JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon says regulators are likely to overreact to banking turmoil
“I think it's going to get worse for banks -- more regulations, more rules, and more requirements,’’ JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s chief executive officer said in a Bloomberg Television interview from Paris Thursday. “If you overdo certain rules, require...

“I think it's going to get worse for banks -- more regulations, more rules, and more requirements,’’ JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s chief executive officer said in a Bloomberg Television interview from Paris Thursday. “If you overdo certain rules, requirements, regulations -- there are some of these community banks that tell me they have more compliance people than loan officers.’’
The only major bank CEO from the financial crisis still in command, Dimon has played a central role in the reaction to the industry’s worst period of tumult in more than a decade. He brought his typical blunt style to critiques of regulators and fellow bankers, spearheaded an industry lifeline to First Republic Bank and ultimately stepped in to buy the lender last week when those efforts proved insufficient.

Big banks have been largely immune to the pressures plaguing their smaller rivals. JPMorgan’s shares have climbed this year, it reported an unexpected jump in deposits in the first quarter in a flight to safety, and it outbid other lenders for First Republic after the San Francisco-based firm became the second-biggest bank failure in US history.
Dimon, 67, has spearheaded acquisitions throughout his 17 years at the helm of JPMorgan, including the purchase of most of Washington Mutual, whose 2008 collapse is the only one bigger than First Republic’s. Now he can capitalize on First Republic’s relationships with rich customers to further his goal of expanding JPMorgan’s wealth-management offerings, which he has called “one of our greatest opportunities.”
Dimon spoke from a JPMorgan conference in Paris, where the firm has more than 500 markets staff — a 22-fold increase from 2019, before Brexit took effect. Before that, London had been the undisputed nexus of European finance, but in recent years the landscape has become more fragmented and Paris has emerged as a key hub.
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