Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "London Whale"


9 mentions found


The big storyA retirement loomsMarianne Ayala/BIThe world's most recognizable banker might finally be ready to call it quits. The comings and goings of Wall Street executives are common, even at the highest levels. Wall Street has long speculated about who will ultimately succeed Dimon. Martin Gruenberg has told staff he'll stand down as chairman once a replacement has been found , per The Wall Street Journal. A report from the Wall Street Journal says the company hopes to conduct its next implant in June.
Persons: , Jamie Dimon's, Marianne Ayala, Jamie Dimon, Insider's Paul Squire, nodded, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan's, Tom Williams, Dimon, Jennifer Piepszak, Marianne Lake, Troy Rohrbaugh, BI's Reed Alexander, Reed, M, Alyssa Powell, Goldman Sachs, Lindsay MacMillan, Nancy Lazar, Piper, Martin Gruenberg, OpenAI, Scarlett Johansson, Sam Altman's, Andrea Chronopoulos, they're, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, George Glover Organizations: Service, Navy SEAL, Business, JPMorgan, Street, Citi, Bank, Inc, Getty, Wall, Dimon, Bank of America, FDIC, Microsoft, Wall Street Journal Locations: New York, London
Boaz Weinstein, the hedge fund investor on the winning side of JPMorgan Chase's $6.2 billion, "London Whale" trading loss in 2011, is now taking on index fund giant BlackRock . The hedge fund wants board control at three BlackRock funds and a minority slate at seven others. BlackRock, Saba says in the deck, "considers itself a leader in governance, but is crushing shareholder rights." At certain BlackRock funds, for example, if an investor doesn't submit their vote in a shareholder meeting, their shares will automatically go to support BlackRock. The index fund manager's rebuttal, "Defend Your Fund," describes Saba as an activist hedge fund seeking to "enrich itself."
Persons: Boaz Weinstein, Saba, Weinstein, doesn't Organizations: Saba Capital Management, Bloomberg, JPMorgan Chase's, Weinstein's, CNBC, BlackRock, affirmatively Locations: New York, BlackRock, Weinstein's Saba, Saba
REUTERS/Mike Acquire Licensing Rights Read moreCompanies JPMorgan Chase & Co FollowNEW YORK, Aug 15 (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N) and the U.S. Virgin Islands traded new accusations this week in legal filings over their relationships with the late disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. The largest U.S. bank detailed how Epstein allegedly funneled hundreds of thousands of dollars in payments and loans to a former U.S. Virgin Islands governor and his wife. The territory in a separate filing cited a 2011 email from a senior JPMorgan executive about suspicious cash withdrawals by Epstein. The filing containing the U.S. Virgin Islands accusations was more than 680 pages. The U.S. Virgin Islands also failed to show that the bank committed obstruction, JPMorgan said.
Persons: JP Morgan Chase, Mike, JPMorgan Chase, Jeffrey Epstein, Epstein, John de Jongh, Cecile, John Duffy, JE, Duffy, Mary Erdoes, , Erdoes, Jonghs, USVI, JPMorgan, Nupur Anand, Tatiana Bautzer, Lananh Nguyen, David Gregorio Our Organizations: JP, Co, JPMorgan Chase, REUTERS, JPMorgan, U.S . Virgin Islands, U.S . Virgin, Thomson Locations: New York, U.S, Manhattan
JPMorgan fails Jeffrey Epstein stress test
  + stars: | 2023-06-15 | by ( Jeffrey Goldfarb | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +8 min
At least, that’s the impression left by Jamie Dimon’s answers to recent questioning in relation to Jeffrey Epstein, the dead sex-trafficker who was a JPMorgan (JPM.N) client for 15 years. Taken altogether, the case is a sign that the bank is simply too big for one person to manage. Epstein was a JPMorgan client from 1998 until 2013. Epstein killed himself in a Manhattan jail cell in August 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges. Litigation related to Epstein is still pending between the U.S. Virgin Islands and JPMorgan, as are claims by JPMorgan against its former head of investment banking, Jes Staley.
