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Citi has invested in new technology to reduce human trading errors. The New York-based bank has invested in new technology to reduce human trading errors, CEO Jane Fraser revealed on Friday. "In trading, we have a smart system called SMART," Fraser said at the 2023 Bernstein Strategic Decisions Conference. "That's the type of thing that we're putting in to make sure that we don't have issues in terms of fat-finger errors going forward." Fraser mentioned the trading technology while explaining the bank's multi-year effort to simplify and modernize its business, including through technology.
Persons: Jane Fraser, It's, Fraser, Bernstein Organizations: Citi, Conference, Revlon Locations: New York, London
Wall Street's succession summer
  + stars: | 2023-05-30 | by ( Kaja Whitehouse | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +5 min
But first, it's the summer of succession — and no, we're not talking about the TV show. Wall Street CEOs pretend that succession planning is another chore, like hashing out the annual budget or organizing an earnings call. But behind the boring press announcing their succession plans is often a story of intrigue and drama. And then, of course, there's Jamie Dimon, Wall Street's longest-serving CEO. Earlier this week, Insider highlighted 17 young analysts poised to shine.
Peter Orszag has been named CEO of investment bank Lazard, effective October 1. Orszag is best known as Barack Obama's director of Office of Management and Budget. Investment bank Lazard announced on Friday that Peter Orszag, CEO of its financial advisory business, would replace Kenneth Jacobs as CEO. But he is also no ordinary Wall Street CEO. He only made the switch to Wall Street from Washington in 2011.
The White House doesn't have a backup plan if Congress doesn't raise the debt ceiling, Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo said. He added that Biden will not consider using the 14th Amendment to address the crisis. Still, Democrats want Biden to prepare to go that route with a default possible in as soon as six days. "The 14th Amendment can't solve our challenges," Adeyemo said on CNN on Friday morning. And Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez recently told Politico that the 14th Amendment is an option where "the president should absolutely have this on the table."
A US default could be days away, and Congress still doesn't have a debt ceiling deal. Some Democrats think Biden should use the 14th Amendment to address the crisis. On Monday evening, McCarthy and Biden met once again to attempt to reach an agreement on raising the debt ceiling and avoiding an unprecedented default. Experts and lawmakers have said that this clause makes a default, and therefore the debt ceiling, unconstitutional, getting rid of the issue forever. Anna Moneymaker/Getty ImagesWhy Biden shouldn't worry about legal challengesNo president has ever invoked the 14th Amendment to address the debt ceiling.
Senate Democrats are asking Biden to prepare to use the 14th amendment to solve the debt ceiling crisis. The 14th amendment would allow Biden to bypass Congress and declare the debt ceiling unconstitutional. On Wednesday, The Washington Post first reported that five Democratic senators have spearheaded an effort to urge Biden to invoke a clause in the 14th amendment to address the debt ceiling. Rep. Jamie Raskin, for example, told Insider in a Wednesday interview that the 14th amendment "provides the whole structure for resolving the conflict." He said that he doesn't think the 14th amendment "solves our problem now.
JPMorgan is calling employees back to the office — and keeping tabs on attendance. This has reignited a conversation about the bank's surveillance of its employees. They explained how the bank tracks everything from office attendance to time spent on Zoom calls and composing emails. Many of the JPMorgan employees Reed spoke to said their surveillance made them feel untrusted by their bosses. Inside the little-known tool that gives JPMorgan Chase the power to collect data about everything its employees do at work
The complaint was sent to the US judges' Committee on Financial Disclosure. For now, questions about Thomas's previously undisclosed financial dealings with Harlan Crow, a billionaire Texas real-estate developer, will fall to an obscure committee of sixteen federal judges — the Committee on Financial Disclosure. Koszczuk said the same letterhead was routinely sent to any member of the public who asked for a judge's financial disclosure report. When Ranjan wrote his article, a review of a Thomas biography, the controversies surrounding Thomas had nothing to do with his financial disclosures. Judges' financial disclosures are only updated annually, and until recently, it wasn't easy to get ahold of them.
London CNN —The publisher of UK tabloid the Daily Mirror has apologized to Prince Harry for using unlawful methods to gather information about his private life. The pair has filed at least seven lawsuits against British and US media organizations since 2019, including Rupert Murdoch’s News Group Newspapers, according to Reuters. News Group Newspapers publishes the Sun and used to produce News of the World, which was shut down in 2011 over its own phone hacking scandal. A spokesperson for Mirror Group Newspapers said in a statement Wednesday that “where historical wrongdoing” has taken place, the group has taken “full responsibility” and apologized “unreservedly” for its actions. Mirror Group Newspapers “is now part of a very different company.
