JPMorgan Chase announced a formal partnership with the International Olympic Committee that names the bank a global partner for two upcoming Games: the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games and the French Alps 2030 Winter Games.
Under the agreement, JPMorgan will serve as the official bank of the U.S. Olympic team at LA28 and is designated as a founding partner of the LA28 Games. The agreement covers both the Summer Games in Los Angeles and the 2030 Winter Games in the French Alps. The parties did not disclose financial commitments tied to the partnership.
JPMorgan chief executive Jamie Dimon emphasized the firm's connections to athletes beyond sponsorship, noting that Olympic and Paralympic competitors are among the institution's customers, clients and employees. The bank also plans to deliver financial health workshops for athletes via an IOC platform. Dimon said, "We bank the communities they call home, finance the facilities where they train, help them start businesses and plan for their futures," highlighting the bank's framing of the relationship in terms of community banking and support services.
The company noted its existing footprint in Los Angeles, where it serves 5 million consumer banking clients, 589,000 small business clients and employs 6,000 people. JPMorgan Chase also reported a long-standing presence in France, operating there since 1868 and employing more than 1,000 people.
Separately, promotional materials referenced the bank's coverage in investment evaluation tools. One such pitch described an AI-driven stock selection tool that assesses JPMorgan among thousands of companies using more than 100 financial metrics. That material highlighted the tool's prior identified winners, including Super Micro Computer (+185%) and AppLovin (+157%), and invited readers to explore whether JPMorgan features in current model strategies. This promotional content did not include additional factual details about the partnership with the IOC or the financial terms of the agreement.
The announcement places JPMorgan as the first bank identified by the IOC to hold the status of global partner of the Olympic Movement, according to the IOC's designation in the agreement announcement. Beyond branding and athlete-facing programming, the public description of the deal did not include information on monetary commitments or the scope of activation across the two Games.
Market participants and stakeholders will need to await further disclosures to determine the financial and operational implications of the partnership for the bank and for the organizing committees of LA28 and the French Alps 2030 Winter Games.