JPMorgans CEO is brushing off fears of a break-up between the U.S. and Chinese economies. 

While Jamie Dimon predicted that over time therell be less trade between the U.S. and China, it wont be a decoupling and the world will go on, in an interview with Bloomberg aired Wednesday.

Dimon is currently in Shanghai for a series of JPMorgan conferences for his first visit to mainland China since the COVID pandemic. The JPMorgan CEO praised the ability to travel to the country in-person, saying humanity is better off with this type of thing.

Disagreements over issues like Taiwan and the export of sensitive technology to China are straining U.S.-China relations. In May, the heads of the G7 countries said they would pursue de-risking instead of decoupling or turning inwards when it came to China. (China argues the term just continues an alleged strategy from the U.S. and others to constrain the country.)

While JPMorgans CEO brushed off suggestions that he could act as a de facto diplomat, he called himself an American patriot and a red-blooded, full-throated, free enterprise capitalist.

Still, Dimon said he had enormous respect for the Chinese people, and credited the countrys extraordinary development. When we do business in a country like China, he said, were there hopefully through good times and bad times. 

Chinese officials say they want to attract foreign business to revive the countrys sluggish economy after years of COVID-zero. Yet a series of regulatory crackdowns, including a recent campaign against consulting firms and data providers, could unnerve foreign companies considering a return to China.

Earlier this year, Chinese regulators gave JPMorgan permission to take full ownership of its China mutual fund, following earlier approvals of a fully-owned securities company and futures company. Dimon at the time said the bank would bring its full force to the market. 

Still, in a separate interview on Wednesday, Mark Leung, JPMorgans China CEO, admitted that the banks expansion in the country will be a longer journey than we would wish to gradually build up scale and reputation to do business.

CEO visits

Dimon is one of a handful of CEOs that have traveled to China since the country ended its COVID-zero policy last December. 

Other CEOs to have recently traveled to China include Apples Tim Cook, Intels Pat Gelsinger, and Qualcomms Cristiano Amon

Tesla CEO Elon Musk is also in China this week, landing in Beijing on Tuesday. Musk met senior Chinese officials, including foreign minister Qin Gang. A government release said that Musk opposed decoupling between the U.S. and China, and that the carmaker wants to expand its China business. 

Musk recently suggested in an interview in mid-May that there was a certain inevitability to the situation over Taiwan, and that the Chinese and global economies were like conjoined twins.


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