Trump’s JPMorgan lawsuit underscores his growing clash with Wall Street


By Lananh Nguyen, Manya Saini and Douglas Gillison

NEW YORK/WASHINGTON, Jan 25 (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump’s lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase (JPM) and its CEO Jamie Dimon highlights a growing, and politically fraught, conflict in the administration’s policy agenda for Wall Street, with big banks scoring wins but also facing setbacks.

In his most confrontational move yet against Wall Street, Trump filed a $5 billion ​lawsuit on Thursday accusing the nation’s largest lender and Dimon of closing several of his and his companies’ accounts on political grounds. Trump has long claimed that Wall Street banks have sought ‌to marginalize him and other conservatives – allegations JPMorgan and other banks deny.

The move underscores how large financial institutions, expected to be major winners of Trump’s sweeping deregulatory agenda, are increasingly navigating an unpredictable and sometimes hostile policy environment that could damage their reputations, potentially affect ‌their business, and force them to rethink their lobbying strategy in Washington.

“The industry is losing as many battles as it wins on big issues and the constant pressure and random nature of developments is taking its toll,” said Todd Baker, a senior fellow at Columbia University.

The president’s lawsuit follows his threat to cap interest rates on consumer credit cards at 10% – a proposal Dimon warned would be an “economic disaster” – and comes as Trump’s regulators move to make it easier for fintech, crypto firms and some corporations to compete directly with traditional banks.

“The Trump administration is delivering by shoring up financial markets and cutting unnecessary red tape to accelerate growth,” White House spokesman Kush Desai said.

JPMorgan declined to ⁠comment. On Thursday, it said “we believe the suit has no merit. We ‌respect the President’s right to sue us and our right to defend ourselves…JPMC does not close accounts for political or religious reasons.”

Trump has also targeted other lenders. The Trump Organization is suing credit card giant Capital One, alleging the bank closed its accounts for political reasons.

Trump has criticized Bank of America (BAC) CEO Brian Moynihan over debanking and told ‍CNBC in August that the bank declined to provide Trump with an account. Large banks have consistently said they do not reject customers on political or other belief-based grounds. Trump also last year attacked Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon for the bank’s bearish stance on tariffs.



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