

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has warned that blockchain technology and digital assets are direct competitors threatening the traditional banking model.
In his shareholder letter, Dimon claims that blockchain infrastructure, stablecoins, and tokenization are core competitive priorities that JPMorgan must aggressively address in order to be able to maintain its dominance.
Dimon has grouped blockchain-based systems alongside major fintech rivals like Stripe, Block, and Revolut.
These new players are well-funded and highly ambitious, according to the JPMorgan boss.
"A whole new set of competitors is emerging based on blockchain, which includes stablecoins, smart contracts, and other forms of tokenization," Dimon warned in the letter.
Dimon made it clear that the bank cannot afford to sit on the sidelines to remain competitive.
He has stressed that JPMorgan must "roll out its own blockchain technology and continually focus on what our customers want in a very detailed way" to ensure faster product development and seamless execution.
During a conference in Washington, D.C. earlier this year, Dimon heaped praise on blockchain technology for being highly efficient and capable of replacing clumsy legacy systems.
JPMorgan backs this up with billions of dollars in daily transaction volume through Kinexys (the bank's rebranded proprietary blockchain platform).
At the same time, Dimon remains deeply hostile toward public cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin.
In 2017, Dimon famously called Bitcoin a "fraud" and vowed to fire any JPMorgan trader caught trading it for being "stupid." He has not warmed up to the asset class. Last year, he argued that the US should not stockpile Bitcoin (BTC).
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Dimon says blockchain-based systems, stablecoins, smart contracts, and tokenization are emerging as direct competitors to traditional banking. He argues JPMorgan must respond aggressively to protect its market position and keep up with faster-moving rivals.
Dimon sees blockchain as efficient and useful for replacing outdated banking systems. However, he remains strongly opposed to public cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and has repeatedly criticized them.






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