JPMorgan Chase
JPMorgan Chase is one of the largest and most complex financial institutions in the United States, with nearly $4 trillion in assets. It is organized into four major segmentsconsumer and community banking, corporate and investment banking, commercial banking, and asset and wealth management.
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The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau featured in three of our most read articles of last year, while two others were about the disruptor Ripple. Other highlights included our annual Women in Banking package, the aftermath of the Equifax data breach and news of Amazon's possible banking plans.
January 2 -
Banks' embrace of open-source development could eventually go beyond creating tools and apps — to something far more radical.
December 29 -
Increases in charitable donations will be more important than ever for bank reputations, as tax breaks and a lighter touch from financial regulators rekindle public anger about the financial crisis.
December 29 -
Former top commercial mortgage-backed securities strategist Trevor Murray accused the Swiss lender of illegally firing him in 2012 for blowing the whistle on attempts by traders to influence his research reports.
December 22 -
Bank allegedly “seriously breached” anti-money laundering rules; mortgage agencies will be permitted to retain $3 billion capital buffer.
December 22 -
The famed investment bank is set to become the first major Wall Street bank to make markets in digital currencies such as bitcoin.
December 21 -
Earlier versions of the bill would have caused bigger changes in how Americans finance home purchases, higher education and retirement. Still, the final legislation will have important effects on borrowing and saving decisions.
December 21 -
Banks' online advice platforms are just the face of a deeper effort to restructure client data and adapt to a digital era.
December 21 -
Peter Scher, global head of corporate responsibility, will join JPMorgan’s operating committee, effective immediately, the company said Thursday.
December 21 -
A new U.K. rule requiring firms to disclose their pay practices, combined with the increased attention on women's workplace issues in general, is forcing banks and other companies to be more forthcoming about what they are paying female employees.
December 19