Jamie Dimon Tells Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong He’s ‘Full of Sh—’ in Davos Clash: WSJ
Brian Armstrong, the CEO of Coinbase, found himself at the eye of a widening storm between Wall Street and the crypto industry last week at the World Economic Forum in Davos — and it got personal.
During a chance encounter over coffee with former U.K. prime minister Tony Blair, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon abruptly cut in, pointing a finger and telling Armstrong bluntly, “You are full of s—,” according to reporting from The Wall Street Journal. The outburst underscored some of the raw tensions happening between traditional banks and crypto firms over the future of U.S. financial regulation.
The confrontation, described by some attendees as uncharacteristically heated for the annual gathering of global elites, followed Armstrong’s series of television appearances earlier in the week.
On business networks, he accused big banks of trying to sabotage key provisions of the Senate’s Clarity Act — a crypto market-structure bill that could redefine how digital assets are regulated and whether exchanges can offer interest-like rewards on stablecoins.
Armstrong argued that banks are using legislative muscle to stifle competition rather than compete fairly in a free market.
At the heart of the dispute is the issue of yield. Coinbase and others offer rewards on stablecoins — digital tokens pegged to the U.S. dollar — that can return about 3.5% to holders. Traditional banks, by contrast, pay near-zero on checking and savings accounts.
Banking executives say allowing crypto platforms to offer such returns is economically indistinguishable from interest on bank deposits and could trigger a mass shift of consumer funds out of the banking system. They warn community banks might struggle to lend to businesses if deposits erode.
Coinbase’s role in crypto legislation
Armstrong’s advocacy comes as the Clarity Act faces legislative gridlock. The Senate Banking Committee abruptly postponed a markup and vote after Coinbase withdrew its support for the bill, calling the current draft “materially worse than the status quo” because of its restrictions on stablecoin yields and other concerns.
At Davos, other bank chiefs reportedly kept their distance. Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan reportedly told Armstrong that if Coinbase wants to offer deposit-like products, “just be a bank,” pointing to the extensive regulatory oversight traditional deposit takers face.
Citigroup’s Jane Fraser offered the Coinbase chief only a brief audience, and Wells Fargo’s Charlie Scharf declined to engage at all.
The clash highlights a broader struggle over how the U.S. financial system will evolve as crypto gains mainstream traction. Next week the White House will convene banking and crypto executives to discuss reviving stalled U.S. crypto legislation.
This post Jamie Dimon Tells Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong He’s ‘Full of Sh—’ in Davos Clash: WSJ first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.



