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JPMorgan’s Dimon urges US Fed to wait past June before cutting rates

JPMorgan’s Dimon urges US Fed to wait past June before cutting rates
JPMorgan’s Dimon urges US Fed to wait past June before cutting rates


Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, testifies during a Senate Banking Committee hearing at the Hart Senate Office Building on December 06, 2023 in Washington, DC. The committee heard testimony from the largest financial institutions during an oversight hearing on Wall Street firms. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Win Mcnamee | Getty Images News | Getty Images

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon on Tuesday urged the Federal Reserve to wait past June before cutting interest rates, arguing the central bank needs to shore up its inflation-fighting credibility.

“I think they have to be data-dependent. If I were them, I would wait,” Dimon said at the Australian Financial Review business summit via a livestream from New York.

“You can always cut it quickly and dramatically. Their credibility is a little bit at stake here. I would even wait past June and let it all sort it out.”

Markets are seeing an 84% probability the Fed will cut in June, while a total easing of 90 basis points have been priced in for the year.

Dimon said the U.S. economy was doing so well it could almost be characterized as a boom, but cautioned against the wholesale embrace of the soft landing narrative by markets. He put the odds of a recession of some sort at around 65% and refused to rule out the possibility of stagflation.

He has previously warned that geopolitical tensions, including the war in Ukraine and conflict in Gaza, could weigh on global growth.

Dimon said the surge in debt and equity markets since late 2023 had some bubble-like characteristics and linked it in part to the legacy of the pandemic-era fiscal and monetary stimulus, which was “still in the system, you can’t say that they’re gone.”

Long a critic of bitcoin, Dimon said a lot of the practical uses for the cryptocurrency were illegal activity like sex trafficking, fraud and terrorism.

“I don’t know what the bitcoin itself is for, but I defend your right to smoke a cigarette, I’ll defend your right to buy a bitcoin. I won’t personally ever buy a bitcoin.”

Dimon also weighed in on artificial intelligence and said JPMorgan had two thousand people working on 400 use cases for the technology at the bank. At home he uses AI to summarize books he does not have time to read.

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