Dimon’s “Worry” Isn’t Compassion—It’s Strategy When Jamie Dimon says he's "far more worried than others" about a market crash, you better believe that’s not a moment of personal vulnerability. That’s cover. That’s positioning. That’s a signal to other insiders: Get your assets out of the blast zone. The man runs JPMorgan Chase—arguably the most powerful bank in the Western world. His public persona is usually smooth, reassuring, Wall Street tough-guy calm. So when he admits the stock market could go down hard in the next six months to two years, he’s not speculating—he’s preparing. And the rest of us? We’re the collateral. AI-Fueled Delusion: Tech’s Phantom Wealth Michael hit the nail on the head: the stock market’s recent boom isn’t…

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