JPMorgan Chase is raising its quarterly dividend to $1.65 per share and greenlighting a new $50B common share repurchase program set to kick off in July 2026.
The move comes on the heels of a year where JPMorgan already flexed its capital muscles. In July 2025, the bank bumped its quarterly payout from $1.40 to $1.50, a 7.1% increase. It also authorized a separate $50B buyback program that same year, under which it repurchased $8.325B in shares during Q1 2026 alone.
The numbers behind the capital return machine
Moving from $1.50 to $1.65 per share represents a 10% increase quarter over quarter.
The $50B repurchase authorization is the same size as the 2025 program. During Q1 2026, the bank burned through $8.325B of its existing buyback authorization in just three months. At that pace, the full $50B program would take roughly 18 months to exhaust, though buyback timing is rarely linear.
Jamie Dimon’s fortress balance sheet philosophy
CEO Jamie Dimon has long championed what he calls a “fortress balance sheet,” the idea that JPMorgan should maintain enough capital to weather virtually any economic scenario while still rewarding the people who own the stock. These latest announcements are a textbook expression of that philosophy.
The stress test connection matters. The Fed runs these exercises annually to determine whether major banks can survive hypothetical economic catastrophes. Only after clearing that bar does a bank get the regulatory nod to increase dividends or expand buybacks. JPMorgan’s ability to announce programs of this magnitude signals it passed with room to spare.
What this means for investors
For existing JPMorgan shareholders, a higher dividend means more income per share, and a $50B buyback program means the bank will be a consistent buyer of its own stock, which tends to support the share price by reducing the number of outstanding shares.
Two consecutive years of $50B buyback authorizations suggests this isn’t a one-time sugar rush. Buyback authorizations are not obligations. They’re ceilings, not floors. But given the bank’s track record of actually executing on these programs, at a pace of $8.325B in a single quarter, investors have reason to take the authorization at face value.
JPMorgan’s capital allocation strategy remains firmly rooted in traditional banking. There’s no mention of digital assets, blockchain investments, or crypto-related ventures in this announcement, maintaining a distinct separation between its shareholder return strategy and any digital asset ambitions.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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