JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon warns the era of cheap money is over, with sustained inflation and a global shift from a “savings surplus” to a “savings deficit” set to push interest rates significantly higher.
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon warns the era of cheap money is over, with sustained inflation and a global shift from a “savings surplus” to a “savings deficit” set to push interest rates significantly higher.

JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Jamie Dimon issued a stark warning that interest rates could climb much further as structural economic shifts and persistent inflation end the era of cheap money, a scenario he believes bond markets are still underpricing.
"We may have gone from a saving glut to not enough savings,” Dimon said in an interview with Bloomberg Television, cautioning that the adjustment in global bond markets is likely far from over.
The warning comes as the 30-year U.S. Treasury yield touched its highest level since 2007 and traders repriced rate expectations, with swap markets now factoring in a nearly 70 percent probability of another 25-basis-point Federal Reserve hike by December.
At stake is a fundamental repricing of risk across asset classes, with Dimon highlighting the dual threat of rising base rates and widening credit spreads that could squeeze corporate borrowers and increase market volatility.
Dimon argued that a confluence of powerful inflationary forces is creating a structural shift in the global savings landscape. The massive capital expenditures required for the AI boom, high government spending driving fiscal deficits, and elevated energy prices stemming from geopolitical conflicts are all contributing to a sustained upward pressure on inflation and, consequently, interest rates. This marks a reversal of the "savings glut" that helped suppress rates for more than a decade.
"They could be much higher than they are today," Dimon said, pushing back against the notion that rates would remain perpetually low. He noted that JPMorgan prepares for both rising and falling rate environments, but his commentary focused on the market's underestimation of upside risk.
The CEO’s concerns extend beyond government debt into the corporate credit markets. He pointed to the U.S. government's $30 trillion debt pile, which carries an average interest rate of 3.5 percent, and noted that $2 trillion of that debt is set to be refinanced within the year at what will almost certainly be higher rates.
This, in turn, sets a higher floor for all borrowing costs. "Interest rates can easily go further up, and credit spreads can go further up," Dimon warned. This creates a potential double squeeze for corporations: the risk-free rate they benchmark against is rising, and the additional premium (credit spread) investors demand to hold their debt could also expand as economic uncertainty grows. This dynamic poses a significant risk for high-leverage companies that will face a much higher cost of capital when they need to refinance.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.