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JPMorgan 2026 Summer Reading List Maps Wealthy Client Worries

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<p>JPMorgan&&num;8217&semi;s 2026 Summer Reading List&comma; the bank&&num;8217&semi;s 27th annual shortlist for private-bank clients&comma; landed on May 18 with 14 nonfiction picks covering artificial intelligence&comma; generational wealth transfer&comma; geopolitical risk&comma; cognitive longevity&comma; and a lemon-recipe book co-signed by artist Ed Ruscha&period; Client advisors across Asia&comma; Europe and the Americas submitted hundreds of titles for the cut&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The bank publishes the list each spring as a beach-read guide for family offices and private-bank clients running eight and nine-figure portfolios&period; Read together&comma; the 14 picks double as a sentiment survey of where ultra-high-net-worth attention is parked in mid-2026&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>The 27th List by the Numbers<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>J&period;P&period; Morgan Private Bank has been issuing the list since 2000&comma; making this the 27th edition&period; The 2026 cut features 14 nonfiction titles&comma; with a separate NextList Summer Series of four curated experiences running alongside the books for the second consecutive year&period; Darin Oduyoye&comma; chief communications officer of J&period;P&period; Morgan Asset and Wealth Management&comma; oversees the project&comma; according to <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;prnewswire&period;com&sol;news-releases&sol;jp-morgan-announces-2026-summer-reading-list-and-nextlist-summer-series-302774249&period;html" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener">the firm&&num;8217&semi;s May 18 announcement of the 2026 selections<&sol;a>&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The selection process leans on what the bank calls a global advisor pool&period; Hundreds of titles get submitted across the year&period; A smaller curation panel then filters for timeliness&comma; quality&comma; and how each topic maps to the questions wealthy clients are bringing into their quarterly reviews&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<ul>&NewLine;<li><strong>27 years&colon;<&sol;strong> the list&&num;8217&semi;s run since launch in 2000&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>14 titles&colon;<&sol;strong> on the 2026 nonfiction shortlist&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li><strong>4 experiences&colon;<&sol;strong> in the second annual NextList Summer Series&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>Hundreds of advisor submissions filtered each spring&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;<figure class&equals;"wp-block-image aligncenter featured-image" style&equals;"margin&colon;1&period;5em auto&semi;text-align&colon;center&semi;"><img class&equals;"aligncenter" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;budgyapp&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2026&sol;05&sol;jpmorgan-2026-summer-reading-list-books-stacked-on-a-poolside-private-bank-table&period;webp" alt&equals;"JPMorgan 2026 summer reading list books stacked on a poolside private-bank table&period;" style&equals;"width&colon;100&percnt;&semi;max-width&colon;800px&semi;height&colon;auto&semi;border-radius&colon;8px&semi;display&colon;block&semi;margin&colon;0 auto&semi;" &sol;><figcaption style&equals;"text-align&colon;center&semi;font-size&colon;0&period;85em&semi;color&colon;&num;888&semi;margin-top&colon;0&period;5em&semi;">JPMorgan 2026 summer reading list books stacked on a poolside private-bank table&period;<&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<h2>Why Two AI Books Lead the Stack<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Artificial intelligence claims <strong>two of the 14 slots<&sol;strong>&comma; more shelf-space than any other theme&period; Sebastian Mallaby&&num;8217&semi;s <em>The Infinity Machine<&sol;em> profiles Demis Hassabis&comma; the Google DeepMind chief executive whose lab at <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;deepmind&period;google&sol;about&sol;" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener">Google DeepMind&&num;8217&semi;s research operation<&sol;a> won the 2024 Nobel in chemistry for AlphaFold&period; Josh Tyrangiel&&num;8217&semi;s <em>AI for Good<&sol;em> moves the conversation away from the lab and toward deployment&comma; profiling people using the technology to fix specific problems in healthcare&comma; agriculture&comma; and disaster response&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The double-AI placement is itself a signal&period; The 2024 list carried no AI title in the marquee slot&period; The 2025 list carried one&period; The 2026 shortlist treats AI as a portfolio question rather than a frontier conversation&colon; which sectors get rewired&comma; which firms keep pricing power&comma; and how a family office should think about a five-year capital plan when the underlying technology stack is still moving&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>For clients running operating businesses inside trusts&comma; the practical worry sits one layer below the headlines&period; Hassabis&&num;8217&semi;s path from DeepMind founding to a Nobel cleans up the founder-mythology genre&period; Tyrangiel&&num;8217&semi;s reporting fills in what gets deployed first and where reasonable returns on early adoption actually land&period; A wealth client reading both gets a strategic frame and a deployment map in one weekend&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>The Great Wealth Transfer Hides Behind &&num;8220&semi;Mattering&&num;8221&semi;<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Family-office advisors point to a different title as the conversation-starter&period; Jennifer Breheny Wallace&&num;8217&semi;s <em>Mattering<&sol;em>&comma; a study