From M&A to trading, things have been slow on Wall Street this year. Life on Wall Street can be grueling — filled with long hours and strict in-office work policies. According to compensation consultancy Johnson Associates, Wall Street bonuses are on track to be disappointing — again — this year. Wall Street pros have been predicting a slow first half of the year, with expectations that business prospects will improve in the second half of the year. "When you're talking about pay on Wall Street, these people make multiples of what real people make," he said.
Howard Marks told clients that he is taking a leave of absence after a throat cancer diagnosis. Marks, who cofounded Oaktree, said he expects to be "fully back in action around mid-summer." Marks, 77, does not expect "any negative consequences from the treatment, or any lasting limitations on my activities." Billionaire investor and Oaktree Capital Management co-chairman Howard Marks said in a note to Oaktree clients on Wednesday that he is taking a leave of absence while he undergoes treatment after a recent throat cancer diagnosis. "I'm writing to let you know I was recently diagnosed with a relatively common form of throat cancer.
Sheldon Whitehouse vs. the Supreme Court
  + stars: | 2023-05-03 | by ( The Editorial Board | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Journal Editorial Report: Senators are now trying to create an ethics code for the High Court. Images: AP Composite: Mark KellyThe Senate Judiciary Committee’s hearing Tuesday on “Supreme Court ethics” was another chance for Democrats to proclaim the importance of public trust in the High Court, while simultaneously working overtime to destroy it. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse , long overdue for his fitting of a tinfoil hat, attacked Justice Clarence Thomas for hanging out with “people dedicated to turning the Court into a tool for right-wing billionaires.”Sorry, but the members of another branch of government don’t need to run their personal social calendars past Mr. Whitehouse for approval before they meet up with old friends. After weeks of spelunking into the financial disclosures of the conservative Justices, the media has emerged with only innuendo.
A growing collection of congressional Democrats is calling on the Federal Reserve to pause its steady march of interest rate increases, warning the central bank is risking “engineering a recession that destroys jobs and crushes small businesses.”Those lawmakers include prominent progressives like Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Representative Pramila Jayapal of Washington, along with Senator Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island, the chairman of the budget committee. They contend the Fed’s actions pose a particular risk to lower-paid workers, Black workers and others who are historically most likely to face job loss and financial pain if recession hits. “While we do not question the Fed’s policy independence, we believe that continuing to raise interest rates would be an abandonment of the Fed’s dual mandate to achieve both maximum employment and price stability and show little regard for the small businesses and working families that will get caught in the wreckage,” the lawmakers wrote in a letter to Fed officials ahead of their meeting this week. Progressive groups and lawmakers like Ms. Warren have urged the Fed to pause rate increases for months, saying they are the wrong tool to fight high inflation, which is moderating but remains above recent historical levels. Their calls have mounted as storm clouds gathered over the financial system, including the failures of three large regional banks in the past two months.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a letter to Congress that the agency may be unable to meet all of its debt obligations as soon as June 1 if the debt ceiling is not raised, putting new urgency on talks in Congress. Let's get the debt ceiling taken care of, but let's talk about how we can reduce the deficit and common sense ways," Democratic Senator Jon Tester told reporters. "If we don't get the debt ceiling, then we go into a depression." Republican Senator Mitt Romney said. We must change course, cleanly raise the debt ceiling, and avert widespread economic pain and instability while we still can."
WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Monday warned that the United States may run out of measures to pay its debt obligations by June 1, earlier than the government and Wall Street had been expecting. The combination of Yellen's letter and the new CBO estimate added a fresh sense of urgency to stalled negotiations between President Joe Biden and McCarthy's Republican majority in the House. "Republicans' failure to agree to cleanly raise the debt ceiling has brought the United States to the brink of economic catastrophe," said Democratic Senate Budget Committee chairman Sheldon Whitehouse, R.I., in response to Yellen's letter. The Goldman Sachs estimate noted that so far there have been few ripples in the markets from rising debt-related risk. But this could change, analysts wrote, "once the Treasury announces a specific deadline for Congress to raise the debt limit."
First Republic Bank was put into receivership by regulators early Monday. First Republic Bank will be taken over by JPMorgan after being seized by regulators, marking the third regional bank to be taken over by federal regulators following a consumer panic that took down Silicon Valley Bank in March. The FDIC said early Monday that JPMorgan submitted a bid for all of First Republic's deposits of $103.9 billion. As part of the transaction, First Republic Bank's 84 offices in eight states will reopen as branches of JPMorgan on Monday. JPMorgan is assuming all of First Republic Bank's deposits — including uninsured ones — as well as most of its assets, said FDIC and JPMorgan in their statements.
Reactions: US Treasury's new June 1 debt ceiling X-date
  + stars: | 2023-05-01 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +5 min
We must change course, cleanly raise the debt ceiling, and avert widespread economic pain and instability while we still can." The clock is ticking - and much faster than many suspected - so House Republicans need to drop their dangerous opposition to paying our nation’s bills." The President must negotiate on raising the debt ceiling." Let's get the debt ceiling taken care of, but let's talk about how we can reduce the deficit and common-sense ways. If we don't get the debt ceiling, then we go into it a depression."
