Finance

Jamie Dimon says WeWork will survive and that he's learned some tough lessons from the debacle

Key Points
  • "I think they'll have a future life," Dimon, CEO of J.P. Morgan Chase, said of WeWork in an interview with CNBC's Wilfred Frost from the bank's offices in London.
  • "We don't want them to lay off 14,000 people and have bankruptcy or something like that," Dimon said. "There are a lot of lessons to be learned on the way by everybody involved, and I've learned a few myself."
  • Among the lessons are that companies should have "proper corporate governance" and an independent board before filing to go public, he said.
JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon: There are lessons to be learned in WeWork's valuation
VIDEO3:5903:59
JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon: There are lessons to be learned in WeWork's valuation

Jamie Dimon says that he has learned lessons from his bank's advisory work for WeWork this year, and that he believes the coworking company has a shot to avoid bankruptcy.

"I think they'll have a future life," Dimon, CEO of J.P. Morgan Chase, said in an interview with CNBC's Wilfred Frost from the bank's offices in London.

"We want them to do that," Dimon said. "We don't want them to lay off 14,000 people and have bankruptcy or something like that. There are a lot of lessons to be learned on the way by everybody involved, and I've learned a few myself."

Among the lessons are that companies should have "proper corporate governance" and an independent board before filing to go public, he said. Shareholders should be treated like partners, rather than figuring out how to extract the highest valuation, he said.

Dimon, who reportedly directly advised former WeWork CEO Adam Neumann, declined to say whether Neumann or the company had been misled by banks. While WeWork ultimately choose a bailout from SoftBank, which had earlier invested in the company at a $47 billion valuation, J.P. Morgan had arranged for a financing deal after the IPO plans imploded in late September.

"You don't know the private advice we gave him or the company," Dimon said.

"I do think we helped WeWork get to a proper conclusion, which I think is very important," Dimon added later. "I really would've been bothered and upset mostly if that company had been a failure and had a chance to succeed, and now it has a chance to succeed."

WATCH: CNBC's full interview with JPM CEO Jamie Dimon

Watch CNBC's full interview with JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon
VIDEO17:4417:44
Watch CNBC's full interview with JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon