Tuesday, October 14, 2025

 

JPMorgan targets critical minerals with $1.5 trillion security initiative

Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

JPMorgan Chase on Monday launched its Security and Resiliency Initiative, committing up to $1.5 trillion over 10 years to strengthen US supply chains, with chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon emphasizing critical minerals essential for national security. 

Expanding from a prior $1 trillion goal, the plan addresses vulnerabilities exposed by geopolitical risks and over-reliance on foreign sources. Part to the effort is a $10 billion direct investment pool for equity and venture capital in US-based firms. 

“It has become painfully clear that the United States has allowed itself to become too reliant on unreliable sources of critical minerals, products and manufacturing, all of which are essential for our national security,” Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon said in a news release.


The initiative targets 27 sub-areas, including mining, refining, solar and nuclear energy, battery storage and munitions.  JPMorgan will provide tailored financing, advisory services, and partnerships to scale domestic production.

“This new initiative includes efforts like ensuring reliable access to… critical minerals,” Dimon said.

To execute, the bank with $4.6 trillion in assets and $357 billion in stockholders’ equity will hire field experts, form an advisory council with industry leaders, and advocate for streamlined permitting, reduced regulations and red tape – long a major obstacle hindering new mining projects in the US. 


Nuclear energy included in JPMorganChase USD1.5 trillion initiative


JPMorganChase has announced it will make direct investments of up to USD10 billion as part of a USD1.5 trillion initiative to address pressing needs in key sectors from critical minerals to frontier technologies, including nuclear energy.
 

(Image: Thomas Breher/Pixabay)

The USA-based financial services firm's newly announced Security and Resiliency Initiative is a 10-year plan to facilitate, finance and invest in industries critical to national economic security and resiliency. The initiative, which expands the firm's existing plans to "facilitate and finance" some USD1 trillion over the next decade, will see it make direct equity and venture capital investments to help select companies, primarily in the USA, to enhance their growth, spur innovation, and accelerate strategic manufacturing.

JPMorganChase said it will focus on four key areas, with 27 sub-areas, to support companies across all sizes and development stages by offering advice, providing financing, and, in some cases, investing capital. The initial list of 27 sub-areas will be refined and augmented over time.

The four key areas are:

•   Supply Chain and Advanced Manufacturing, including critical minerals, pharmaceutical precursors and robotics
•   Defence and Aerospace, including defence technology, autonomous systems, drones, next-gen connectivity and secure communications
•   Energy Independence and Resilience, including battery storage, grid resilience and distributed energy
•   Frontier and Strategic Technologies, including AI, cybersecurity and quantum computing

Nuclear energy - specifically, "power generated through next generation nuclear tech" - is identified as a sub-area under the Energy Independence and Resilience key theme. "Diversified sources of energy production and the modernisation and resiliency of the grid will be imperative to the national interest and advancing artificial intelligence," the company notes. The other sub-areas under this theme are grid resilience, distributed energy, battery storage and solar.

"It has become painfully clear that the United States has allowed itself to become too reliant on unreliable sources of critical minerals, products and manufacturing - all of which are essential for our national security," said Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO of JPMorganChase. "Our security is predicated on the strength and resiliency of America's economy. America needs more speed and investment. It also needs to remove obstacles that stand in the way: excessive regulations, bureaucratic delay, partisan gridlock and an education system not aligned to the skills we need."

The new initiative "includes efforts like ensuring reliable access to life-saving medicines and critical minerals, defending our nation, building energy systems to meet AI-driven demand and advancing technologies like semiconductors and data centres", Dimon added.

The firm also said it will advocate for policies that can accelerate these efforts, including research and development, permitting, procurement and regulations conducive to growth. "As the bank intensifies its focus on these essential industries, it will also continue to work closely with its community and business partners to champion these sectors, foster talent and support skills training to ensure companies can fill critical jobs," it said.

With operations worldwide, JPMorganChase & Co had USD4.6 trillion in assets and USD357 billion in stockholders' equity as of 30 June, and serves its customers under the JP Morgan and Chase brands.

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