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JPMorgan Chase’s dealmakers are spending their time in the Swiss Alps huddling with ebullient clients, but the boss of the biggest US bank is striking a more cautious tone.
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“Asset prices are kind of inflated” in the US stock market, chief executive Jamie Dimon said in a CNBC interview Wednesday from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
“You need fairly good outcomes to justify those prices, and we’re all hoping for that. I think having pro-growth strategies helps make that happen, but there are negatives out there and they can tend to surprise you.”
His remarks came hours after Filippo Gori, the bank’s co-head of global banking, described a “sense of euphoria” among clients in an interview from the annual gathering. He added that the new administration “has clearly brought the animal spirits back to the market.” Daniel Pinto, JPMorgan’s outgoing president, said Wednesday on Bloomberg Television that the US economy is in a good place, though inflation and geopolitics could derail the optimism.
The bankers’ remarks come on the third day of Donald Trump’s second presidential term, and Wall Street has embraced the return of Trump, who finance executives see as more business-friendly and growth-oriented than his predecessor. Dimon said after the election in November that many bankers were “dancing in the street.” The S&P 500 index has climbed 4.6 percent since Trump was elected.
Dimon reiterated that he remains cautious about global deficit spending, the potential for persistent inflation and geopolitical issues. On deficits, he added that growth is “the only real solution” to reduce them.
The longtime JPMorgan chief said earlier this month that he wasn’t surprised that Trump won the US presidential election. In an interview from the World Economic Forum last year, Dimon said that Trump was “kind of right” on some issues.
“I was really just trying to make the point of, respect the voter,” Dimon said Wednesday of his remarks last year. “The problem with putting a voter in a box is a voter may be voting for some completely different reasons than you think or I think or something like that, and respect why they may have grievances or angers.”
In the wide-ranging interview, Dimon also touched on billionaire Elon Musk and the government-efficiency effort he’s set to run. Dimon said he and Musk have “settled some of our differences” and he wishes the panel the best.
“I think it is completely rational for someone to look at our government and say it’s been ineffective,” Dimon said. “Government needs to be more accountable, it needs to be more efficient, it should be outcomes-based.”
(Bloomberg)













