When Your Stock Does Well, You Do Well
Jamie Dimon may not have been President Trump's biggest fan during the 2024 election cycle—he reportedly backed Kamala Harris—but the JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) CEO is probably finding some silver linings in the current administration's approach to financial regulation.
According to a New York Times report, Dimon's wealth grew by a staggering $770 million in 2025. That's not just his salary and bonus. The figure includes his base compensation, stock grants, dividends from his JPMorgan holdings, and the appreciation of shares he already owned. When you run the country's largest bank and that bank's stock climbs 34% in a year, the math gets pretty favorable.
Dimon's net worth rose from $2.4 billion to $3.1 billion, according to Forbes. JPMorgan declined to comment on the report.
Breaking Down the Numbers
For context, Dimon's official 2024 compensation package totaled $39 million, consisting of a $1.5 million base salary, a $5 million cash bonus, and $32.5 million in stock awards. His 2025 compensation details are expected to be disclosed later this month, but the $770 million wealth gain encompasses far more than just his annual pay package.
The New York Times didn't spell out their exact methodology, but they indicated the figure came from company disclosures and tracking stock appreciation. It's worth noting that when MarketDash covered the highest-compensated CEOs of 2024, the top earner clocked in at $101 million—making Dimon's total wealth gain look astronomical by comparison, even if it's not purely compensation.
A Banner Year for Bank Executives
Dimon isn't alone in enjoying a windfall year. The report highlighted that CEOs at Citigroup (C), Goldman Sachs (GS), and Capital One Financial (COF) each pulled in more than $100 million in 2025 when you factor in dividends and appreciation on shares they already owned. Their stocks all posted strong gains during the year, amplifying the wealth effect.
The common thread? A resurgent mergers and acquisitions market, a friendlier regulatory environment, and a stock market that rewarded financial institutions handsomely.
The M&A Boom Powering the Gains
What's driving all this wealth creation? Start with dealmaking. The year 2025 saw 68 deals valued at $10 billion or more—a record. The average transaction size hit $227 million, the highest level since 1980. Global merger activity reached its strongest point since the COVID-19 pandemic.
Banks like JPMorgan make money when companies merge, go public, or restructure. They advise on deals, underwrite offerings, and provide financing. So when M&A activity surges, their revenues and stock prices tend to follow.
The Trump administration's deregulation efforts have created a more permissive environment for big deals. Add in falling interest rates, a robust stock and bond market, and massive investments in AI, and you've got a perfect storm for financial institutions. Even major deals that haven't closed yet—like Netflix's proposed acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery—are contributing to the optimistic outlook.
What's Next for 2026?
The momentum appears likely to continue. Analysts and industry observers expect 2026 to bring another strong year for M&A activity, especially with the current regulatory posture and a pipeline of potential blockbuster deals awaiting approval.
If JPMorgan stock maintains its trajectory and the dealmaking environment stays hot, Dimon could be looking at another substantial wealth gain this year. It's a reminder that when you're the CEO of a major financial institution, your fortune is deeply tied to both your company's stock performance and the broader health of the capital markets.
For now, Dimon's $770 million year stands as a testament to how lucrative it can be to sit atop Wall Street's biggest player during a period of regulatory easing and deal frenzy—even if you didn't vote for the guy helping make it happen.




