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Quote: Jamie Dimon – JP Morgan Chase 2025 Chairman and CEO Letter to Shareholders

“Shareholder value can be built only if you maintain a healthy and vibrant company, which means doing a good job of taking care of your customers, employees and communities. Conversely, how can you have a healthy company if you neglect any of these stakeholders?” – Jamie Dimon – JP Morgan Chase 2025 Chairman and CEO Letter to Shareholders

The tension between maximizing immediate shareholder returns and sustaining long-term enterprise value has defined corporate strategy for decades. Dimon’s formulation reframes this as a false choice, arguing instead that shareholder value emerges structurally from the health of the broader stakeholder ecosystem rather than despite it.1 This represents a departure from shareholder primacy doctrine that dominated institutional finance from the 1980s onward, yet it also reflects operational reality in capital-intensive, relationship-dependent businesses.

The Stakeholder Model as Operational Necessity

JPMorgan Chase operates across 160+ countries, moving approximately 12 trillion dollars daily and safeguarding over 41 trillion dollars in assets.1 This scale creates structural dependencies that pure shareholder-first logic cannot adequately address. The firm maintains 94 million customer relationships and 75 million digital engagement touchpoints, with customer satisfaction and net promoter scores reaching record levels in 2025.1 These metrics do not emerge from cost minimization or extraction strategies; they require sustained investment in service quality, employee capability, and community trust.

The operational argument is straightforward: in financial services, customer defection is rapid and reputation damage is permanent. A bank that systematically underinvests in customer experience, employee training, or regulatory compliance may show higher short-term earnings but faces accelerating customer attrition, regulatory penalties, and talent loss. The 2008 financial crisis demonstrated this dynamic at scale-institutions that had prioritized short-term trading profits over risk management and customer stewardship faced existential threats despite years of reported profitability.

The Employee and Community Dimensions

Dimon’s framing explicitly includes employees and communities alongside customers. This reflects several operational realities:

  • Talent competition: Financial services firms compete globally for technical talent, particularly in technology and data science. Firms that systematically underinvest in employee development, compensation, and workplace culture face accelerating attrition to competitors and technology firms. JPMorgan Chase has emphasized heavy investment in technology and AI-driven productivity, which requires retaining and attracting specialized talent.1
  • Regulatory and reputational risk: Banks operate under intense regulatory scrutiny. Community relationships, philanthropic engagement, and demonstrated commitment to local economic development reduce regulatory friction and reputational risk. These are not purely altruistic; they are risk management tools.
  • Systemic stability: Large financial institutions are systemically important. Their failure imposes costs on the broader economy. Regulators and policymakers increasingly condition bank licensing, capital requirements, and operational freedom on demonstrated commitment to community reinvestment and employee welfare. Neglecting these stakeholders invites regulatory intervention that constrains shareholder returns far more severely than proactive investment.

Debate and Objections

The stakeholder model faces substantive criticism from shareholder primacy advocates. The core objection is that stakeholder language can mask inefficiency, rent-seeking by management, or capital misallocation. A firm might claim to invest in employees or communities while actually funding bloated overhead, ineffective programs, or initiatives that benefit management rather than stakeholders. Without clear metrics and accountability, stakeholder rhetoric becomes a cover for poor capital discipline.

Additionally, stakeholder models can create principal-agent problems. Managers given discretion to balance multiple stakeholder interests may prioritize their own interests-higher compensation, empire-building, or pet projects-under the guise of stakeholder stewardship. Shareholders, as residual claimants, have the strongest incentive to monitor management; diffusing accountability across multiple stakeholders weakens this discipline.

Dimon’s formulation addresses this partially through the logical structure of his argument: he does not claim that all stakeholder investment is value-creating, but rather that neglecting stakeholders systematically undermines company health. This is a narrower claim-it rules out certain strategies (systematic customer neglect, employee underinvestment, community extraction) without requiring that every stakeholder initiative be value-maximizing. The burden of proof shifts: the question becomes not whether stakeholder investment is always optimal, but whether systematic neglect is ever sustainable.

Strategic Context: 2025 Operating Environment

Dimon’s letter was written in an environment of significant macroeconomic and geopolitical turbulence. Markets faced surprise tariffs, currency volatility, surging commodity prices, and intensifying geopolitical tensions.1 In this context, the stakeholder model takes on additional strategic weight. Firms with deep customer relationships, loyal employees, and community trust have greater resilience during periods of uncertainty. They can weather margin compression, navigate regulatory change, and maintain access to capital and talent when competitors face defection and attrition.

The letter also emphasizes JPMorgan Chase’s role as a source of economic stability and growth. The firm explicitly frames its strategy around leveraging its global presence, balance sheet, and expertise to strengthen economic security and turn strategic priorities into measurable outcomes.1 This positioning-as an institution embedded in and responsible for broader economic health-is incompatible with pure extraction logic. It requires genuine stakeholder investment as both operational necessity and strategic positioning.

Measurement and Accountability

A critical gap in stakeholder models is measurement. Dimon’s statement asserts a relationship between stakeholder health and company health, but does not specify how to measure or verify this relationship. JPMorgan Chase does report customer satisfaction metrics, net promoter scores, and employee engagement data, but these are self-reported and subject to selection bias. Independent verification of stakeholder health remains limited.

