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By Gary Gensler |
October 11, 2012
Keynote Address by CFTC Commissioner Gary Gensler before the George Washington University Center for Law, Economics and Finance Conference
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By David McLaughlin, Bloomberg |
October 3, 2012
JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s rivals may face government lawsuits claiming tens of billions of dollars in damages tied to investor losses on mortgage bonds after New York’s attorney general filed a fraud lawsuit against the nation’s biggest bank by assets.
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By Max Abelson, Bloomberg |
October 3, 2012
The combined $63 billion in profit reported by the six largest U.S. lenders over the four quarters through June is more than they earned in any calendar year since the peak in 2006.
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By Daniel P. Collins, Alanna Byrne |
September 12, 2012
According to many economists and financial industry insiders, the Federal Reserve likely will announce QE3 tomorrow. But Larry McDonald believes that the Fed will — and should — postpone QE3.
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By Daniel P. Collins, Ginger Szala |
September 1, 2012
Leo Melamed was instrumental in changing the futures industry, but he couldn’t have done it without Milton Friedman. Here, Melamed talks about Friedman’s contribution and the future of the industry
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By Press Release |
July 25, 2012
Written testimony of CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler before the House Committee on Agriculture in which he discusses Dodd-Frank, Libor enforcement actions and PFGBest.
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By Press Release |
July 17, 2012
Testimony of Chairman Gary Gensler before the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture regarding progress in Dodd-Frank, PFGBest oversight and Libor manipulation scandal.
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By Dawn Kopecki, Bloomberg |
July 13, 2012
JPMorgan Chase & Co., the largest U.S. bank, reported a $4.4 billion trading loss in its chief investment office, bigger than analysts estimated
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By Daniel P. Collins, Michael McFarlin |
July 10, 2012
The PFGBest revelation raises serious questions about the safety of the U.S. Futures industry. Now, apparently customer segregation has been violated twice in nine months.
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By Max Abelson, Bloomberg |
June 11, 2012
JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon plans to testify before Congress this week about his firm’s $2 billion trading loss. His Wall Street colleagues don’t understand why.