of purpose and connection&comma; doubles as a textbook for handing a family enterprise to a generation that did not build it&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<blockquote>&NewLine;<p>Nothing beats summer as a time for rest&comma; reflection and renewal&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;blockquote>&NewLine;<p>Darin Oduyoye&comma; chief communications officer of J&period;P&period; Morgan Asset and Wealth Management&comma; described the list that way in the firm&&num;8217&semi;s May 18 release&period; He flagged <strong>Mattering<&sol;strong> specifically as the title resonating with family offices managing the wealth handoff to children and grandchildren&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The wealth-transfer pressure is structural&comma; not a 2026 fashion&period; Industry researchers project that tens of trillions of dollars will pass between generations in the United States over the next two decades&comma; with most of the flow crossing through family-office and private-bank channels&period; The conversation has shifted from tax optimisation to identity&period; Whether the next holder of a fortune knows why the fortune exists is now the part wealth advisors flag as harder than the structuring work&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Geopolitics&comma; Crisis&comma; and a Storm Warning<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Two titles handle the world-blowing-up shelf&period; Historian Odd Arne Westad&&num;8217&semi;s <em>The Coming Storm<&sol;em> pulls warnings from the inter-war years and the early Cold War to map current great-power friction&period; <em>Crisis Engineering<&sol;em>&comma; by Marina Nitze&comma; Matthew Weaver and Mikey Dickerson&comma; reads as the operating manual&comma; drawn from the authors&&num;8217&semi; work pulling US federal agencies through systems failures&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>For a private-bank client&comma; the pairing answers different questions&period; Westad walks through where the next decade of great-power friction is most likely to land and which historical periods rhyme with the moment&period; Nitze and her co-authors offer the practical sequencing for crisis containment in the first 72 hours of a fast-moving institutional emergency&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>That pairing matters in 2026 because the calendar in front of wealthy clients is dense with politically driven inflection points&period; Election cycles in three G20 economies&comma; ongoing tariff resets&comma; and persistent supply-chain rewiring around semiconductors and rare earths sit at the centre of nearly every multi-asset committee discussion this year&period; Family offices with operating exposure to manufacturing&comma; logistics&comma; or financial-services infrastructure are using both books as briefing material for their internal risk teams&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>The Longevity and Performance Stack<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Three titles share the human-performance bucket&period; Dr&period; Tommy Wood&&num;8217&semi;s <em>The Stimulated Mind<&sol;em> argues for protocols that keep cognition intact deep into old age&period; Cognitive scientist George Newman&&num;8217&semi;s <em>How Great Ideas Happen<&sol;em> breaks down the discovery process into trainable steps&period; NBA analyst Ric Bucher&&num;8217&semi;s <em>Coachable<&sol;em> pulls feedback-loop lessons from Michael Jordan&comma; Tom Brady&comma; Diana Taurasi and other top performers&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The longevity slice is now a fixture in the wealth conversation&period; Sports-investing clients in particular&comma; including those buying minority stakes in NBA&comma; NFL and Premier League teams&comma; want a high-performance frame for their own operating businesses&period; Bucher&&num;8217&semi;s interview roster lands directly with that audience&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Wood&&num;8217&semi;s book points the conversation somewhere quieter&period; Cognitive longevity is the variable that determines whether a founder stays in the chair past 75 and whether a matriarch retains decision authority on a generational trust&period; For ultra-wealthy households&comma; brain health doubles as succession planning&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>The Full 14-Title Roster<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The complete shortlist&comma; with each author and the thematic bucket the book sits in&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<table>&NewLine;<thead>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<th>Title<&sol;th>&NewLine;<th>Author<&sol;th>&NewLine;<th>Theme<&sol;th>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<&sol;thead>&NewLine;<tbody>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>How Great Ideas Happen<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>George Newman<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Discovery and innovation<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>The Infinity Machine<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Sebastian Mallaby<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>AI and Hassabis profile<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>AI for Good<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Josh Tyrangiel<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>AI deployment<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>America&colon; The Imagination of a Nation<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Assouline and Joel Stein<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Culture and identity<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Crisis Engineering<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Marina Nitze&comma; Matthew Weaver and Mikey Dickerson<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Crisis