, and he buys millions worth of it. How can anyone trust what he says.
*END OF ROME*
By the end of the third century, Rome had clearly reached a crisis. The state could no longer obtain sufficient resources even through compulsion and was forced to rely ever more heavily on debasement of the currency to raise revenue
In the end, there was no money left to pay the army, build forts or ships, or protect the frontier. The barbarian invasions, which were the final blow to the Roman state in the fifth century, were simply the culmination of three centuries of deterioration in the fiscal capacity of the state to defend itself. Indeed, many Romans welcomed the barbarians as saviors from the onerous tax burden
*Does this sound like we are here now ?*
*Taxes - Inflation - Fiscal Deficit*
What about the other economies? Which US enemy as at now is not in a debt crisis? And which economy is not printing too? Or struggling with inflation?
I would argue with Jamie Dimon’s opinion about Americans financial health as surging taxes along with insurance costs are crippling most Americans and then we have basic inflation of goods & services that are adding to the pain. When Americans don’t have the finances for basic needs it’s not likely they will have discretionary funds to keep the economy rolling.
A country only do well when not only the top 20 % do well, but bottom 20% as well. If the bottom 20% working class people is struggling to buy groceries, can’t buy home, drowning with debt just to get by then no matter what they say, doesn’t matter.
20% of the US population makes 70 million people. If people lose their hope to get afloat, you’d better get ready for some nasty things to emerge.
Great interview. 👍
I cannot understand why this guy gets so much respect.
😂
I assume he is a very charismatic and capable psychopath.
@@enkibumbubingo!
Jealous much?
I like this guy. He speaks in a super layman fashion for someone in his position and not afraid to speak pretty bluntly
I'm a retiree, and I see that my pension doesn't change much. Prices change a lot, and for the worse. Burger-flippers are making $20/hr now, so no more fast food for me. My bills are closing in on double what they were 7 years ago, when I retired. My property taxes are going up because of all the little add-ons, which could eventually force me to sell. Eggs cost 5 times (!) what they did when I retired. I've cut soda, frozen foods of any kinds, juices, beverages, etc.
Everyone seems to be getting more money, consideration and attention, except for people like me.
No one is getting more of anything except the frauds like in this video
People make more money because money loose value very fast. If bidon keeps printing like he did until now, prices will double again.
Does your pension adjust with inflation?
Get a job as a Burger flipper, you get $20 / hr and free burgers! win win.
@@JEEDUHCHRI As I say, my pension does not change much, but it does change, i.e., there is a COLA. It's just not keeping up with inflation, and that's part of the point.
Fine Man God Bless Him . God Bless USA
Either soft or hard landings have possibilities, just be prepared for both.
I'd bet my breakfast Jamie doesn't wake up at 4:30 routinely (would be happy to take him out for breakfast even though I largely don't agree with his outlook). His face says 6:30 am, skimming papers not entire sections, and likely more Pilates than finance. Also, you can't really have it both ways: On the whole, you care about the American public and are excited to serve in the cabinet or you run a private big bank and it's selfish interests come first. Can't say you care about the public and be too afraid to get into politics because of what the public says. Also, the 'I'm not a politician' is the ultimate farcical political answer. Inflation is a real issue and we agree there, but Diemon criticizes the Basel III endgame which will make banks safer and reduce the chances of giant bailout spending packages which increase inflation. His actions and words don't exactly align in my book.
He wakes up between 4:30-5:30
The problem with Basel 3 is quite simple even though it increases the capital banks have to hold and it makes them safer, it reduces the amount of money banks can loan out so it makes it more expensive and harder to loan it out to smaller and medium-sized businesses thereby eliminating a lot of them
I don’t think he said that he would be willing to be a cabinet secretary, he said that he would be willing to assist either president. That could be construed to mean a cabinet position, as he didn’t specifically rule out Commerce (an obvious position for someone of his background) the way he did Treasury or Fed Chair, but it more likely means he would be willing to serve as an economic advisor or on a council of economic advisors as we have seen many CEOs do in the past. Those wouldn’t be cabinet level positions and would allow him to continue to still serve in his role at JP Morgan while also serving the country in an advisory position- similar to the way CEOs often serve on other corporations corporate boards.