Persons: Jamie Dimon’s, Jeffrey Epstein, ” Dimon, , Dimon, Epstein, Stephen Cutler, JPMorgan’s, Jes Staley, Mary Erdoes, Staley, fraudster Bernard Madoff, Cleave, Wells, Morgan Stanley, Jeffrey Epstein’s, John Foley, Streisand Neto Organizations: YORK, Reuters, JPMorgan, U.S, Securities, Exchange Commission, Department of Justice, Federal Reserve, Reuters Graphics, London Whale, Citigroup, U.S ., U.S . Virgin Islands, Thomson Locations: Wall, U.S, U.S . Virgin, Manhattan
Why, then, has Dimon been so willing to swing back into action in the wake of Silicon Valley Bank's collapse? But it's starting to look like JPMorgan — and Dimon — will end up winners no matter how things turn out. In backstopping First Republic, JPMorgan helps a client and a bank that experts say would fit nicely into its business. By saving First Republic, JPMorgan also stands to gain goodwill from Silicon Valley startups, which are customers of the smaller bank. The paper also reported that regulators asked Dimon, Bank of America, and other banks to buy Silicon Valley Bank and pay out depositors over the insured limit.
[1/2] Boaz Weinstein, founder and chief investment officer at Saba Capital Management, speaks during the SALT conference in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. May 17, 2017. REUTERS/Richard BrianLONDON, March 20 (Reuters) - Hedge fund manager Boaz Weinstein pinned hopes on Credit Suisse's survival, but also money on its demise. At the time Weinstein told Reuters he thought the derivatives were mis-priced because he believed Credit Suisse's problems would be resolved, either way, more quickly. As the trade is both long and short, Weinstein stands to profit from the short leg of his trade much more than he will lose from the long side. Weinstein led a proprietary trading fund at Deutsche Bank which was spun out to start Saba Capital Management in 2009.
Jamie Dimon throws Staley off fortress battlements
  + stars: | 2023-03-09 | by ( Neil Unmack | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
Suing former employees – in this case using an archaic-sounding doctrine that brands Staley a “faithless servant” – isn't a great look, but the bank led by Jamie Dimon has more reasons than most to defend itself. His $400 billion firm is being pursued for unspecified damages by a woman who argues that it knew of Epstein’s sex trafficking venture, and is also being sued by the government of the U.S. Virgin Islands. The bank has delivered a more than 400% total return to shareholders since Dimon took over in 2006, while talking up its “fortress” balance sheet. If JPMorgan loses either of the lawsuits in which it is a defendant, it wants Staley to share in the damages. Current or future employees might worry they too could find themselves branded a faithless servant for failing to disclose moral missteps, or having clients who fall from grace.
Jamie Dimon throws Jes Staley off the battlements
  + stars: | 2023-03-09 | by ( Neil Unmack | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
Suing former employees – in this case using an archaic-sounding doctrine that brands Staley a “faithless servant” – isn't a great look, but the bank led by Jamie Dimon has more reasons than most to defend itself. His $400 billion firm is being pursued for unspecified damages by a woman who argues that it knew of Epstein’s sex trafficking venture, and is also being sued by the government of the U.S. Virgin Islands. If JPMorgan loses either of the lawsuits in which it is a defendant, it wants Staley to share in the damages. Current or future employees might worry they too could find themselves branded a faithless servant for failing to disclose moral missteps, or having clients who fall from grace. CONTEXT NEWSJPMorgan on March 8 filed a complaint against former executive James “Jes” Staley, for not disclosing his relations with former client and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
"The curve trade in Credit Suisse reflects my view that one way or the other, in the next two years the drama around Credit Suisse will resolve for better or for worse. Weinstein led a proprietary trading fund at Deutsche Bank which was spun out to start Saba Capital Management in 2009. Credit Suisse's CDS surged in price through late November after the bank's $2.4 billion rights issue and the stock of the company fell to the lowest level in its 166-year history. While bearish bets against Credit Suisse mounted in late 2022, Weinstein says he watched Credit Suisse's CDS price curve make less and less sense: the 2-year protection on the bank cost about the same as the 10-year. Credit Suisse declined to comment.
Total: 9