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.
-
Billionaire CEO Jamie Dimon is OK with tax hikes on the rich, as long as the revenue goes where he thinks it'll do the most good.
January 30 -
The New York company will also match donations made by its employees to Feeding America and United Way Worldwide.
January 25 -
The leaders of the biggest U.S. banks are likely to be summoned to face questions from the Financial Services Committee, an early sign that the financial industry will endure tougher scrutiny under a Democratic-controlled House.
January 25 -
A 2017 agreement with Marriott International that kept the hotel chain's card portfolio with American Express and JPMorgan Chase will take a brand marketing turn in February, but leave both issuers as partners.
January 23 -
For thousands of government employees, credit card bills are coming due for travel and other expenses they incurred before the shutdown.
January 22 -
In letters to the Treasury secretary and CEOs of the largest banks, the Massachusetts Democrat questioned why Mnuchin was trying to quell liquidity fears that had not previously been mentioned by regulators.
January 18 -
The units that handle small business payments and the one for larger firms will be combined; survey shows U.K. consumers may shun loans.
January 18 -
Dimon’s pay package included $24.5 million of restricted stock tied to performance, an annual base salary of $1.5 million and a $5 million cash bonus.
January 17 -
JPMorgan Chase Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said he thinks a hard Brexit is unlikely but would be a "disaster" if it happened.
January 16 -
Sen. Elizabeth Warren questioned the five largest U.S. retail banks in a letter on what they are doing to reduce the impact of the government shutdown on customers.
January 16