WOW, he stole my quote. I keep telling every young person that it feels like 1973! back when I was 15 & scared about the future..
Na, we are far from 1973. The millennial generation has lived through multiple proposed end of the worlds, and recessions.
Only difference is now a homestead will set you back a cool quarter of a million dollars.
@@sirclark4405wagers were. Much lower than do the inflation math
@@sirclark4405 what's a homestead...growing your own food..??
Excellent interview!!!
Dimon is a good man unlike those guys at Blackrock
Great interview. Jamie sure seems very genuine & honest. However every CEO has dark secrets that are never spoken publicly.
What insight…
I don’t think that is necessarily true. You don’t get to the top without stepping over a few people to be sure, but I don’t buy the current narrative that every powerful person has a bunch of skeletons in their closets. I think the truth is much more simple than that. Powerful people are human just like the rest of us. They have families, they have feelings, they make mistakes, they do good things, and they sometimes do bad things. The mistakes and bad things that powerful people do just have bigger impacts and receive greater scrutiny than the problems that average people create.
jamie did interviews like this while he was running all of Jeffrey Epsteins banking
Behind every great wealth there is usually a great crime!
Why this disconnect?
He is awesome
Sounds like he’s running for president
I’d vote for him over the other two losers….
@@user-fb8bo3ys2f My dad works as an assistant director in one of he top 4 banks. He said last last week one of the guys from the feds came over and had 2 hours meeting with all the CEOs and some of the directors. His bboss told him that they (the feds) will not plan to cut the rate until fall. This is what he told us over dinner but who knows.
Was telling my Dad the same thing the other day kind of crazy to see someone else say the same thing. Edit: A lot of his interviews seem to be more involved in geopolitical and societal factors rather than economic issues. Seems as if he's prepping campaign points for sure.
I'd elect a billionaire banker over a billionaire fraudster any day
a banker? lol
Nice World hes living it.......
Lol he eats the best meals every day and flies on private jets and gets chauffeured in a rolls Royce wherever he needs to go. Of course he’s living an amazing life.
But regardless, dude’s old and won’t be alive for much longer. All these parasitic boomers will be kicking the bucket in the next 10-15 years.
Jaime Dimon for President! 🇺🇸
When you keep printing and printing and printing, I just don't understand how you can stop inflation.
You don’t, its called Bidenomics
The low interest rates began well before Biden and government spending has been out if control for years. Blaming one politician for the problem is shortsighted.
I was a bit skeptical about 4rabet at first, but man, the design won me over 🤩 it's so sleek and modern plus the colors are easy on the eyes.
Dimon is a great executive.
Yes, the government spending money from thin air is supporting or buoying the present economy but the piper must be paid
Is this an ad?
for the corrupt and criminal regime
Looks like they’re prepping him for presidency.
Western oligarchs' opinions are always so transparent.
are we still trying to land?
Great questions, solid interview
In the history of business cycle, a soft landing only occurred once 30 years ago. So he is right to be skeptical.
Everytime the probably of a recession lessens like it has according to the media the last few months, history tells us the opposite is true. That it usually happens when people aren’t aware of it.
Yeah thats true, but that was caused by many other facrors. Not because of something like covid. Its like shaking a can of soda, covid is what shook the soda can and now the bubbles are fizzling down. Like jamie said the real problem is fiscal spending and america will be the next argentina/Venezuela if things dont change. But chase is part of the problem making capitalism a monopoly. We dont have a free market , we have a monopolized market thx to banks like chase. Socioeconomics!!!!
What would a hard landing look like?
recession bro@@BanterBureau
In 1960 the US economy was far and away the largest the world had ever seen with very little debt. Today it’s barely 25% with Massive Debts and Deficits!!!!!! If my household was like that it would cease to exist!!!!!
Nice Ad for JP Morgan Chase!
Like him or not. Dimon has evolve over time as a shrewd businessman / CEO with a pulse on “global” economy.
getting trillions in government bailouts paid for by the working man so he can continue ripping off the working man.
never realised shrewd businessmen meant organised crime.
He is a super grifter. Despicable human in the actions he allows his henchmen to undertake
I don't know what jobs market he means most of the jobs are low paid the high paid are scarce and most companies are making big redundancies
Wow. It goes to show how disconnected these 1% ers are with how much consumers are struggling, middle class is being wiped out, massive debt, etc. Unbelievable.
