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Last Man Standing: The Ascent of Jamie Dimon and JPMorgan Chase Paperback – Illustrated, October 19, 2010
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In Last Man Standing, award-winning journalist Duff McDonald provides an unprecedented and deeply personal look at the extraordinary figure behind JPMorgan’s success. Using countless hours of interviews with Dimon and his full circle of friends, family, and colleagues, this definitive biography is by far the most comprehensive portrait of the man known as the Savior of Wall Street.
Now, in an updated prologue, McDonald offers insight into the future of Wall Street and how Dimon will overcome the challenge of aggressive new regulation from Washington—and how he plans to continue to thrive as the world’s preeminent banker.
- Print length361 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateOctober 19, 2010
- ISBN-101416599541
- ISBN-13978-1416599548
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—Mara Der Hovanesian, BusinessWeek
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
On the morning of September 18, 2008, the phone rang in Jamie Dimon’s office. It was Hank Paulson, the secretary of the treasury. For the second time in six months, Paulson had a pressing question for the chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase. Would Dimon be interested in acquiring the floundering investment bank Morgan Stanley—at no cost whatsoever?
During one of the most tumultuous months in the history of the stock market—stocks fell 27 percent between August 29 and October 10, 2008—the storied investment bank Lehman Brothers had already failed, the brokerage giant Merrill Lynch had been sold to Bank of America, and the insurance heavyweight AIG had received an emergency loan of $85 billion from the federal government. One of the only remaining questions was whether it would be Morgan Stanley or Goldman Sachs that fell next. The government was desperately seeking to stave off what could have been a wipeout of Wall Street. And here was Paulson, offering Dimon Morgan Stanley for the bargain basement price of $0 per share.
At the government’s urging, Dimon had agreed to take over Bear Stearns for $2 a share in March 2008, in a whirlwind 48-hour deal. (The price was ultimately raised to $10.) The transaction had catapulted JPMorgan Chase to the forefront of the financial industry and established Dimon as the government’s banker of last resort. “Some are coming to Washington for help,” Sheila Bair, chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, later said. “Others are coming to Washington to help.”
Considered in a historical light, a takeover of Morgan Stanley would have been much more profound than that of Bear Stearns. Dimon was already being compared to John Pierpont Morgan, the legendary banker who was his company’s founder, and this deal would have meant a reassembling of the empire that had been forcibly dismantled during the Great Depression, when banks were barred from the securities trade. Dimon, in other words, would have been sitting atop the very same empire his firm’s namesake had lorded over nearly a century before.
But it was not to be. Dimon reportedly said he’d discuss it with his board, but his initial view was that his bank shouldn’t do it—it would involve a bloodbath for employees on both sides, a doubling of risk, and years of distraction for the company. What’s more, the ultimate cost of a deal would have been quite substantial, whether in terms of layoffs, writedowns, or a de-risking of Morgan Stanley’s balance sheet. (Dimon has always said it doesn’t make sense for two major investment banks to merge.) Moreover, his team was already busy preparing a bid to take over the deposits and loans of the Seattle-based bank Washington Mutual, also on the verge of failure.
The amazing thing: Paulson really didn’t have anyone else to turn to. Dimon was quite literally the only chief of a major bank to have properly prepared for the hundred-year storm that had hit Wall Street with such vengeance. Everyone had known that the capital base of the financial sector had been in desperate need of shoring up, but Jamie Dimon was alone among his peers in having actually done something instead of just talking about it. As a result, of all the actions taken by the government in the fifteen months since the crisis had started, the only thing that had really worked was giving it to Jamie. Which is exactly why a desperate Paulson was trying to do it again. But he proved unable to persuade Dimon to pull off a third major deal in 2008. Morgan Stanley eventually pulled through. But even without this deal, Dimon’s reputation continued to ascend to new heights. In the midst of the most serious and far-reaching financial crisis since the 1930s—much of it caused by plain old avarice and bad judgment—Dimon and JPMorgan Chase stood apart. Much of the melodramatic coverage of Wall Street postcrisis has focused on its flaws—the hubris and the greed. Jamie Dimon’s story contains the opposites—the values of clarity, consistency, integrity, and courage. By sticking to them, Dimon has unquestionably become the dominant banking executive of his era. “Banking is a very good business if you don’t do anything dumb,” says Warren Buffett. “Morris Shapiro said long ago that there are more banks than bankers, and that’s fundamentally the problem. But Jamie is a banker from head to toe.”
© 2009 Duff McDonald
Product details
- Publisher : Simon & Schuster; Illustrated edition (October 19, 2010)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 361 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1416599541
- ISBN-13 : 978-1416599548
- Item Weight : 11 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.91 x 8.44 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #86,987 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #141 in Company Business Profiles (Books)
- #231 in Business Professional's Biographies
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About the author

Duff McDonald is a New York-based journalist and author. He has written for Vanity Fair, The New Yorker, New York, Esquire, Fortune, Business Week, Conde Nast Portfolio, GQ, WIRED, Time, Newsweek, The New York Observer, and others.
