Billionaire Jamie Dimon Still Believes America Is Worth Investing In, Despite Trump Tariffs and Market Fluctuations. Should You Buy These 3 U.S. Stocks in 2025?

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Jamie Dimon has some scary things to say about the economy and the stock market, but his comments should be taken in context.

  • In the event that there are storms brewing on the horizon, investors will appreciate the dependability of these three U.S. stocks.

  • 10 stocks we like better than AutoZone ›

On May 19, JPMorgan Chase had an investor-day presentation and billionaire CEO Jamie Dimon had a lot to say about the economy, global trade, and investing. And much of it sounded negative.

During the presentation, Dimon brought up the subject of U.S. stagflation -- the dreaded combination of ongoing inflation and economic recession at the same time. Policymakers generally try to keep inflation low and economic growth high. When they intervene, it usually sacrifices one to benefit the other. But when both inflation and growth are moving in the wrong direction, it leaves them with little options to improve the economy.

Dimon also essentially said that U.S. stocks were overvalued and perhaps due for a 10% decline. The billionaire CEO is looking at the market's valuation compared to its future earnings estimates (known as the forward price-to-earnings ratio), which is already high right now. But Dimon believes economic conditions are deteriorating, partially because of trade tariffs, and that earnings estimates are consequently too optimistic. As estimates come down, the stock market could drop.

Red, white, and blue lights are arranged in the shape of the U.S.A.
Image source: Getty Images.

There was plenty more that Dimon said, and it can certainly sound alarming. But keep in mind that these comments aren't wildly different from comments that he made just a week ago to Bloomberg. And during that interview, he was undeterred in his belief in the long-term potential of U.S. stocks.

In fact, Dimon said, "If you were to take all of your money and put it in one country, it would still be America." In light of those comments, here are three of the most resilient publicly traded U.S. stocks there are. All three should be top considerations for 2025, especially if the market does have the 10% pullback that Dimon thinks could happen.

1. A business that prudently invests money

When it comes to the auto parts retail chain space, I'm personally invested in Advance Auto Parts as a (risky) turnaround opportunity. But bigger rival Autozone (NYSE: AZO) needs no turnaround. Even though the S&P 500 index has doubled in the last five years, Autozone stock left the S&P 500 in its dust with a better than 250% five-year return, thanks to its consistently solid execution.

If you're only looking for top-line growth, Autozone is sure to disappoint -- the company finished the first half of its fiscal 2025 on Feb. 15, with first-half net sales only increasing 2% from the same period of its fiscal 2024. But this is a rare case when a stock can perform well without much growth. And it's thanks to its incredible return on invested capital (ROIC).