The work beneath the work: How J.P. Morgan, BofA, U.S. Bank, and Citi are rebuilding their internal systems
- Four big bank developments dominated headlines this week: one focused on small businesses, two on AI innovation, and one quashing an acquisition rumor.
- These moves suggest the largest US banks are reorganizing around a thesis: identifying where value is now created and how distant they are from fully internalizing it.
Where banks compete now isn’t what you see; it’s how they operate.
Four major bank moves made the headlines this week: one aimed at small business, two centered on AI tools, and the other shutting down an acquisition rumor.
In the broader view, these moves show the largest US banks are reorganizing around a narrative bigger than products or channels, pinpointing where value is generated now and measuring how far they are from controlling it internally.
J.P. Morgan is scaling distribution, but calling it inclusion
The development: J.P. Morgan has unveiled its new “American Dream Initiative,” targeting six focus areas with an early emphasis on small businesses. The program sets a measurable goal: expand support from 7 million to 10 million small businesses in the coming years, including nearly $80 billion in small business lending over the next decade.
The bank also plans to grow its “Coaching for Impact” program, aiming to mentor roughly 115,000 small business owners across more than 80 cities over the next ten years. Additionally, J.P. Morgan intends to bolster its branch network with 1,000 additional small business bankers and double its senior business consultants to 150, signaling a major investment in hands-on support for entrepreneurs.
The backstory and implications: The move carries a macroeconomic weight…
…
