Scott Bessent isn’t pulling punches. The Treasury’s top economic adviser had a clear message for JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon this week: stop worrying so much about the bond market.
Speaking to reporters at a closed-door event in Washington, Bessent responded to recent warnings Dimon made about looming risks in the U.S. Treasury market, including the possibility of a liquidity crisis if rates continue rising.
“For his entire career he’s made predictions about bond markets,” Bessent said. “None of them have come true.”
The remark, half-dismissive and half-surgical, reflects rising tension between government officials and Wall Street leaders as U.S. debt issuance increases and yields remain volatile. Dimon has long been vocal about systemic risk in the bond market, recently calling it “the most dangerous time” in decades.
A clash of confidence
Dimon’s remarks come amid rising concern that the U.S. government is issuing too much debt too quickly, which could spook buyers and push up yields further. But Bessent says those fears are overblown.
“There’s a difference between sounding alarms and managing the system,” Bessent added. “Markets are absorbing the supply. Rates are elevated, but they’re not disorderly.”
To Bessent, Dimon’s commentary may be more self-serving than strategic, aimed at influencing Fed thinking or boosting JPMorgan’s positioning in debt markets. The Treasury, by contrast, is sticking to a steady issuance path and betting on economic resilience.
The bigger backdrop: a strong economy, fragile sentiment
Bessent’s confidence comes at a time when the U.S. economy continues to outperform expectations. GDP growth is tracking above 2.5%, unemployment is near historic lows, and inflation has cooled from 2022 highs. Still, yields on 10-year Treasurys hover around 4.5%—uncomfortably high for markets accustomed to ultra-low borrowing costs.
Dimon isn’t alone in warning of danger. Billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman and bond king Jeffrey Gundlach have echoed similar concerns about debt sustainability and foreign demand drying up.
But Bessent is focused on fundamentals. “There’s a lot of noise, and it sells headlines. But we have to deal in data, not drama,” he said.
Dimon’s track record in the spotlight
Bessent’s swipe at Dimon wasn’t just rhetorical. Over the last two decades, Dimon has frequently issued dire warnings about inflation, recession, or financial instability—many of which didn’t materialize. That history seems to be shaping Bessent’s view.
The comment also underscores how political and financial leaders increasingly diverge on how to interpret the current environment. Where banks see risk, policymakers are doubling down on stability narratives.