This is why the working class will never thrive because these people are in-charge of the whole system
Nice to see some common sense from an American… great man
🤣
You mean the guy that manipulated the global gold market to make $10 billion of illegal profit. That is the guy that has common sense? Jamie Dimon is a super grifter, stealing pennys on every transaction, adding no economic value, his company is a parasite on productive Americans
Why would the common man or woman in the USA or Western Europe fight in WW3?
The great sacrifices, paid in blood and fear of WW1 & WW2 have resulted in a state of financial dictatorship, that has the seen a few super rich, hoard vast wealth, while throwing a few loaves to the middle classes and just a few crumbs to working classes.
I respect Dimon and while the comments make me think listening will be a waste of my time, Ill give it a try.
so what do you say now?
@@aviralgupta393 He said nothing..
What a great guy ! 👍
Thanks 4 Great Interview! ⭐️
Interesting perspective, Dimon, let's see how it unfolds 🌐
I think a lot more than the bottom 20% aren't doing well. People are working more hours and the open jobs aren't well paying.
Jaime is a dam star ⭐️ we need him to continue to guide the private banking sector
Wow, she had the most powerful banker in the world and she couldn’t find a single challenging question. Her future as a serious journalist is in doubt
What are you talking about? She asked a wide variety of questions.
And didn't challenge him on anything he said. He could have told her jokes back and she would have accepted that.
@@plica06 Why would she challenge him on anything? What do you even mean? Dimon is there voluntarily. He doesn't have to be. This isn't a police interrogation.
She had to the pre-agreed question !!
Great leader
Should be in jail !
So many ignoring his main point about the economy, Massive fiscal spending and QE hangover. I cannot believe how so many ignore this deficit spending and its effect on inflation. The public has become so conditioned to look for the Fed to play the cavalry and forget how limited they are when you have deficit spending like this. At least Jamie Dimon ‘hints’ at the real problem.
JD is insanely smart. And a good man. He cares about the US and the planet.
What's your smoking addiction, MJ?
And yet our purchasing power has diminished severly
Man I would love Jamie in a cabinet role really making future seeking policy this man is Smart and sees the full picture
To be fair he is an expert on crashing an economy thru personal greed as his company was one of the major catalyst to the GFC crash. Somehow they got richer and didn't go to jail.
Absolutely !! and they'll do it again in MARK2 GFC
I love this man talking
When he mentioned that he reads "The Exchange" what's he referring to?
A section of the Wall Street journal
A section of the wall street journal newspaper
@@kylepetrosino908 thank you!
Good job, Emma!
Mr. Dimon will be the 1st in the line looking for government handouts when banks get caught making bad decisions. We place too much emphasis on what bankers say.
Hit the nail on the head !! .... 2008 Finincial crisis MARK2 heding the worlds way! and undoubtedly these are the types that will be responsible.
Investment banking refers to a financial sector that facilitates the creation of capital for companies, governments, and other entities. This involves services like underwriting, mergers and acquisitions, securities trading, and offering financial advice. Investment banks help organizations raise funds through issuing stocks or bonds and also provide strategic guidance for corporate activities.
Dimon: I took so much money, there's no way you're getting out of this!
Thank you, Mr. Future President.
The difference between Dimon and Elon, is that Dimon is a smart charlatan.
I would love to vote for him for president
Who’s gonna carry the boats?Hard landing. Stay hard.
In the English Channel?
Good thing I already bought calls. Thanks Jamie.
If you were sitting on over1 trillion in commercial debt this is how you would sound.
18 years ... relatively young when he started, and was a bank ceo before his current job. That's a global exec right there
With this, what's the optimal strategy to capitalize on the stock market? I'm contemplating diversifying my $400k stock portfolio to maximize returns while minimizing risk.
There are strategies that could be put in place for solid gains regardless of economy situation, but such execution is usually carried out by an investment specialist
Accurate asset allocation is crucial, and some individuals use hedging strategies or allocate part of their portfOlio to defensive assets for market downturns. Expert guidance is vital for achieving this. This approach has helped me stay finan-cially secure for over five years, yielding nearly $1 million in returns on invest-ments.
