npr.org 
<https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/04/07/828733842/jamie-dimon-warns-a-bad-recession-is-coming>
  


Jamie Dimon Warns 'A Bad Recession' Is Coming


Jim Zarroli Facebook Twitter

3 minutes

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JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon says the coronavirus pandemic will have 
devastating consequences for the global economy. Eric Piermont/AFP via Getty 
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Eric Piermont/AFP via Getty Images 

 

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon says the coronavirus pandemic will have 
devastating consequences for the global economy.

Eric Piermont/AFP via Getty Images 

The United States faces "a bad recession," combined with the kind of financial 
stress not seen since the global financial crisis of 2008, JPMorgan Chase CEO 
Jamie Dimon warns.

"The world is confronting one of the greatest health threats of a generation, 
one that profoundly impacts the global economy and all of its citizens," he 
wrote in his widely read annual letter to shareholders 
<https://reports.jpmorganchase.com/investor-relations/2019/ar-ceo-letters.htm> .

"As a nation, we were clearly not equipped for this global pandemic, and the 
consequences have been devastating," Dimon wrote. "But it is forcing us to work 
together, and it is improving civility and reminding us that we all live on one 
planet."

He applauded the speed with which the federal government and the world's 
central banks, including the Federal Reserve, have tried to mitigate the 
adverse effects of the pandemic.

But he painted a gloomy picture of the months to come, writing that "we have to 
be prepared to operate under extremely adverse circumstances."

Dimon, who recently underwent emergency heart surgery 
<https://www.npr.org/2020/03/05/812737735/jpmorgan-ceo-jamie-dimon-recovering-from-heart-surgery>
 , is among the most powerful and best known bankers in the world, and one of 
the few still in office who weathered the 2008 crisis.

He said his own bank had entered the year in a position of strength and, "while 
conditions may sometimes be unusual and difficult, we are functioning smoothly."

But he pointed to numerous difficulties ahead and said the bank's earnings will 
be down "meaningfully" this year.

"We are exposing ourselves to billions of dollars of additional credit losses 
as we help both consumer and business customers through these difficult times," 
Dimon wrote.

While most of the bank's branches remain open, many call centers have been shut 
down because of local restrictions, which has increased hold times for 
customers, he said.

 

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