playbook<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>The Coming Storm<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Odd Arne Westad<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Geopolitical history<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Mattering<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Jennifer Breheny Wallace<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Purpose and succession<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Coachable<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Ric Bucher<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Performance lessons<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>The Stimulated Mind<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Dr&period; Tommy Wood<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Brain longevity<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Light and Thread<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Han Kang<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Essays and reflection<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Irreplaceable<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>World Monuments Fund<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Cultural preservation<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Keith Haring in 3D<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Larry Warsh and Glenn Adamson<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Contemporary art<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>Squeeze Me&colon; Lemon Recipes &&num;038&semi; Art<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Ruthie Rogers and Ed Ruscha<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Food and art<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<tr>&NewLine;<td>We Are the World &lpar;Cup&rpar;<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Roger Bennett<&sol;td>&NewLine;<td>Sports culture<&sol;td>&NewLine;<&sol;tr>&NewLine;<&sol;tbody>&NewLine;<&sol;table>&NewLine;<h2>Beyond Books&colon; The NextList Summer Series<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The reading list ships with a companion programme now in its <strong>second year<&sol;strong>&period; The NextList Summer Series curates four experiences the bank&&num;8217&semi;s private-banking clients can attend&comma; and is positioned alongside the books as the experiential half of the summer programme&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Four experiences sit on the 2026 NextList&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<ul>&NewLine;<li>Two Strangers &lpar;Carry a Cake Across New York&rpar;&comma; a Broadway musical run in New York City&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>The Aurora&comma; a Swedish concours d&&num;8217&semi;elegance featuring more than 500 collector cars&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>Calder&period; Rêver en équilibre&comma; a Paris exhibition with close to 300 works by sculptor Alexander Calder&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<li>Wellness residencies at <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;shawellnessclinic&period;com&sol;en&sol;" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener">SHA Wellness Clinic&&num;8217&semi;s flagship retreats<&sol;a> in Spain&comma; Mexico and the United Arab Emirates&period;<&sol;li>&NewLine;<&sol;ul>&NewLine;<p>The experiential extension is consistent with where private banks across the industry are pushing&period; Money-can&&num;8217&semi;t-buy access has become the differentiator a competitor&&num;8217&semi;s product cannot match&comma; and the NextList format is JPMorgan&&num;8217&semi;s contribution to that arms race&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Frequently Asked Questions<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<h3>When Was JPMorgan&&num;8217&semi;s 2026 Summer Reading List Released&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>J&period;P&period; Morgan published the 2026 list on May 18&comma; the firm&&num;8217&semi;s 27th annual edition since the programme launched in 2000&period; The list is updated once a year&comma; in May&comma; and stays current through the northern-hemisphere summer&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>How Many Books Are on the 2026 List&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>Fourteen nonfiction titles&comma; covering artificial intelligence&comma; leadership&comma; geopolitics&comma; longevity&comma; art&comma; culture&comma; food and travel&period; The 2026 cut is the same size as the 2025 list and slightly narrower than the 2024 edition&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>Who Picks the Books on JPMorgan&&num;8217&semi;s Reading List&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>Client advisors across the bank&&num;8217&semi;s global private-banking network submit hundreds of nonfiction titles each year&period; A curation team then filters the submissions for timeliness&comma; quality and resonance with the bank&&num;8217&semi;s wealthy clients&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>Which Book Is Getting the Most Attention From Family Offices in 2026&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>According to Darin Oduyoye&comma; the firm&&num;8217&semi;s chief communications officer for asset and wealth management&comma; Jennifer Breheny Wallace&&num;8217&semi;s <em>Mattering<&sol;em> is the title resonating most with next-generation family leaders navigating generational wealth transitions&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>What Is the NextList Summer Series&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>A companion programme to the reading list&comma; now in its second year&period; The 2026 NextList includes four curated experiences&colon; the Broadway musical Two Strangers&comma; Swedish car concours The Aurora&comma; the Calder retrospective in Paris&comma; and SHA wellness residencies in Spain&comma; Mexico and the