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Posts Tagged ‘Jamie Dimon’

james dimon

Are all bankers evil? Maybe not. Over the past year, it’s become fashionable to trash Wall Street for unbridled greed and the rapacious use of billions in taxpayer bailout funds. Much of the outrage is justified, since Wall Street firms like Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, and Citigroup stoked the flames that nearly torched the entire economy. But there’s been rough justice for a few of those firms, now either defunct or de facto wards of the state.

Other firms have filled the void, becoming even more prominent. One of them is JPMorgan Chase, whose chief executive, Jamie Dimon, has largely escaped the pitchforks aimed at his fellow Wall Street CEOs. Over the course of the financial crisis, JPMorgan Chase remained profitable, a pillar of relative stability in the midst of an earthquake. The bank absorbed the failed Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual, while accepting $25 billion in bailout money that it paid back with interest once the government allowed it to. Through it all, Dimon consulted frequently with officials in Washington, and news reports have even depicted him as President Barack Obama’s favorite banker. A new biography of Dimon, Last Man Standing by Duff McDonald, describes Dimon as a diligent and trustworthy executive who has risen above the swill of Wall Street. I spoke recently with McDonald about the man some think will be the next treasury secretary. Excerpts

I don’t think Jamie Dimon would ever run for office. He wouldn’t put his family in that position or deal with the attendant issues. But would he accept an appointment? Don’t be surprised if he does. When Obama got elected, there were rumors that Dimon would end up in Washington. I asked him why he didn’t shoot down the rumors. He said, “Isn’t it kind of presumptuous to turn down a job you haven’t been offered?” But if he were offered the position of treasury secretary, it’s almost a slam-dunk he would take it. It’s the only thing he has left to do–public service. He told me that his one regret is never having done any public service, and he’d like to.

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