JPMorgan's Dimon: 'Intensity is the same' after decades on top

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JPMorgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon said Monday he knows he can’t be CEO “forever” but stated his intensity “is the same” after nearly 18 years as boss of the nation’s largest bank.

The comments from the 67-year-old Dimon came during JPMorgan’s annual investor day in New York City, where the CEO discussed how much longer he might stay in his job and what type of person could succeed him without offering any hints that his tenure might end soon.

Those issues become more relevant with each passing year. Dimon became CEO of JPMorgan in late 2005, after it merged with Bank One, and he is the only big-bank CEO still standing who was in charge during the height of the 2008 financial crisis. He was also previously CEO of Bank One from 2000 to 2004.

One of his peers, Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman, announced on Friday he would step down within the next 12 months. Gorman, 64, has been running that Wall Street bank since 2010.

One analyst asked Dimon Monday how many more years he planned to stay in charge. The CEO said “three and a half,” while laughing, but then said “we have the same plan we had before” without specifying if the number he vocalized was real or not.

WASHINGTON, DC - SEPTEMBER 22: (L-R) Wells Fargo CEO Charles Scharf, Bank of America CEO Brian Thomas Moynihan, JPMorgan Chase & Co CEO Jamie Dimon, and Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser testify during a Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on Capitol Hill September 22, 2022 in Washington, DC. The committee held the hearing for annual oversight of the nation's largest banks. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
Dimon, second from right, testifies with other big bank CEOs Charles Scharf, Brian Moynihan and Jane Fraser in 2022. He is the only big bank CEO left who was in charge during the 2008 financial crisis. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images) · Drew Angerer via Getty Images

When asked if he still had the same drive for the job he said he did. “I am not going to change,” he said. “I’m not going to play golf. I can’t do this forever, I know that. But my intensity is the same. I think when I don't have that kind of intensity, I should leave.”

He didn’t drop any hints as to which of his executives might have the best chance of taking his job someday, but he did say the bank's directors know all of his senior managers and the succession question, he said, is “up to them.”

"The board is very comfortable with the really top choices here."

The most important qualities in the next leader? Dimon mentioned hard work, grit and courage while also using a few expletives to drive his points home.

“If you don't have grit, you don't have it," he said. "If you don't have courage, you don't have it."

A $3 billion bump from First Republic

His key executives spent much of the day telling analysts how the country’s biggest and most profitable bank intends to get even bigger and take in more income despite chaos in its industry, higher interest rates and a possible recession.

A key update was that JPMorgan raised its forecast for net interest income, the difference between what it earns on its loans and pays for its deposits, by $3 billion. That jump is due to JPMorgan’s May 1 acquisition of the bulk of First Republic, which was seized by regulators after a massive outflow of deposits.