Jamie Dimon has bad news for JPMorgan bankers

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Every generation of Wall Street workers learns the same lesson the hard way. The bank you joined is rarely the bank you retire from. Roles get reshuffled, divisions get sold off, and the career path that looked rock-solid on day one almost never matches the one that pays out at year 30.

For decades, the safe play inside a giant like JPMorgan Chase (JPM) was simple. Learn the products, build a book of business, climb the ladder. The senior bankers who shepherded clients through deals, financings, and downturns were the ones who got promoted, paid, and protected when the cycle turned.

That model still works. But it is being quietly rewritten in real time, and the man running the rewrite has spent the past few years warning anyone who would listen that the next decade in finance would look nothing like the last.

Now Jamie Dimon has put a sharper edge on what he means. The JPMorgan chief executive told Bloomberg Television that the bank will hire more artificial intelligence specialists and fewer traditional bankers in certain categories as automation accelerates across Wall Street.

Jamie Dimon said JPMorgan plans to reduce headcount, shift hiring

Speaking at JPMorgan’s China Summit in Shanghai on May 21, Dimon was direct about where headcount goes next.

“I think it will reduce our jobs down the road,” he said in the interview, according to Bloomberg.

“There will be all different types of jobs, and I think we will be hiring more AI people and fewer bankers in certain categories, and it will make them more productive,” Dimon added.

More AI:

Dimon’s framing matters. He is not talking about a sudden wave of pink slips. He is talking about a steady reshaping of who gets a job offer in the first place, while existing staff get retrained, redeployed, or pushed toward early retirement.

JPMorgan’s annual attrition runs at roughly 10%, or about 25,000 to 30,000 employees a year, which gives leadership real room to shift the mix without dramatic layoffs, reported Bloomberg.

When I look at what JPMorgan has been quietly building over the past 18 months, the math behind Dimon’s comment becomes obvious. The bank’s tech budget sits near $20 billion, with roughly $2 billion of that earmarked specifically for AI, reported Fast Company. JPMorgan has also started tracking and ranking its engineers on internal dashboards based on how heavily they use AI tools.

That is not a bank trying to manage AI on the side. That is a bank rebuilding its operating model around it.


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