DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Executives’ favorite explanation for spending big on AI: FOMO

January 14, 2026
in News
Executives’ favorite explanation for spending big on AI: FOMO
Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan, speaking to a reporter.
JPMorgan’s CEO Jamie Dimon Noam Galai via Getty Images
  • This post originally appeared in the Business Insider Today newsletter.
  • You can sign up for Business Insider’s daily newsletter here.

If you’re wondering whether JPMorgan’s tech spend is paying off, here’s Jamie Dimon’s answer: “Trust me.”

That’s how the CEO responded to questions about the bank’s ROI on its ever-growing tech budget during JPMorgan’s fourth-quarter earnings calls. The bank is projecting it’ll spend roughly $9.7 billion more in expenses this year than in 2025.

He won’t be the last executive pressed on money spent on tech and AI. The quiet concerns that started last year regarding massive AI investments are escalating into loud protests in 2026.

Dimon wasn’t just asking for blind faith from his shareholders. He discussed the threat posed by his peers and fintechs, and said spending on technology and AI is far more important than trying to “meet some expense target.”

(For what it’s worth, JPMorgan is actually top of the class when it comes to AI maturity across Wall Street, according to Evident’s AI index.)

The players might be different, but other businesses will likely defend their AI spend with a similar argument: Every dollar I don’t spend is one my competitor is willing to, and that could be the difference between winning and losing.

I’m not endorsing FOMO-inspired spending, but I see the rationale. I’d rather go down swinging in the AI wars than not enter the fray at all.

There’s another fight JPMorgan isn’t interested in getting into.

The bank’s CFO said the credit card rate cap proposed by President Donald Trump could force JPM to rethink its business entirely.

It’s the latest company to weigh in on Trump’s proposal, and it’s a biggy. JPMorgan’s card services sales totalled roughly $360 billion last quarter.

Opponents of Trump’s pitch say capping credit card rates will backfire. If lenders can’t charge higher rates to riskier borrowers, they’ll just limit the credit they offer them instead of lowering their rates.

And it’s not like people will stop borrowing. (This is America, after all.) They’ll just look for alternatives, which could lead them to take out more personal loans, making 2026 potentially a big year for lenders like SoFi.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post Executives’ favorite explanation for spending big on AI: FOMO appeared first on Business Insider.

Trump’s War-Mad Golf Buddy Takes Credit for Iran Blitz
News

Trump’s War-Mad Golf Buddy Takes Credit for Iran Blitz

by The Daily Beast
March 4, 2026

Sen. Lindsey Graham is taking a victory lap after helping to convince the president to strike Iran. Graham, whose long-running ...

Read more
News

What if Sherlock and Moriarty were BFFs? ‘Young Sherlock’ explores how a friendship unravels

March 4, 2026
News

Canada’s Carney says Trump didn’t tip him off before striking Iran, but he supports the war ‘with some regret’

March 4, 2026
News

Texas GOP narrowly avoided ‘nightmare scenario’ — but still faces disaster: reporter

March 4, 2026
News

A 19-Year-Old Ended Up in the ER After Beer Pong Caused a Seriously Weird Injury

March 4, 2026
Trump’s Approval Rating Hits Second-Term Low Amid Iran Backlash

Trump’s Approval Rating Hits Second-Term Low Amid Iran Backlash

March 4, 2026
Leak: Resident Evil 1 Remake May Already Be in Early Development

Leak: Resident Evil 1 Remake May Already Be in Early Development

March 4, 2026
A Reddit poster claimed to leak a shelved ad for an OpenAI orb and earbuds. OpenAI says it’s ‘totally fake.’

An OpenAI ad hoax mystery just got a new twist

March 4, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026