JPMorgan’s CEO has an urgent and concerning message for investors

JPMorgan’s CEO has an urgent and concerning message for investors


JPMorgan Chase just reported strong first-quarter results. Its CEO used the earnings call to warn investors not to get comfortable.

On JPMorgan’s Q1 2026 earnings call on April 14, CEO Jamie Dimon declined to predict whether the U.S. was heading for a recession. But he did not hold back on what happens when the next credit cycle finally arrives. “When there’s a credit cycle, losses will be worse than people expect,” he said, according to American Banker.

Dimon was careful to separate two things: the immediate health of JPMorgan’s book and the broader systemic risk he sees building.

On the immediate picture, he said the bank is not seeing major credit issues. JPMorgan holds approximately $50 billion of exposure to the $1.7 trillion private credit industry.

Its total provision for credit losses came down in Q1, and the bank saw only one charge-off in its nonbank financial institution loan portfolio, which totaled about $160 billion last quarter, according to American Banker.

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On the systemic risk, he was more measured. “I don’t think [private credit risk is] systemic. It almost can’t be systemic at that size, relative to anything else. But, when recessions happen, and values go down, and people refi at higher rates, they’ll be stressed and strain the system,” he said, according to American Banker.

The distinction matters. Dimon is not calling for an imminent collapse. He is saying that when conditions turn, the pain will be worse than most people currently assume.

Dimon pointed to two structural problems in his annual shareholder letter, released April 6.

First, credit standards have been weakening across the board. When standards slip during good times, the losses that emerge in a downturn tend to surprise investors who assumed underwriting remained disciplined, according to AOL citing the shareholder letter.

Second, private credit lacks transparency. Because the market does not price daily like public debt, investors will sell based on predictions rather than actual losses when stress arrives. That kind of behavior can accelerate a downturn well beyond what the underlying fundamentals would suggest, according to AOL.

Dimon also warned that the next credit cycle will likely hit an unexpected sector. He pointed to history. “There’s always a surprise in a credit cycle. Even if a credit cycle is normal, the surprise has often been which industry. You didn’t expect newspapers in 2000, Warren Buffett‘s businesses. You didn’t expect utilities and phone companies in 2008 and 2009,” he said, according to CNN.


finance.yahoo.com
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