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 locations being shuttered are spread across eight states, according to a spokesperson. JPMorgan took over 84 First Republic branches when it bought the failed San Francisco bank a month ago.
June 1 -
Potential uses for banks include risk analysis, investment portfolio construction and financial crime monitoring.
May 31 -
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon says his company remains committed to doing business in the Communist Party-ruled nation as political tensions grow.
May 31 -
The banking goliath is continuing to execute its four-pillar technology investment strategy, CIO Lori Beer said at its investor day.
May 30 -
JPMorgan Chase notifies about 1,000 First Republic Bank employees that they aren't being given jobs — even temporarily — following its takeover of the failed lender.
May 25 -
According to the bank, Cecile de Jongh, the wife of former USVI Governor John de Jongh, was Epstein's "primary conduit for spreading money and influence throughout the USVI government."
May 25 -
The San Francisco-based bank — which regulators seized and sold to JPMorgan Chase early this month — was paying dozens of employees more than $10 million apiece annually in the heyday before its collapse.
May 25 -
JPMorgan bought First Republic Bank earlier this month after it became the second-largest bank failure in U.S. history and the fourth regional-bank collapse this year.
May 22 -
First Citizens, JPMorgan Chase and New York Community Bancorp all bought failing banks in 2023. Here's what experts say they and other acquirers should do to ensure the tech integration is smooth.
May 18 -
"I think it's going to get worse for banks — more regulations, more rules and more requirements,'' JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said in a Bloomberg Television interview from Paris on Thursday.
May 11 -
JPMorgan sued Javice and Olivier Amar, another Frank executive, for fraud in Delaware federal court in December, claiming they falsified records to show the site had more than four million customers when it actually had less than a tenth that number.
May 8 -
A year after Russia's invasion of Ukraine thrust the country into chaos, financial services workers are helping to rebuild the country and are expressing hope for the future.
April 25 -
Javice disclosed her bank-run experience in response to a demand by JPMorgan for information about three Nevada shell companies which held the Signature accounts.
April 24 -
After the recent banking crisis, Schwab's stock may do better if the brokerage "de-banked," one analyst argues.
April 24 -
The card network's ambition to add services has led it to work alongside companies like JPMorgan Chase, Jack Henry & Associates and Stax.
April 19 -
A Jane Doe Epstein victim and the U.S. Virgin Islands are both suing JPMorgan over its ties to Epstein, who was a client of the bank from 1998 to 2013.
April 18 -
The largest U.S. bank by assets raised its forecast for net interest income in 2023 to $81 billion from $74 billion, a positive sign for investors wondering how an economic downturn might weigh on profits.
April 14 -
The lender had $2.38 trillion of deposits at the end of March, compared with $2.34 trillion three months earlier. The influx more than offset drains from inflation and customers' seeking higher-yielding alternatives.
April 14 -
In an amended complaint filed Wednesday in federal court in Manhattan, the U.S. Virgin Islands revealed new details of how JPMorgan handled allegations about Epstein up until 2013, the year the bank broke off its relationship with him.
April 13 -
"Our leaders ... have to be visible on the floor, they must meet with clients, they need to teach and advise, and they should always be accessible for immediate feedback and impromptu meetings," the company's operating committee said in a memo to employees.
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