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Dimon Paints Two Pictures: Strong Growth vs. War Risk

Published Apr 6, 2026
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A modern architectural model is juxtaposed with a rusty oil barrel on a wooden surface, symbolizing the contrast between strong growth and lingering industry risk.
Summary:
  • JPMorgan CEO warns Iran conflict could reverse falling prices.
  • Tax cuts and AI could boost growth by 1%, but oil shock threatens it.
  • Bank earned $57 billion in 2025, but faces inflation risk ahead.

Jamie Dimon just described America with a split personality. In his 2025 letter released April 6, the JPMorgan boss painted an optimistic picture: tax cuts, new spending, and AI investment could add nearly 1% to growth. But then he dropped the warning nobody wanted to hear.

An Iran war isn't just bad news - it's the reason his rosy scenario could fall apart.

What's Working

Tax cuts and the spending bill could pump $300 billion into the economy this year. Companies are pouring money into AI, and productivity gains are just starting to show.

The U.S. worker has jobs, rising pay, and savings. The economy should cruise along at a solid pace.

JPMorgan earned $57 billion in 2025, down slightly from $58.5 billion before. That's strong performance in a tough year. Credit is fine, lending is normal.

Then War Changes Everything

Oil going above $100 because of a military fight stops falling prices - it reverses them. Higher prices mean higher rates, which means lower stock and bond values. That's the opposite of what everyone expected.

Goldman Sachs raised recession odds to 30%. BlackRock's Fink said if oil hits $150, a "steep recession" follows. The warning isn't just Dimon - it's across Wall Street.

What to Watch

The next few weeks matter most. If Iran conflict gets worse, oil spikes and price forecasts jump. The Fed stays with higher rates.

Markets now bet on rate cuts later this year - but war risk could kill that hope and hurt growth stocks fast. Dimon's letter is clear: the good scenario is just one outcome.

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