June's Inflation Relief Was a Peace Dividend
Mamdani Is Fundamentally Reimagining Violence
Why the Left Hates Jews and Christians
The Lure of Cheating the Government Without Penalty
Further Proof That Climate Cataclysms Are Just Fearmongering
Private Equity Didn't Kill the Patient
Brightline Is a Boondoggle—Secretary Duffy Must Not Give It Another Bailout
When Friends Stand Together
Indian Americans Are Proud to Be Part of America’s 250-Year Story
Democrats Search for Graham Platner’s Runner-Up
Taxing the Wealthy Can’t Fund Social Security Into Solvency
California Makes Everyone Else Pay for Its Climate Goals With $2.2 Billion Port...
Gang Member's Instagram Cash Flexes Unravel $2.8M Fraud Ring
Third Circuit Spikes New Jersey Ban on 'Assault Firearms' and Large Capacity Magazines
Everything Went Wrong for James Talarico This Week After His Epstein-Tied Backer Was...
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.
Jamie Dimon Becomes Wall Street’s Hero Figure
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

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement