What close watchers say about Jamie Dimon hiring Todd Combs
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Todd Combs, one of Warren Buffett’s stockpickers at Berkshire Hathaway, is leaving to join JPMorgan.
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JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon is a longtime admirer of Buffett and has spoken highly of Combs.
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Combs, the CEO of Berkshire-owned Geico since 2020, sat on JPMorgan’s board for nine years.
Warren Buffett will soon be out of a job, but at age 95, he’s probably not looking for a new one. Longtime admirer Jamie Dimon may have sprung for the next best thing by hiring his understudy.
The JPMorgan CEO has hired Todd Combs, one of Buffett’s two investment managers at Berkshire Hathaway, to head up a new $10 billion group at the bank and be his special advisor.
Bringing Combs into the JPMorgan fold might be as near as Dimon can get to having Buffett himself on his team.
“Dimon may very well have viewed Combs as a close proxy for Buffett himself,” David Kass, a finance professor and longtime Berkshire blogger, told Business Insider. “Although Dimon could not hire Buffett, he could hire one of his protégés.”
Read more of our reporting on the leadership transformation underway at Berkshire Hathaway:
The “main impetus” for Dimon hiring Combs was likely his observations of the investor as a JPMorgan board member over the past nine years, John Longo, a finance professor, fund manager, and the author of “Buffett’s Tips,” told Business Insider.
But “the fact that he ran a large financial business (Geico), is a successful fund manager, and is a protégé of Warren Buffett certainly enhance his credentials,” Longo said.
He added that Combs has undoubtedly “learned a great deal” from Buffett, and JPMorgan now stands to benefit from that knowledge.
“Jamie deeply respects Warren Buffett and Todd Combs,” JPMorgan said in a statement to Business Insider. Geico declined to comment.
Combs ran a hedge fund before Buffett hired him in 2010. He helped set up Haven, a healthcare joint venture between Berkshire, JPMorgan, and Amazon, that launched in 2018 but closed three years later.
He was appointed CEO of Berkshire-owned Geico in 2020, and has reshaped the auto insurer to help increase profits in recent years. Buffett applauded Combs for Geico’s “spectacular” improvement in his February letter to shareholders.
Combs’ departure was unexpected, as Buffett had originally planned for him to take over Berkshire’s vast portfolio once he and Charlie Munger were out of the picture.

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