He is the co-host, along with his friend Matt McButter, of the podcast How to Tickle Yourself, produced by Storic Media.
http://storicmedia.com/how-to-tickle-yourself/
He is the author of several books, including:
Frictionless, co-authored with Christiane Lemieux (Harper Business, June 2020)
The Golden Passport: Harvard Business School, the Limits of Capitalism, and the Moral Failure of the MBA Elite (Harper Business, April 2017.
The Firm: The Story of McKinsey and Its Secret Influence on American Business (Simon & Schuster, September 2013)
Last Man Standing, a biography of Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase (Simon & Schuster, October 2009)
The CEO, a satire, co-authored with Owen Burke (Simon Spotlight)
He lives in Hurley, New York with his wife, Joey; his daughter, Marguerite; ten chickens and three cats (The Sherriff Steven Wondrous, Princess Steven Buscemi, and Corey Feldman, Esquire).
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This is a tremendous biography. Yet, it's vastly more than that. It is a crucial contribution to the the burgeoning insights into the development of the financial services industry in the U.S. Moreover, it is a story about the development of character - human character - the character of a man (Jamie Dimon) whose life, intelligence, compassion and instincts continue to shape the landscape in America. In many ways, Dimon's life represents something that is lacking today in U.S. culture -- living role models for a younger generation to yearn to emulate.
The writing by Duff McDonald is balanced, provides the reader with a tremendous sense of Jamie Dimon as a human being, as well as financier/CEO. The writing has a pulse, provides a perspective into both the personal and corporate world - an existence that is often perplexing. The dimensions of struggle, insight, learning and persistence all resonate throughout this non-nonsense non-fiction account of one of America's true leaders.
The history of the development of the U.S. financial services industry is also quite detailed and anything but boring.
After Alexander Hamilton founded the Bank of New York - purportedly the first commercial bank in the U.S. in 1794- he had the industry to himself until 1799. About this time, his political rival Aaron Burr started the Bank of Manhattan. A banker named John Thompson started Chase National Bank in 1877. He named it after Salmon P. Chase who'd been President Lincoln's secretary of the treasury as well as Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.
J.P. Morgan & Company emerged in what has been referred to as the "gilded age" of American finance. Founded in 1871 by J. Pierpont Morgan and a Philadelphia banker by the name of Anthony Drexel. (P. 203).
The essence of the book is captured in the following paragraph from author Duff McDonald:
"After years of being considered a glorified number-cruncher who only knew how to cut costs, he was finally acknowledged as a leader who knew how to make a company grow. What's more, he was recognized s both a creative thinker and a man with the ability to shape the culture not just of his company but also of his industry and even the country itself. It says something about Wall Street today that only a few people command both the respect of their peers and the genuine curiosity of the outside world." P. 322
Of course the years as Sandy Weill's protege are well documented and shared frankly, yet with uncanny dignity. However, there are some lessons you can identify in the book that should serve readers requirement for a perspective on the real Sandy Weill, as evidenced by the following:
"Weill had acquired the dreaded CEO disease, which made him unable to hear anything but what he wanted to hear." p.115.
Sandy Weill, on the other hand, is proof that you should never underestimate the man who overestimates himself." p.130
The Dimon family's dedication to giving back to community is well documented in the book:
"The Dimons give generously from their family foundation as well as from their personal accounts. Jamie also gives gifts above and beyond annual bonuses to the people with whom he works closely, including his driver. And just like Sandy Weill, he has tried to spread stock ownership through every company he's run, from top to bottom, driven by a desire to see his colleagues get rich along with him." P.114
Dimon's insights into deal making and mergers and acquisitions activity are numerous, useful and characterized in the following:
"On a call with analysts in May, he tried, once again, to make explicit his view of acquisition opportunities. "There are three things that have to make sense," he said. "And they are not in order of importance. One is the business logic. There should be clear business logic to it. The second is the price. Sometimes there is a price at which you cannot make it pay for shareholders. And the third is the ability to execute. You have to be able to see clearly getting done what you need to get done, whether it is management or systems or marketing or culture or something like that. If those things make sense, you can then weigh and balance them. Meaning, if you have exceptional business logic and an easy ability to execute, you could pay a higher price. And conversely, if those things are a little more complex, you want a margin of error by getting a lower it price." Pp.216-217
The tidbits that Warren Buffet shares about Dimon are priceless: Here's a couple to chew on:
"Warren Buffett thinks Dimon separated himself from the pack by relying on his own judgment and not becoming slave to the software that tried to simplify all of banking into a mathematical equation. "Too many people overemphasize the power of these statistical models," he says. "But not Jamie. The CEO of any of these firms has to be the chief risk officer."
