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By Dawn Kopecki, Phil Mattingly and Clea Benson, Bloomberg |
June 13, 2012
U.S. senators preparing to hear testimony from JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon said they will press him to explain what led to more than $2 billion in trading losses.
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By Dawn Kopecki and Phil Mattingly, Bloomberg |
June 12, 2012
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said traders in a London unit responsible for a $2 billion loss didn’t understand the risks they were taking and weren’t properly monitored.
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By Rick Green, Bloomberg |
June 12, 2012
Here’s a chronology of events leading to the disclosure and aftermath of JPMorgan's $2 billion 'hedging' loss.
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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.
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By Max Abelson |
June 10, 2012
The firm's loses have sliced $27 billion from JPMorgan’s market value since the May 10 disclosure, while triggering at least five federal probes.
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By Phil Mattingly and Cheyenne Hopkins, Bloomberg |
June 6, 2012
JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s trading loss of more than $2 billion points to failures in the bank’s risk- management practices, U.S. regulators told lawmakers today.
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By Cheyenne Hopkins and Caroline Salas Gage, Bloomberg |
June 4, 2012
When is a hedge not a hedge? That’s the question regulators are confronting after JPMorgan Chase & Co. reported a $2 billion trading loss from a position Dimon called a “hedge.”
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By Bradley Keoun, Bloomberg |
June 2, 2012
Bruno Iksil, known as the London Whale because his bets this year were so large, has been a leviathan of a risk-taker since at least 2010, reports say.
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By Silla Brush, Bloomberg |
May 31, 2012
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission is seeking input on whether to narrow exemptions in a proposed proprietary-trading ban after JPMorgan Chase & Co. announced at least $2 billion in losses on credit derivatives.
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By Laura Litvan and Phil Mattingly, Bloomberg |
May 18, 2012
Republicans in the U.S. Congress were uniting behind a call to repeal all or part of the 2010 financial regulatory overhaul. Since JPMorgan Chase & Co. announced its $2 billion trading loss earlier this month, that front has splintered.