This measurement gap creates vulnerability to the principal-agent critique. Without external accountability mechanisms, managers can claim stakeholder investment while actually pursuing other objectives. Institutional investors increasingly demand stakeholder metrics and third-party verification, but standardized frameworks remain underdeveloped. The tension between stakeholder rhetoric and stakeholder accountability remains unresolved.

Implications for Capital Allocation

If stakeholder health is genuinely correlated with shareholder value in mature financial institutions, this has concrete implications for capital allocation. It suggests that cost-cutting strategies focused on customer service reduction, employee layoffs, or community disinvestment are likely to destroy shareholder value over medium-term horizons, even if they boost short-term earnings. Conversely, it suggests that investments in customer experience, employee development, and community engagement should be evaluated not as costs but as capital investments with expected returns.

This reframing does not eliminate the need for discipline or accountability. It simply shifts the question from “should we invest in stakeholders?” to “how much should we invest, in which stakeholders, and with what expected returns?” The latter question is more tractable and more aligned with shareholder value maximization than the former.

Conclusion: Structural Interdependence

Dimon’s statement articulates a model of corporate value creation based on structural interdependence rather than stakeholder altruism. In this model, shareholder value is not created despite stakeholder investment but through it. The health of customers, employees, and communities is not a constraint on shareholder returns but a prerequisite for them. This is not a moral argument; it is a claim about how value is actually created in large, complex, regulated financial institutions operating at global scale. Whether this model generalizes to other industries, business models, or competitive environments remains an open question. But within the context of JPMorgan Chase’s operating model and market position, it reflects operational reality rather than aspirational rhetoric.

 

References

1. Jamie Dimon’s Letter to Shareholders, Annual Report 2025 – 2026-04-06 – https://www.jpmorganchase.com/ir/annual-report/2025/ar-ceo-letters

2. Letter to Shareholders from Douglas B. Petno and Troy Rohrbaugh, Annual Report 2025 – 2026-04-06 – https://www.jpmorganchase.com/ir/annual-report/2025/ar-ceo-letter-petno-rohrbaugh

3. Letter to Shareholders from Marianne Lake, Annual Report 2025 – 2026-04-06 – https://www.jpmorganchase.com/ir/annual-report/2025/ar-ceo-letter-marianne-lake

4. Letter to Shareholders from Mary Callahan Erdoes, Annual Report 2025 – 2026-04-06 – https://www.jpmorganchase.com/ir/annual-report/2025/ar-ceo-letter-mary-callahan-erdoes

5. JPMorganChase Publishes 2025 Annual Report, Including Chairman & CEO Letter to Shareholders – 2026-04-06 – https://www.marketscreener.com/news/jpmorganchase-publishes-2025-annual-report-including-chairman-ceo-letter-to-shareholders-ce7e51d2de89fe2d

6. Letter to Shareholders from Jennifer A. Piepszak, Annual Report 2025 – 2026-04-06 – https://www.jpmorganchase.com/ir/annual-report/2025/ar-ceo-letter-jennifer-piepszak

7. Jamie Dimon’s Letter to Shareholders, Annual Report 2024 – 2025-04-07 – https://www.jpmorganchase.com/ir/annual-report/2024/ar-ceo-letters

8. [PDF] Dear Fellow Shareholders, | JPMorgan Chase – 2026-04-06 – https://www.jpmorganchase.com/content/dam/jpmc/jpmorgan-chase-and-co/investor-relations/documents/ceo-letter-to-shareholders-2025.pdf

9. [PDF] Response to Glass Lewis Report 2025 – JPMorgan Chase – 2025-05-05 – https://www.jpmorganchase.com/content/dam/jpmc/jpmorgan-chase-and-co/investor-relations/documents/response-glass-lewis-report-2025.pdf

10. Letter to Shareholders from Tim Berry, Annual Report 2025 – 2026-04-06 – https://www.jpmorganchase.com/ir/annual-report/2025/ar-ceo-letter-tim-berry

11. [PDF] Dear Fellow Shareholders, | JPMorgan Chase – 2025-04-07 – https://www.jpmorganchase.com/content/dam/jpmc/jpmorgan-chase-and-co/investor-relations/documents/ceo-letter-to-shareholders-2024.pdf

12. [PDF] 2025 Investor Day Transcript – JPMorgan Chase – 2025-05-19 – https://www.jpmorganchase.com/content/dam/jpmc/jpmorgan-chase-and-co/investor-relations/documents/events/2025/jpmc-2025-investor-day/full-transcript.pdf

13. Jamie Dimon’s 2025 Shareholder Letter | PDF | Investing – Scribd – 2025-10-12 – https://www.scribd.com/document/914601117/Jamie-Dimon-April-2025-letter-to-shareholders

14. Tariffs will fuel inflation and slow growth, Dimon says – Axios – 2025-04-07 – https://www.axios.com/2025/04/07/jamie-dimon-annual-letter-2025

15. From Jamie Dimon: A special message – J.P. Morgan – 2021-04-13 – https://www.jpmorgan.com/insights/investing/investment-trends/from-jamie-dimon-a-special-message

 

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