JPMorgan Chase (JPM) announced a sweeping push into small business banking on Tuesday, pledging to lend $80 billion over the next decade and hire 1,000 new bankers across its US branch network.
JPMorgan Chase & Co., JPM
The announcement is being called the “American Dream Initiative.” CEO Jamie Dimon framed it around the idea that economic opportunity is slipping away from too many Americans. “The American Dream is alive, but it’s slipping out of reach for too many people — and for future generations,” Dimon said.
The bank currently works with 7 million small business clients. The goal is to add 3 million more over the next several years. To support that, JPMorgan will expand its business banker headcount from 3,000 to 4,000 over the next decade.
The $80 billion lending commitment is roughly 10% more than the bank had originally planned.
The push reflects real economic strain. Median per-capita income in the US grew around 155% from 2000 to 2024, while median home prices rose 207%, according to St. Louis Fed data. Small business revenue growth has also been sluggish, according to the New York Fed.
At the same time, US banks tightened lending standards to small businesses over the past quarter while also seeing weaker mortgage demand, per the Federal Reserve’s latest senior loan officer survey.
JPMorgan says it also plans to expand its Coaching for Impact entrepreneur program, with a goal of graduating seven times more small business owners than it currently does. The bank wants to advise small businesses on how to better access supplier programs for defense and government contracts.
The initiative doesn’t arrive in a vacuum. It follows a similar JPMorgan push into US manufacturing and defense announced six months ago. Both align with the Trump administration’s stated goals around economic growth and affordability.
JPMorgan also highlighted its work in Alabama in the announcement — just days after Alabama Governor Kay Ivey signed an executive order aimed at stopping banks from denying services based on personal beliefs. The bank has been caught up in the broader national “debanking” debate, and President Trump sued JPMorgan and Dimon in January over claims his accounts were closed for political reasons in 2021. The bank has said the suit has no merit.
JPMorgan is not alone in making big community-focused pledges. BlackRock said last month it is committing $100 million to fund training programs for skilled trades like ironwork, plumbing, and HVAC installation.
JPMorgan holds an 11.1% share of US bank deposits as of the end of last year, down from 11.3% in 2024. Its long-term goal is to reach a 15% share.
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