EFTA00874518.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 126.3 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 2 pages
From: Sultan Bin Sulayem
To: Jeffrey Epstein <jeevacation@gmail.com>
Subject: Jamie Dimon calls shareholder meetings `complete waste of time'
Date: Wed, 28 Feb 2018 03:37:30 +0000
Jamie Dimon calls shareholder meetings
`complete waste of time'
JPMorgan Chase boss came under fire at US bank's last
annual get-together in Delaware
Irfan Ali Khan yesterday
B9 Bloomberg
JPMorgan Chase chairman and chief executive Jamie Dimon has denounced annual
shareholder meetings as "a complete waste of time," nine months after he was
harangued at the bank's yearly get-together in Delaware.
Mr Dimon's latest comments, delivered at the US bank's annual investor day on
Tuesday, are likely to stir debate over the usefulness of shareholder meetings, which
tend to be the only opportunity for retail investors to connect with top managers.
But in recent years, executives at several big banks have been unnerved by encounters
with interest groups that gain admission to meetings by buying, or borrowing, a small
number of shares.
Last May, at JPMorgan's annual meeting in Wilmington, Delaware, Mr Dimon was
attacked over a range of issues, including the bank's financing of private prisons and
his role on Donald Trump's now-defunct business advisory council.
Dozens of protesters also staged demonstrations outside the meeting, repeating chants
and slogans they had used during a civil disobedience action at the bank's New York
headquarters on May Day.
EFTA00874518
"Shareholder meetings .. . have become a complete waste of time, let's call it what it
is," Mr Dimon said on Tuesday before a question-and-answer session with Wall Street
analysts.
He added that the meetings had become "a joke ... hijacked by people who have only
political interests and don't have any interest in the future health of the company".
Mr Dimon went on to underscore JPMorgan's commitment to corporate social
responsibility, noting that the biggest bank in America had backed a range of projects,
from the redevelopment of Detroit to the building of affordable housing.
"We ... don't think that taking care of your communities is a bad thing," he said.
"Companies like ours have been doing that for 30, 40, 50 years; I don't know what's
new about it."
The hostile atmosphere at last year's annual meeting prompted Mr Dimon to try to
lighten the mood with a joke, complaining that the protesters were "starting to hurt
[his] feelings". But one shareholder admonished him by saying that just by hearing him
out, the chief executive would earn more than $100.
"I hope it's worth it!" said Mr Dimon, who was paid $28m the previous year.
"This is not a laughing matter," the participant replied.
Sent from my iPhone
EFTA00874519
Entities
0 total entities mentioned
No entities found in this document
Document Metadata
- Document ID
- 022b7455-f535-4e2e-95b1-e521e90a99e1
- Storage Key
- dataset_9/EFTA00874518.pdf
- Content Hash
- 08b728948454e7a67d6bbed04d61f329
- Created
- Feb 3, 2026