Please can you leave the info of your lnvestment advsor here? I’m in dire need for one
*Sharon Lynne Hart* is the licensed advisor I use. Just search the name. You’d find necessary details to work with to set up an appointment.
Vote for Trump
I expected Jamie to be a LOT more vile and contentious to be fair.
Well conducted interview and good insights into how he has made up his conclusions on a macro scale.
I disagree with Jamie a lot but I gotta respect deep insight (from a macro level) when I see it.
I would have thought he would be pro-Russia, but there we go, thanks for taking a stand and even explaining it towards a greater good for the economy! (which I agree on)
Algorithmic trading, predatory economics, birth gap and pyramid social programs. The A.I. and automaton replacement curve. Wealth gap and class system. Countries debts and fiat money.
He is correct on the issue of deficits. If you keep marketing this debt, you have to attract buyers. You must pay attractive interest to keep debt buyers happy.
5 days in the office = old thinking
12:03, any one know what "Exchange" and "FT" he is referring to? Is the a WSJ section or a different media?
Financial Times
The very fact that the head of the most important global systematic bank is openly discussing geo politics is worrying. Either things are getting really bad, or the powers at be have decided the near future and his position will become increasingly the norm as the world adapts to that future.
He has always been outspoken, this isn't new.
the powers THAT be
I don't think this guy is nearly as stupid as a politician actually.. up until 3:40 he does no dancing around the economic outlook and macro outlook is not good.. you can casually listen to him and feel soothed but nothing about anything he says should literally cause calm.. he says with a little tonal deafness that people were looking through rose colored glasses in 1972, then 1973 was quite bad.. then immediately says that there's going to be some positive in the short and mid-term which is factually true but..
This man is probably a master of saying things that are legally representative but that also sound smooth, because here he speaks to what everyone is thinking and he says that the bottom 20% of economic people cannot afford a house, and you can find that a mere 26% of people in the population are age 20-35 which is where the majority of the economic hardship is occurring, and he does not miss the fetanyl the suicide rate et al..
So you can watch him speak and miss that he understands it and then you can see a professionalism that he's still looking for the positives
In other words low income folks can afford food with their EBT,middle income folks can get their Amazon goods within a day and the 1% are raking in billions of dollars!
5:28 why was this edited when Dimon spoke about Israel?
I really wish Jamie Dimon would run for president
What a great man
After he said Bitcoin is a scam then bought a bunch, I dont believe a word.
We all know that J.P. Morgan is recruiting sociology and social work majors. Thank you, Mr. Dimon for leading the youth of America down the right path.
You can't be a successful major bank CEO by being emotional. You can tell he's very calculated and deliberate. He does not buy into hypes and rhetoric. I think Dimon is more than smart enough to not run for any political office. Politics nowadays is all about popularism, just giving constituents whatever they want. Dimon is the type of people that wouldn't hesitate to go against people's will if he thinks it creates long-term value. He'll be destroyed as a politician, and he knows it.
Some people say he didn't get any hard questions, that's not true. Maybe they are just used to political bickering where neither side wanted to resolve any issues, they just want to one-up the other side. Financial reporters don't care for that stuff. They care a lot more about which direction is Dimon taking JP Morgan going forward. He dodged some of the more political questions, too.
Politics determines how wealth is distributed within a country, while wars and diplomacy determine how wealth is distributed between countries.
These are all direct consequences of government policies for the majority of the US population: Economic inequality, inflation, stagnant real wages for the last fifty years, costly healthcare, an expensive education system, student loan debt totaling $1.7 trillion with an average balance of $38,000, poor public transportation systems, racial inequality, mass incarceration, the militarization of police, deteriorating infrastructure, housing affordability, homelessness, the opioid epidemic, and gun violence.
Instead of prioritizing the welfare of their people, they meddle in other countries to spread their version of democracy.
LOL "Who keeps you in Check."
Jamie "Well. . . My wife."
The guy runs the world economy and thinks people are doing fine
Love how the editor-in-chief ask questions.
The world needs a hard landing, hard landing to stay hard
In the past consumers used cheap credit to subsidize their income to continue lifestyles above their means. Now expensive credit to subsidize their income. Inflation makes it difficult to keep up with cost of living. Many do not want to cut back or change lifestyle are raiding their retirement accounts early or taking our home equity loans.