JPMorgan Chase will inject $24 million into Philadelphia’s maritime manufacturing sector, CEO Jamie Dimon said on Wednesday, marking the bank’s latest move to rebuild domestic industrial capacity deemed critical to national defense.
The funding package, which includes $18 million in loans and investments alongside $6 million in philanthropic grants, will be deployed at the historic Philadelphia Navy Yard.
A primary focus is accelerating the construction of a new submarine manufacturing and assembly facility operated by Rhoads Industries, which is expected to generate 450 permanent jobs.
The capital will also expand credit access for up to 100 local maritime small businesses and fund workforce training for welders and electricians.
Speaking with CNBC on Wednesday, the veteran banker, 70, framed the Philadelphia investments as evidence of a broader American industrial awakening spurred by global instability.
“The arsenal of democracy has been reignited,” Dimon told the network, pointing to recent high-profile investments in the same industrial park as proof of a turnaround.
“People said it couldn’t happen, but here you have Hanwha shipbuilding at the Philadelphia Navy Yard.”
The interview echoed some of the chief executive’s previous remarks on the issue.
In his annual letter to shareholders in April, Dimon urged Uncle Sam to follow “the right policies” to keep the US as the world’s no. 1 military superpower.
The $24 million pledge is the latest deployment of capital under JPMorgan’s $1.5 trillion, 10-year “Security and Resiliency Initiative.”
Launched last year, the massive financing project targets sectors vital to US economic and military readiness.
The bank recently expanded the program’s scope into Europe as governments across the West rush to rearm and secure supply chains amid ongoing wars in Ukraine and the Middle East.
Wall Street’s renewed focus on heavy industry coincides with a massive decline in domestic maritime capabilities.
According to industry research cited by JPMorgan, the United States currently produces less than 1% of the world’s new commercial ships.
The US-flagged merchant fleet has plummeted from roughly 3,000 vessels in the 1960s to fewer than 190 today.
Reversing this trend faces a severe labor bottleneck — the US Navy said in January that it will need an estimated 250,000 new skilled shipbuilding workers over the next decade just to meet existing demand.
However, the tide has recently begun to turn in Philadelphia, bolstered by major international partnerships.
In late 2024, the South Korean defense and energy conglomerate Hanwha Group finalized a $100 million acquisition of the struggling Philly Shipyard.
Federal lawmakers including Sen. Dave McCormick (R-Penn.) have highlighted Hanwha’s subsequent multi-billion dollar expansion proposals, which aim to install new docks and a block assembly facility.
These upgrades are designed to scale the shipyard’s output from fewer than two vessels annually to as many as 20, including lucrative liquefied natural gas carriers and naval modules.
By pairing skills training with capital for regional parts suppliers, the initiative attempts to build an ecosystem that can sustain the Navy Yard’s projected growth.
“America can compete and lead in shipbuilding again,” Dimon said in a statement accompanying the announcement. “It starts with more skilled workers and secure supply chains”.












