JPMorgan's Dimon says hard Brexit would be a 'disaster' for Britain

JPMorgan Chase Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said he thinks a hard Brexit is unlikely but would be a "disaster" if it happened.

Dimon's bank is prepared for the possibility of Britain crashing out of the European Union, having spent hundreds of millions on preparations to avoid scrambling to continue operating across Europe, he said in a lunchtime interview Wednesday held by the Economic Club of New York.

Jamie Dimon, chairman and chief executive officer of JPMorgan Chase, speaks during an Economic Club of New York event on Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2019.

"A hard Brexit will be a disaster for Great Britain," he said. "We don't think it's going to happen, because it's bad for Europe too."

Read more: Hard Brexit is a systemic risk to U.S. banks: Bankshot

The U.K. is at a crossroads after Parliament emphatically rejected Theresa May's Brexit deal on Tuesday. The defeat leaves May's divorce agreement with the European Union all but dead and opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn trying to force a general election. While May believes she will survive Wednesday's no-confidence vote, it's unclear how long she or her Brexit strategy will last.

Dimon said he understands the British desire to separate from the EU, but said the U.K. population is only now realizing how messy a divorce is. A withdrawal agreement between the two blocs resembles a U.K. "surrender" more than it does a negotiation, he said.

"It's a really complicated situation," said Dimon, who campaigned against Brexit beore the vote in 2016. "The Brits were dealt a bad hand, and they played it badly."

Bloomberg News
Brexit Jamie Dimon JPMorgan Chase
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