JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said on Wednesday that sweeping tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump will probably lead to a recession and defaults by borrowers, he told Fox Business’ "Mornings with Maria" program.
"So long as you have rates going up ... inflation is sticky and credit spreads are gapping out, which they're going to, I think you'll see more credit problems," Dimon said.
Dimon urged fast progress on trade negotiations with US trading partners in order to calm markets, which have been roiled by tariff announcements.
"I hope what they really do is ... get those things done quickly," he said, referring to trade negotiations between US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and other nations. "If they want to calm down markets, show progress on those things."
Dimon, 69, is one of the most prominent voices in corporate America and has regularly been consulted by administrations during times of crisis. His name was floated for senior economic roles in government during the 2024 presidential campaign, including Treasury secretary, but he stayed put at the bank.
Also Read
"I'm taking a calm view, but I think it could get worse if we don't make some progress here," Dimon said.
JPMorgan's economists raised the risk of a US and global recession this year to 60 per cent from 40 per cent after Trump unveiled the trade barriers.
The longest running CEO of a large bank also said that IPOs were being canceled amid market volatility.
"The bad part of these volatile markets is... what it does to the capital markets and the ability of companies to raise money. So IPOs are being canceled, a couple of hung deals out there in the high-yield land, bridge loans, and that just slows everything down," he said.
Even before Trump's latest tariff announcement, new US
tariffs and worries about trade contributed to a 13 per cent decline in US mergers and acquisitions in the first quarter, Dealogic data compiled for Reuters showed.
"Volatile markets generally are good for our capital markets business, but they're generally not good for equity issuance," Dimon added.
In some cases, clients overseas have shunned the US lender in favor of banks closer to home.
"We've lost a couple of bond deals already," Dimon said.
"They simply say that, you know, we'd rather just do this with a local bank than with a US bank."
US stock indexes opened mostly lower on Wednesday, then rebounded, after China announced more levies on US goods, retaliating to President Donald Trump's reciprocal tariffs that took effect earlier in the day.
The world's second largest economy would impose additional tariffs of 84 per cent on all US goods from April 10, up from the 34 per cent previously announced, China's finance ministry said.
Dimon also said that the economy is facing considerable turbulence and tariffs will have lasting negative consequences in his annual letter published on Monday. (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

)