When you're the CEO of America's largest bank and someone accuses you of politically motivated debanking, apparently the appropriate response is to tell everyone to "grow up." That's essentially what JPMorgan Chase (JPM) chief Jamie Dimon did Sunday when questions arose about the bank's handling of Trump Media & Technology Group (DJT) accounts.
Court Orders, Not Political Targeting
During an appearance on Fox Business' "Sunday Morning Futures," Dimon addressed claims that JPMorgan had debanked President Donald Trump's media company. The banking giant was subpoenaed as part of a special counsel investigation requiring it to turn over Trump Media's banking records, which sparked accusations of political targeting.
Dimon wasn't having it. While he declined to discuss any specific account, he made the bank's position crystal clear: they were following legal obligations, period. "We don't give information to the government just because they ask. We're subpoenaed. We're required by court to give it to the government," Dimon explained.
He added that JPMorgan doesn't "debank people for religious or political affiliations," pushing back against the narrative that banks are weaponizing their power against conservatives or any particular political group.
Banks As Reluctant Enforcers
"I don't like debanking people," Dimon said, pointing to what he sees as systemic compliance issues under current regulatory frameworks. His argument? Banks are being forced into roles they never wanted, acting as de facto enforcers of government policy through compliance requirements that leave little room for discretion.
"Let's take a deep breath and fix the problem as opposed to blame someone who's put in that position," Dimon concluded, essentially asking critics to direct their anger at the regulatory system rather than the banks navigating it.
Trump Media did not respond to requests for comment on Dimon's statements.
How Debanking Pushed Trump Toward Crypto
The debanking controversy takes on additional context when you consider how it shaped the Trump family's pivot to cryptocurrency. Earlier this year, Donald Trump Jr. revealed that he and his brother Eric played a key role in changing their father's views on digital assets like Bitcoin (BTC), and the experience of being debanked was a major catalyst.
"We were real estate guys, we were hard assets, we built buildings — [bitcoin] was a bit nebulous," Trump Jr. said during the Bitcoin 2025 conference in Las Vegas. "But once we got into that political sector...we were getting de-banked, we were getting de-insured, we were getting de-everything. It was brutal."
That experience wasn't just personally frustrating for the Trump family—it fundamentally changed their investment strategy and policy positions. The shift toward digital assets became both a practical necessity and an ideological statement about financial freedom.
Trump Media's Crypto Holdings
The pivot to crypto has been substantial. Trump Media announced plans to raise $2.5 billion to invest in Bitcoin this year and held 11,542 Bitcoins as of the end of September, putting its current holdings at approximately $1.05 billion.
Beyond Trump Media's Bitcoin position, the Trump family has launched multiple crypto ventures, including the Official TRUMP memecoin (TRUMP) and World Liberty Financial (WLFI). Both projects have faced criticism for their lack of transparency and potential conflicts of interest, particularly given Trump's return to the presidency.
For investors tracking Trump Media (DJT), the stock's performance tells a challenging story. The shares score poorly in momentum rankings, with unfavorable price trends across short, medium, and long-term timeframes—something worth considering alongside the company's evolving crypto strategy and ongoing political controversies.