Stories Tagged as
Jamie Dimon
What did $13 billion just buy J.P. Morgan?
Nov 19, 2013
Most banks with legal exposure to the financial crisis are dealing with the lawsuits one-by-one. Not J.P. Morgan Chase.
Weekly Wrap: JP Morgan fines + #longreads
by
Kai Ryssdal
Oct 25, 2013
Recapping the shutdown's effects on the economy and the future of J.P. Morgan.
Divvying up the $13 billion JP Morgan fine
Oct 21, 2013
We're getting early reports of a potential $13 billion settlement over mortgage securities, of which $4 billion would go to consumers.
JP Morgan close to $13 billion mortgage-lending settlement
Oct 21, 2013
$4 billion would go to help struggling homeowners in regions where the housing crash hit hardest.
Allan Sloan: Why I voted to keep Jamie Dimon as Chairman and CEO
by
Allan Sloan
May 22, 2013
Allan Sloan, senior editor at large for Fortune magazine, explains why he voted to allow Jamie Dimon to keep his dual role as CEO and Chairman of JPMorgan Chase.
Dimon keeps dual role, but JPMorgan shareholder vote a 'wake-up call' to management
May 21, 2013
Mike Mayo, banking analyst with CLSA, joined Marketplace Morning Report prior to today's shareholder meeting to discuss.
Jamie Dimon as chairman and CEO: His own 'yes man'?
by
David Gura
May 21, 2013
JPMorgan Chase shareholders have voted to maintain Jamie Dimon's role as both CEO and chairman of the bank.
For public good, not for profit.
Power, risk and Jamie Dimon
May 20, 2013
Jamie Dimon faces shareholder judgment on whether he should remain chairman -- as well ask CEO -- of JPMorgan Chase. It's a symbolic vote, but important to a banker who prefers control.
Jamie Dimon goes shopping from his biggest shareholders
May 8, 2013
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon is scrambling to keep his other title: chairman of the board. But the man who controls more assets than any other U.S. banker is in the market for one-year loans from his biggest shareholders: Their votes, call it political capital, at the upcoming shareholder meeting.
JPMorgan ignored risk warnings, misled investors: Report
by
Scott Tong
Mar 15, 2013
Senate investigators are holding a hearing today on JPMorgan’s estimated $6.3 billion losses connected to a London trader known as the 'Whale.' New evidence from internal emails and phone calls suggests the blame may lie with even bigger fish in company.