Five key takeaways from Jamie Dimon's letter to JPMorgan's investors
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[April 04, 2022] By
Michelle Price
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Jamie Dimon, CEO of
JPMorgan Chase & Co, published his closely watched annual letter to
shareholders on Monday, covering critical issues including the war in
Ukraine, the energy crisis, sanctions, inflation and interest rates.
Here are five of the key takeaways from the letter:
THE U.S. ECONOMY IS STILL STRONG...
Dimon has long been bullish on the U.S. economy and repeated that
message in his letter, noting the average American consumer is "in
excellent financial shape" with leverage among the lowest on record,
excellent mortgage underwriting, plentiful jobs with wage increases and
more than $2 trillion in excess savings.
...BUT INFLATION WILL REQUIRE AGGRESSIVE RATE HIKES
The Federal Reserve and the government were right to take bold actions
amid the pandemic, but stimulus probably lasted too long, said Dimon. He
believes the rate rises needed to rein in inflation would be
"significantly higher than the markets expect."
Dimon also had some advice for the Fed: it shouldn't worry about the
market volatility rate rises will cause unless that volatility affects
the economy. It should be flexible in its plan and be prepared to
respond quickly to events on the ground.
THE WAR IN UKRAINE WILL SLOW THE GLOBAL ECONOMY
"The hostilities in Ukraine and the sanctions on Russia are already
having a substantial economic impact," Dimon wrote.
JPMorgan economists think that the euro area, highly dependent on Russia
for oil and gas, will see GDP growth of roughly 2% in 2022, instead of
the 4.5% pace expected just before the invasion began. By contrast, they
expect the U.S. economy to advance roughly 2.5% versus a previously
estimated 3%, Dimon wrote.
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JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon speaks at the Boston College Chief
Executives Club luncheon in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., November
23, 2021. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
"These estimates are based upon a fairly static view of the war in Ukraine and
the sanctions now in place," Dimon wrote. More Russia sanctions are possible, he
noted.
"Along with the unpredictability of war itself and the uncertainty surrounding
global commodity supply chains, this makes for a potentially explosive
situation," he wrote.
...THE WORLD MAY BE FACING AN "UNPRECEDENTED" MOMENT
The confluence of the dramatic stimulus-fueled recovery from the pandemic, the
likely need for rapid rate rises, the war in Ukraine and the sanctions on Russia
may be unprecedented.
"They present completely different circumstances than what we’ve experienced in
the past – and their confluence may dramatically increase the risks ahead,"
Dimon wrote, adding the war will also affect geopolitics for decades.
WITHOUT STRONG AMERICAN LEADERSHIP "CHAOS" WILL PREVAIL
"American global leadership is the best course for the world and for America,"
Dimon wrote. Since nature abhors a power vacuum, it is increasingly clear that
without strong American leadership "chaos likely will prevail," he added.
However, he noted the world does not want an "arrogant" America bossing everyone
around, but an America that works with allies, collaborating and compromising.
"We can organize military and economic frameworks that make the world safe and
prosperous for democracy and freedom only if we work with our allies," he added.
(Reporting by Michelle Price; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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