JPMorgan leading the pack
Jamie Dimon is sending a message to his fellow Wall Street chiefs: It’s time to bring employees back to the office.
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Jamie Dimon is sending a message to his fellow Wall Street chiefs: It’s time to bring employees back to the office.
JPMorgan Chase & Co. became the first major U.S. bank to mandate a return to offices for its entire U.S. workforce, with staffers being told they’ll need to come back in about two months. The lender’s top decision-making body, led by Chief Executive Officer Dimon, said in a memo to staff Tuesday that it “would fully expect that by early July, all U.S.-based employees will be in the office on a consistent rotational schedule.”
Industry leaders have been preparing for an end to remote work since the earliest months of the pandemic last year. Dimon, who’s been going into the bank’s headquarters since June, said as far back as September that he
expects economic and social damage to result from a longer stretch of working from home. David Solomon, Dimon’s counterpart at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., called the remote-working arrangement an
“aberration” that needs to be corrected as quickly as possible.
“This is fantastic news and the fact that it’s JPMorgan and Jamie Dimon -- this will send a very positive message to other CEOs, not just in New York but around the country, to start making plans to on-board their employees,” Bill Rudin, chief executive officer of Manhattan office landlord Rudin Management Co., said in a phone interview.