Biden White House Scrambling on Whether to Pardon These Three People
Do Dems Know Obama Gave Kash Patel an Award for Hunting Down Terrorists?
NBC News Host Highlights the Immense Damage Joe Biden Has Done With Hunter's...
Healthcare CEO Killer Inscribed These Words on the Bullet Casings
Trump Needs to Pardon All the J6 Political Prisoners on Day One
Fire Your Whiny Employees Too Upset Over The Election To Do Their Work
Trump Announces Slew of Nominations, Appointments
Here's What Romney Had to Say in His Farewell Senate Speech
This Election Cycle, at Least One Celeb Understood Voters Didn't Care What A-Listers...
The Milei Revolution
This Democrat Governor Is ‘Disappointed’ Joe Biden Pardoned His Son
SCOTUS Just Heard the Most Unhinged Arguments for Medically Mutilating Minors
Kash Patel for FBI? Yes.
There Is One Man the Trump Administration Needs to Help Tame the Bureaucratic...
Trump Will Make Energy Affordable Again
OPINION

Jamie Dimon Becomes Wall Street’s Hero Figure

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Jamie Dimon has become a heroic figure on Wall Street.

During a Q&A session with Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke in Atlanta, JPMorgan [JPM 40.69 -0.03 (-0.07%) ] CEO Jamie Dimon questioned whether too much bank regulation—especially new capital requirements—might be slowing down the economy.

Advertisement

"Now we're told there are going to be even higher capital requirements, and we know there are 300 rules coming, has anyone bothered to study the cumulative effect of these things? And do you have a fear—like I do—that when we look back and look at them all, that they will be the reason that it took so long for our banks, our credit, our businesses, and most importantly, our job creation, to start going again? Is this holding us back at this point?" Dimon said.

The question seemed to put Bernanke back on his heels—and brought some on trading floors to their feet—cheering.

"Nobody has looked at it in all detail, but we certainly are trying as in each part to develop a system that is coherent and that is consistent with banks performing their vital social function in terms of extending credit,” Bernanke replied.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos