Big announcements in the banking industry have a certain theatrical quality, and JPMorgan’s October launch of its Security and Resiliency Initiative had it all: press releases, a polished video of Jamie Dimon, and an advisory council that resembles a state dinner guest list. Jeff Bezos is working on it. Condoleezza Rice is, too. Michael Dell and Jim Farley of Ford are seated next to former defense secretary Robert Gates. A bank is talking about more than just quarterly earnings when it gathers that kind of room.
Over a ten-year period, the headline figure is $1.5 trillion, of which about $1 trillion is used to finance work that the company would have done anyhow, such as loans, advisory services, and capital raises for clients in manufacturing, defense, energy, and emerging technology. The true pivot is the extra $500 billion. Dimon presented the issue succinctly, stating that the US has become overly reliant on untrustworthy suppliers for manufacturing and essential minerals. Ten years ago, this kind of statement would have sounded alarmist. It hardly qualifies as controversial anymore.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Company | JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM) |
| Initiative Name | Security and Resiliency Initiative (SRI) |
| Headline Commitment | $1.5 trillion over 10 years |
| Direct Equity Investments | Up to $10 billion |
| Announced | October 13, 2025 |
| Chairman & CEO | Jamie Dimon |
| Prior Baseline Plan | ~$1 trillion over a decade |
| Increase Over Prior Plan | +$500 billion (50%) |
| Focus Areas | Supply chain & advanced manufacturing; defense & aerospace; energy; frontier tech; pharma/healthtech |
| Total Firm Assets | $4.6 trillion (as of June 30, 2025) |
| Mid-Market Clients Served | 34,000 companies |
| Fortune 500 Coverage | More than 90% |
The equity component is different in this case. JPMorgan has made up to $10 billion in venture and direct equity investments, which may seem small in comparison to the trillion-dollar package but is uncommon for a commercial bank. Banks make loans. They give advice. They provide underwriting. Usually, they don’t invest in rare-earth processors or drone startups. There is a perception that the company is venturing into areas typically occupied by private equity and sovereign wealth funds—not because it wants to, but rather because someone must and Washington is unable to act quickly enough.
A new dimension was introduced in the grid report that came out in March. The bank’s chief climate adviser, Sarah Kapnick, compared the U.S. power grid to a national security threat, pointing out that a large portion of the nation’s electrical infrastructure was built in the 1960s and 1970s. For the United States alone, grid upgrades are expected to cost about $1 trillion between 2026 and 2035. The SRI is set against a backdrop of deteriorating weather, adversaries testing systems covertly, and an outdated grid unable to support AI data centers.

It’s difficult to ignore how much of this is reminiscent of older tales. Industrial banks contributed to the financing of American manufacturing’s transformation during the war in the 1940s. They provided funding for the telecom expansion in the 1990s. Every moment had excesses and misallocations, particularly in the telecom industry, where billions of dollars’ worth of fiber ended up buried and unutilized for years. There is currently the same risk. Investing in “critical industries” seems like a good idea until you have to choose which seventy-seven startups out of thousands truly belong there.
Online skeptics were quick to point out the obvious. Critical can mean nearly anything if it is determined by whoever is in charge of the checkbook. Housing for the middle class somehow missed the list, according to a sardonic Reddit thread. Others brought up the 27 subcategories, such as shipbuilding, nuclear energy, nanomaterials, and quantum computing, and questioned whether any bank, including this one, had the know-how to properly distribute capital among them.
JPMorgan is not a minor player, though. It already occupies the majority of the rooms where these decisions are made and serves over 90% of the Fortune 500. SRI strategy now directly benefits from the company’s previously established Center for Geopolitics. The project might end up being the decade’s most significant corporate initiative. In ten years, it’s also possible that a large portion of the money will have gone exactly where it always went, albeit with a more compelling narrative. In any case, the bank has set its flag far ahead of the crowd and the direction of travel is obvious.