United Arab Emirates&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>Where Can I Get the JPMorgan 2026 Summer Reading List&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>The full list is published on <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;privatebank&period;jpmorgan&period;com&sol;nam&sol;en&sol;about-us&sol;the-client-experience&sol;summer-reading-list" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank" rel&equals;"noopener">J&period;P&period; Morgan Private Bank&&num;8217&semi;s official 2026 summer reading list page<&sol;a>&comma; with separate regional pages for the Americas&comma; Asia-Pacific&comma; and Europe&comma; Middle East and Africa&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3>Has the List Previously Included AI Titles&quest;<&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p>Yes&comma; but 2026 is the first year two AI books appear simultaneously in the curated shortlist&period; That placement choice mirrors the topic&&num;8217&semi;s weight in private-bank client conversations through the year&comma; and signals where the bank thinks wealthy attention will sit for the next twelve months&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><script type&equals;"application&sol;ld&plus;json">&NewLine;&lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;context"&colon; "https&colon;&sol;&sol;schema&period;org"&comma;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "FAQPage"&comma;&NewLine; "mainEntity"&colon; &lbrack;&NewLine; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Question"&comma;&NewLine; "name"&colon; "When Was JPMorgan's 2026 Summer Reading List Released&quest;"&comma;&NewLine; "acceptedAnswer"&colon; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Answer"&comma;&NewLine; "text"&colon; "J&period;P&period; Morgan published the 2026 list on May 18&comma; the firm's 27th annual edition since the programme launched in 2000&period; The list is updated once a year&comma; in May&comma; and stays current through the northern-hemisphere summer&period;"&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rcub;&comma;&NewLine; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Question"&comma;&NewLine; "name"&colon; "How Many Books Are on the 2026 List&quest;"&comma;&NewLine; "acceptedAnswer"&colon; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Answer"&comma;&NewLine; "text"&colon; "Fourteen nonfiction titles&comma; covering artificial intelligence&comma; leadership&comma; geopolitics&comma; longevity&comma; art&comma; culture&comma; food and travel&period; The 2026 cut is the same size as the 2025 list and slightly narrower than the 2024 edition&period;"&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rcub;&comma;&NewLine; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Question"&comma;&NewLine; "name"&colon; "Who Picks the Books on JPMorgan's Reading List&quest;"&comma;&NewLine; "acceptedAnswer"&colon; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Answer"&comma;&NewLine; "text"&colon; "Client advisors across the bank's global private-banking network submit hundreds of nonfiction titles each year&period; A curation team then filters the submissions for timeliness&comma; quality and resonance with the bank's wealthy clients&period;"&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rcub;&comma;&NewLine; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Question"&comma;&NewLine; "name"&colon; "Which Book Is Getting the Most Attention From Family Offices in 2026&quest;"&comma;&NewLine; "acceptedAnswer"&colon; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Answer"&comma;&NewLine; "text"&colon; "According to Darin Oduyoye&comma; the firm's chief communications officer for asset and wealth management&comma; Jennifer Breheny Wallace's Mattering is the title resonating most with next-generation family leaders navigating generational wealth transitions&period;"&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rcub;&comma;&NewLine; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Question"&comma;&NewLine; "name"&colon; "What Is the NextList Summer Series&quest;"&comma;&NewLine; "acceptedAnswer"&colon; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Answer"&comma;&NewLine; "text"&colon; "A companion programme to the reading list&comma; now in its second year&period; The 2026 NextList includes four curated experiences&colon; the Broadway musical Two Strangers&comma; Swedish car concours The Aurora&comma; the Calder retrospective in Paris&comma; and SHA wellness residencies in Spain&comma; Mexico and the United Arab Emirates&period;"&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rcub;&comma;&NewLine; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Question"&comma;&NewLine; "name"&colon; "Where Can I Get the JPMorgan 2026 Summer Reading List&quest;"&comma;&NewLine; "acceptedAnswer"&colon; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Answer"&comma;&NewLine; "text"&colon; "The full list is published on J&period;P&period; Morgan Private Bank's official 2026 summer reading list page&comma; with separate regional pages for the Americas&comma; Asia-Pacific&comma; and Europe&comma; Middle East and Africa&period;"&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rcub;&comma;&NewLine; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Question"&comma;&NewLine; "name"&colon; "Has the List Previously Included AI Titles&quest;"&comma;&NewLine; "acceptedAnswer"&colon; &lbrace;&NewLine; "&commat;type"&colon; "Answer"&comma;&NewLine; "text"&colon; "Yes&comma; but 2026 is the first year two AI books appear simultaneously in the curated shortlist&period; That placement choice mirrors the topic's weight in private-bank client conversations through the year&comma; and signals where the bank thinks wealthy attention will sit for the next twelve months&period;"&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rcub;&NewLine; &rsqb;&NewLine;&rcub;&NewLine;<&sol;script><&sol;p>&NewLine;

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