Earlier this month, ProPublica reported on Justice Clarence Thomas's undisclosed luxury trips. Mark Paoletta, a partner at Schaeer Jaffe and close friend of Thomas, wrote in the right-leaning National Review article published Thursday arguing that Thomas had "acted properly and consistent with the rules" of financial disclosures for Supreme Court Justices. But the attorney is also featured in a painting that was commissioned by Crow and depicts Thomas vacationing at the luxury resort that is central to the renewed scrutiny of Thomas' financial disclosure forms. Sharif Tarabay, the artist of the painting, told ProPublica that the piece depicts a moment at Topridge from about five years ago. But that is immaterial to the conclusion that Justice Thomas had no obligation to disclose these innocuous trips," Paoletta wrote.
You also have the option of purchasing live tickets that can be printed directly from your computer or wireless device. WASHINGTON — Swifties, the BeyHive and Cure fans may have a reason to rejoice: Senators on Wednesday are set to introduce a bipartisan bill targeting hidden ticket fees for live events. Dubbed the Transparency in Charges for Key Events Ticketing (TICKET) Act, the measure would require ticketing merchants to disclose upfront full ticket prices, including fees, for concerts, sporting events and other large gatherings. Ticket fees can comprise 21% to as much as 58% of the total cost of tickets, according to a statement from the committee. The bill aims to promote competition "by delivering ticket fee and speculative ticket transparency for the benefit of all consumers," the committee said.
First Republic Bank said deposits fell 41% to $104.5 billion in the first three months of 2023. It's also exploring its strategic options, which is industry jargon for a sale or spinoff. First Republic Bank is not out of the woods yet. First Republic also said it is "pursuing strategic options to expedite its progress while reinforcing its capital position." Exploring strategic options is often industry jargon for a sale or spin-off.
Michael Klein was tapped last year as CEO of CS First Boston, Credit Suisse's investment banking spinoff. There's a new casualty of the banking crisis: Wall Street deals veteran Michael Klein. Credit Suisse and Klein "have mutually agreed to terminate the acquisition of The Klein Group," the company said in its first-quarter earnings announcement. It marks the latest blow for Credit Suisse's investment bankers. Here's everything you need to know about Klein and what the scuttling of the deal means for Credit Suisse's investment bankers.
New York CNN —Banks have pledged to go green, but last year they poured billions of dollars into expanding the capacity of fossil fuel production despite the accelerating climate crisis. While Canadian banks are providing a rising share of the money, US lenders still dominate the market and accounted for 28% of all fossil fuel financing in 2022, said the report. High prices have swelled profits for energy companies, leaving them flush with cash. The record profits come after the world’s 60 largest private banks provided $5.5 trillion in finance for fossil fuels over the past seven years, according to the report. The Banking on Climate Chaos report, which has been published for 14 years, examines the fossil fuel funding of the 60 largest banks in the world.
New York CNN —Earnings reports are coming thick and fast, showing how companies fared in the first few months of the year. But even as earnings are forecast to slump to their lowest level in three years, investors fear the worst is yet to come. This left significant gaps in the forensic search for Nazi-linked records, the Senate Committee stated. AlixPartners, according to the Senate committee, has indicated it will conduct a “supplementary review” of Credit Suisse’s connections to ratlines amongst other allegations. Credit Suisse is Switzerland’s second-largest bank by assets and has spent the past few years plagued by scandals and large losses.
This left significant gaps in the forensic search for Nazi-linked records, the Senate Committee stated. The bipartisan Senate investigation follows a March 2020 report by the Simon Wiesenthal Center (SWC) that linked Credit Suisse accounts to a list of 12,000 Nazis in Argentina. Credit Suisse has thus far failed to meet that standard,” said Sen. Grassley in a statement. AlixPartners, according to the Senate committee, has indicated it will conduct a “supplementary review” of Credit Suisse’s connections to ratlines amongst other allegations. Credit Suisse is Switzerland’s second-largest bank by assets and has spent the past few years plagued by scandals and large losses.
Washington CNN —The recent revelations of lavish gifts and travel that a Republican megadonor showered on Justice Clarence Thomas reflect a larger Supreme Court culture of nondisclosure, little explanation, and no comment. The incident reflects the broader lack of accountability at the high court regarding off-bench behavior. Justices regularly brush aside reporters’ queries for specifics on travel and gifts, book advances and other extracurricular activities. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Durbin made another such plea to Roberts this week as he also urged the chief justice to open an investigation into Thomas’ conduct. Chief justice on the spotRoberts, who became chief justice in 2005, has continually described the high court as beyond the realm of politics and worthy of public trust.
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