The Harris and Trump campaigns are both taking advice from one Wall Street titan: Jamie Dimon

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JPMorgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon has been talking regularly to both presidential campaigns in the final stretch of the 2024 contest.

The growing question is whether he will throw his support behind either candidate. The boss of the biggest US bank hinted Tuesday that such a move may be possible.

"I will decide, and I will vote," Dimon said in a Bloomberg Television interview. "I reserve the right to do whatever I want. I'm a citizen. I can vote. I can say what I want. I've never been in the habit of endorsing candidates. But I am thinking through what I want to say or do or something like that."

But whom he might support or whether he will do so at all is far from a foregone conclusion as he sends signals both publicly and privately that have been embraced by both sides.

Dimon’s dialogue with both campaigns is happening on a weekly basis with allies of both candidates, according to people familiar with the talks.

The conversations have included informal and formal advisers to both campaigns, one of these people said, a list that includes both current and former Cabinet members.

CEO of Chase Jamie Dimon looks on as he attends the seventh
CEO of Chase Jamie Dimon at an event at the Chateau de Versailles, outside Paris, in May. (LUDOVIC MARIN/POOL/AFP via Getty Images) · LUDOVIC MARIN via Getty Images

The tenor of his conversations with the Trump campaign is an agreement on pro-business policies to grow the economy.

It's a level of agreement that Trump's team clearly hopes could lead to more.

Both Dimon and former President Trump "share support of commonsense policies like a government efficiency commission that would eliminate fraud and save taxpayer dollars," Trump senior adviser Brian Hughes said in a statement.

Read more: Trump vs. Harris: 4 ways the next president could impact your bank accounts

But Dimon has also offered public support for key Harris priorities, including new tax credits to lower-income Americans.

Dimon has more engagement at the moment with the Harris campaign, one of these people said, as the CEO offers feedback on the vice president's economic agenda. Dimon has talked with Harris directly within the last three weeks, this person added.

The scrutiny of Dimon's views is intensifying, with a possible endorsement looming as one of the campaign's final most sought-after prizes. Just last week Donald Trump’s account even posted a false claim of a Dimon endorsement.

The banker’s eventual retirement as top boss of JPMorgan adds another wrinkle to the intense focus on his actions, as the bank prepares possible successors once Dimon is ready to leave.

A long and complicated relationship with both candidates

The 68-year-old CEO and executive chairman for JPMorgan holds an outsized sway across Wall Street.