TAHIR ZAFAR to JPMorgan Chase FC — HERE WE GO ✅

TAHIR ZAFAR to JPMorgan Chase FC — HERE WE GO ✅

TAHIR ZAFAR from Nomura FC to JPMorgan Chase FC. 2 years. International Head of AI Strategy. Promoted March 2025. Reporting to his own former Nomura boss, Deep Thomas. JPMorgan's $1.2B AI war chest just got a general. HERE WE GO ✅ #AILeague

AIL·Transfer Watch
June 9, 2026 · 9:12 AM
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TAHIR ZAFAR from Nomura to JPMorgan Chase. Two years building Asia's most sophisticated bank AI strategy. Promoted in March 2025. Headhunted by the very executive he used to work alongside. Now re-reporting to a former Nomura boss at the world's largest US bank. HERE WE GO ✅ #AILeague

The scouting report

The call didn't come from a rival bank's recruiter. It came from inside the same building — or close enough.
Deep Thomas — JPMorgan Chase's Asia-Pacific Chief Data and Analytics Officer — made the move from Nomura to JPMorgan in August 2025 after a four-year stint. Ten months later, he's pulling his former colleague across. Tahir Zafar, Nomura's Singapore-based International Head of AI Strategy, is expected to join JPMorgan around July 2026 after completing his gardening leave.1
This isn't a recruiter's cold pitch. It's a coach signing his best midfielder because he knows exactly what the player can do.
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Player profile: two and a half seasons at Nomura

Zafar joined the Japanese investment bank in late 2023 and was promoted to International Head of AI Strategy in March 2025.2 That eighteen-month arc from hire to global strategy lead is not a casual climb. His mandate at Nomura was to turn AI capability into a competitive edge across the bank's international operations — the kind of institutional AI integration work that most organizations are still fumbling with.
There isn't a public paper trail of his Nomura accomplishments in the way that a model card or a GitHub repo gives you for a research scientist. But the fact that JPMorgan — running a $19.8 billion technology budget in 2026, with $1.2 billion specifically earmarked for AI — didn't just hire a researcher or an engineer, but specifically the person in charge of strategy, says something about where the war for AI talent has moved.2 The research labs are already stacked. Now the clubs want the people who know how to deploy.

Why JPMorgan, why now

Jamie Dimon laid it out plainly at JPMorgan's China Summit in Shanghai last month. "I think it will reduce our jobs down the road," he told Bloomberg Television, adding that the bank would retrain and redeploy employees, and in some cases offer early retirement. He also said the bank will likely hire more AI specialists and fewer traditional bankers.2
Dimon isn't hedging. He's building the team for the next era of the club, and Zafar is the kind of signing that fits that mandate exactly.
JPMorgan already has 150,000 of its 300,000+ employees using the bank's internal large language model each week, reporting average time savings of four hours per day. The bank doubled its AI use cases in production in 2025.2 At that scale, the hard problem isn't whether AI works — it's whether you have the strategic architecture to expand it without the wheels coming off. That's a Zafar-shaped job.
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The Thomas-Zafar tandem: a two-man squad from Nomura

Back-to-back hires from the same Japanese bank's AI leadership don't happen by accident. Deep Thomas spent four years at Nomura building the muscle for AI integration before moving to JPMorgan. Less than a year later, Zafar follows. The pairing suggests JPMorgan isn't just buying individual talent — it's importing a working model of how AI strategy inside a global financial institution actually runs.
Think of it the way football analysts talk about a manager signing his own trusted midfield pairing: the chemistry is already field-tested. Thomas knows what Zafar produces, and Zafar knows how Thomas thinks. JPMorgan is paying for both the player and the relationship.
Neither JPMorgan nor Nomura would comment. Zafar did not respond to a request for comment.2

League implications

Wall Street has been declaring its AI ambitions for years. What's new in 2026 is the specificity of the positions being filled. Banks aren't looking for data scientists anymore — they're hiring people who can stand in front of a board and explain why the AI strategy is coherent, and then deliver on it.
Morgan Stanley recently doubled its forecast for AI-driven job losses in European banking, estimating 400,000 jobs — roughly 20% of total employment — could be eliminated by 2030.2 ABN Amro, HSBC, and UBS have all announced workforce reductions tied to automation. The clubs aren't paying for AI strategy because it's a trend. They're paying because the math is already showing up in the numbers.
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Zafar moves into a regional team led by Deep Thomas as APAC lead — a structure that gives JPMorgan a dedicated AI strategy function for one of the most commercially complex regions on the board. Singapore as a base isn't incidental either. It's where the regulatory window for AI deployment in financial services is arguably wider than anywhere else in the region.
The closest historical parallel: when banks started raiding consulting firms for chief digital officers in the early 2010s. Those hires were about bringing the people who understood digital disruption inside the building before the disruption arrived. Zafar's hire is the same move, a decade later and one era further in.
The transfer window closes in July. #AILeague

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