-
By Brian Swint, Joe Carroll and Lananh Nguyen |
May 14, 2013
Three of Europe’s biggest oil explorers are being questioned by European regulators about potential crude market manipulation.
-
By Dave Michaels, Bloomberg |
April 8, 2013
The U.S. Senate confirmed Mary Jo White to lead the Securities and Exchange Commission, putting the former U.S. attorney in charge of an agency that has failed to satisfy critics with its response to the financial crisis.
-
By Dave Michaels |
March 16, 2013
Senate probe provided 900 pages of evidence that could help the SEC make the case that JPMorgan executives broke the law.
-
By Cheyenne Hopkins |
March 14, 2013
JPMorgan Chase & Co. engaged in high-risk proprietary trading under the guise of ordinary hedging, said Senate investigators.
-
By Aaron Ricadela, Bloomberg |
February 5, 2013
Dell Inc., the world’s third-biggest maker of personal computers, is going private in a deal valued at $24.4 billion, undertaking the biggest leveraged buyout since the financial crisis.
-
By Roger Runningen and Joshua Gallu, Bloomberg |
January 24, 2013
Mary Jo White, who gained prominence prosecuting terrorists as U.S. attorney for Manhattan, will be named by President Barack Obama to be chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, according to a White House statement.
-
By Joshua Gallu and Hans Nichols, Bloomberg |
January 18, 2013
Mary Jo White, the former U.S. attorney in Manhattan, is under consideration to become the next chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
-
By Cheyenne Hopkins and Ian Katz |
September 11, 2012
Regulators are poised to choose the first U.S. non-bank companies that are likely to be branded potential risks to the financial system.
-
By Cheyenne Hopkins, Bloomberg |
April 27, 2012
The largest U.S. banks, including JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., told the Federal Reserve that a limit on their credit exposure is unnecessary and “fundamentally flawed.”
-
By Cheyenne Hopkins, Bloomberg |
April 2, 2012
The U.S. Treasury Department and regulators will move one step closer tomorrow to designating some companies as posing a risk to the country’s financial system in the event of their failure.