Bank CEOs had a lot to talk about in 2025. Some of them were more blunt than others in addressing the hot-button issues of the day and measuring their own company’s performance.
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As banking reporters we appreciate
Consider the word “cockroach,” which gained an impressive amount of traction this year when
In no particular order, here’s a look at some of the most memorable bank CEO quotes of the past year.
Jamie Dimon
CEO, JPMorgan Chase
Dimon is hardly a stranger to speaking his mind. As chairman and CEO of the largest bank in the U.S. based on asset size, he uses his platform to talk about all sorts of issues, such as remote work, industry regulations and the state of the national and global economies.
So it wasn’t a surprise when he
During
“My antenna goes up when things like that happen,” he told analysts on the call. “And I probably shouldn’t say this, but when you see one cockroach, there are probably more.”
John “Johnny” Allison
CEO, Home Bancshares
John “Johnny” Allison, CEO of Home Bancshares in Arkansas, is one of the most reliably outspoken bank leaders around. In 2024, he
This year, Allison was remarkably candid about his company’s mergers-and-acquisitions plans when he told investors that Home had signed a letter of intent to buy a smaller bank. Bank CEOs usually keep such information close to the vest until an agreement has been reached.
A few weeks later at an industry conference, he had
“These lost-decade banks, I think they’re going to get a hot shot in the butt, you know, I think somebody’s fixed to come after them and do something and I think they need it,” Allison said.
Jane Fraser
CEO, Citi
Jane Fraser, the CEO of
Even as
The $2.6 trillion-asset bank is still addressing a pair of 2020 consent orders related to its history of risk management and internal controls failures. It’s
“There isn’t, I think, a single person in our firm that feels that we are declaring victory,” said Fraser, who was
Brian Moynihan
CEO, Bank of America
Brian Moynihan found himself in a strange place in January. The
“I hope you start opening your bank to conservatives, because many conservatives complain that the banks are not allowing them to do business within the bank, and that included a place called
Moynihan didn’t respond to the president’s comments. But in February, during an event at the Economic Club of Washington, D.C., he said that
“People always ask me, ‘Do you have different approaches for different administrations?’ And we say, ‘Well, long term, we’ve been around since Washington was president, so if we geared ourselves up for this president, and then that president, we’d have had to change 45 times whatever it is,'” Moynihan said during the event.
“What we’re trying to say is, give us a rational regulatory structure and have it stick to the ribs.”
Bill Demchak
CEO, PNC Financial Services Group
Speaking of bank regulations, Bill Demchak, the longtime CEO of
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. have each
Demchak
The OCC and the FDIC have explicitly requested comments on whether they should adopt quantitative measurements for “material harm.” If the proposal is approved as it’s currently written, the rule would spark a significant decline in certain workflows, Demchak predicted.
“If it does nothing else, it will get rid of all the crazy ancillary work we do on minor MRAs,” he said.
Terry Turner
CEO, Pinnacle Financial Partners
In one of the year’s highest-profile M&A deals, Pinnacle Financial Partners and Synovus Financial
Terry Turner, Pinnacle’s co-founder and CEO, and other executives have spent a lot of time trying to ease concerns about the transaction, in part by arguing that it won’t be a repeat of the 2019 merger between BB&T Corp. and SunTrust Banks, which joined together to create Truist Financial. That particular deal helped sour investors on mergers of equals, partly due to the length of time it took to achieve the anticipated cost savings and partly due to integration issues.
Still, Turner has
The market’s reaction “is an unfortunate thing, but it doesn’t change our excitement for what the earnings case is, what the shareholder return case is,” Turner said. “When we combine these companies, we’re going to be the best at compounding revenue and earnings in the peer group.”
Todd Rosenberg Photography
Mariner Kemper
CEO, UMB Financial
Bank CEOs had to wrestle this year with
The back-and-forth about which country would face which tariffs was dizzying at times, and bank stocks, along with much of the rest of the market, took a tumble. Companies, including banks, were left hanging due to the injection of uncertainty that the threat of tariffs delivered.
In April, Trump put a 90-day pause on reciprocal country-specific tariffs, but as that period drew to a close, bankers including Mariner Kemper, CEO of UMB Financial in Kansas City, Missouri,
In an interview with American Banker, Kemper said: “My belief system is that this administration, while they talk seriously about how they’re going to lay down the law, I don’t believe that they want to go down as the White House that burned down the nation.”
Jamie Dimon
CEO, JPMorgan Chase
Dimon had another memorable comment in 2025.
Just days after competitor Wells Fargo
And, in his usual Jamie-style, he made his feelings about the situation perfectly clear.
“Congratulations. I mean, boy, they went through a long, arduous road,”
The Federal Reserve had imposed a $1.95 billion-asset cap on Wells in 2018 following the bank’s fake-accounts scandal. Charlie Scharf, a one-time protege and two-decade-long colleague of Dimon’s at
“The punishment should fit the crime, not be something you don’t understand at all what the punishment is. So my hats off to them,” Dimon said. “They’re back. They’ve got great bones.”