"You have to have somebody that's got a real fear in them of what can happen in the markets. They have to know financial history. You can't evaluate risk in sigmas." - quote from Warren Buffett p.232
Duff McDonald refers to sayings of Dimon as DIMONOLOGY. These are precious sentences of wisdom, uncommon sense, and the voice of both character and experience. Allow me to share a few here I particularly enjoyed, to whet your whistle:
"a consistency to performance, rather than someone chasing the flavor of the month," p. 206
"One of the toughest jobs of the CEO is to look at all the stupid stuff other people are doing and to not do them," p.214
"Everyone was trying to grow in products we didn't want to grow in," he later told a reporter. "So we let them have it." P.214
"There is one financial commandment that cannot be violated: Do not borrow short to invest long-particularly against `illiquid, long-term assets." "You know what sinks companies?" he asked an audience in late 2008. "Financing illiquid assets short." P. 230
"Well, sometimes you can't grow. Sometimes you don't want to grow. In certain businesses, growth means you either take on bad clients, excess risk, or too much leverage." P.231
"I don't want to be big and stupid. I want to be really good at what we do." P.240
"The issue is not just whether someone has the intellectual capacity to manage it. Someone must also have the desire." P.325
"Individual units may have volatile results, but the combination is more stable. P.324
"It is no surprise that a lack of corporate intrigue tends to go hand in hand with long-term success." P. 303
"He actually trusts the people working for him, and trusts, too, that they can learn from their mistakes, as he has learned from his own." P.304
"When talking of the most important things in his life, he once said, "My family, humanity, my Country, and the world. And way down here is J.P. Morgan." P.309
"A lot of those mark-to-market losses will end up being real losses," he'said. "They are real losses that are simply being recognized in the market before they're being recognized in expected cash flows." P.310
"What we aim for is continuous improvement. It's not like we think we get to a perfect place." P. 320
Problems don't age well; denying or hiding them guarantees that they will get worse. Bureaucracy, silos, and politics are the bane of large corporations; they must be combated vigorously and continually." P.160
No company has ever had much of a future by cutting costs. Success is measured by top and bottom-line growth." P.169
Review our businesses and what we're doing well organically. That kind of growth will get you a higher value for your shareholders. By the way M&A is risky and tough, so the discipline is different. You really need to think about the landscape, to ask yourself what's changing." Pp.173-174
"I think it's important that you're open-minded to other people's ideas." P.176
"Many of the previous decade's mergers had been nothing more than "stacking doughnuts"- the holes in the business that had existed before were still there." P.181
On large outsourcing contracts - "We want patriots, not mercenaries," p. `93
"open architecture" -- in which the firm's brokers were allowed to offer any number of funds, not just those from JPMorgan Chase." P.194
`If you admit your mistakes, Dimon's theory went, you save yourself the hassle of having your critics point them out to you." P. 196
"Every single risk you're taking can be broken down to its smallest components and therefore be better understood. All it takes is time and effort." P.197
As Duff concludes this volume, he shares the following:
"Jamie Dimon has emerged as a moral and managerial compass for both his industry and the country itself." p. 328 ----
Frankly, after 328 pages of absolutely wonderful investigative journalism, the obvious discipline of a superb historical biographer, and being immersed in the rare literary talents of a master story-teller (I am referring here to author Duff McDonald) -- I unequivocally agree!!!
To Jamie, Judy, family, colleagues and to Duff McDonald - It was a pleasure and a privilege to have the honor of reading about your lives. My sincere thanks. Your story shall endure with me.
To the reader - Buy This Book - One of the Best I've devoured in 2010 and likely to make my Top 10 for 2010. ENJOY!
Also, who ever is reading this, I am planning on recording videos on YouTube to get more in depth book reviews, if that’s something your interested please let me know. Thanks!
It's a good feeling working for a company where what I do everyday for our clients (despite being just 1 out of over 200,000) actually matters. No one here is insignificant. And every detail, every employee, matters. And that's a healthy culture for any business to have. I am proud to be part of this great company; proud of our leader and our management team's diligent handling of our bank's financial affairs; proud to have been able to help our clients during a very difficult period for our country.
Duff's account of Jamie's career is a must read for any aspiring manager/leader. From his detailed account of Jamie's early career to the more recent events, this book is an easy, addictive read. It's hard to put it down. Great job researching the stories, issues and conducting interviews. In the aftermath of this complex system meltdown, it is refreshing to read a book in which complex financial issues can be easily understood by anyone. Strongly recommended.
However, JP Morgan got involved with subprime mortgages that makes him far from a saint.
Top reviews from other countries
His rise through the ranks to where he is today is almost legendary and well known and he seems to lead a very contented family and home life.....when he is there!
The author albeit a little dazzled by Mr Dimon's perhaps has produced a very worthwhile read, a good insight into his career and companies he worked for.
I look forward to reading the book, but this is awful service from Amazon.





