What if JPMorgan Investors Win?
As final ballots come in on a proposal to strip JPMorgan Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon of his chairman title, some worry about what will happen if shareholders win.
As final ballots come in on a proposal to strip JPMorgan Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon of his chairman title, some worry about what will happen if shareholders win.
Bloomberg customers were examining whether there could have been leaks of confidential information, even as the media company restricted its reporters' access to client data.
JPMorgan Chase Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon said he may consider leaving the bank where he has held the top post since 2005, if shareholders vote to split his duties.
California's attorney general has sued JPMorgan Chase, alleging that used illegal tactics in its efforts to collect debts from more than 100,000 credit card holders.
It was a banner year for these Fortune 500 companies. Learn why their profits soared.
The latest federal inquiry to focus on JPMorgan Chase bears uncomfortable similarities to one of the most notorious chapters in U.S. business history: the Enron scandal.
Another one of Jamie Dimon's key executives is leaving JPMorgan Chase, the firm announced Sunday. Frank Bisignano becomes the ninth top exec to depart in the past 18 months.
Regulators plan to fault JPMorgan Chase, which served as Bernie Madoff's main bank for two decades, for failing to report suspicious activity, a source says.
Reputations are among the most prized assets major corporations have, and they can fall as fast and as hard as they have climbed. These are America's nine most damaged brands.
In a speech, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said the U.S. has "too much inequality" -- a striking sentiment coming from Wall Street's leading defender of financial elites.
You’ve probably seen reports on big companies that pay surprisingly little in federal taxes, due to loopholes and accounting gimmicks. Thanks to the website 24/7 Wall Street, we have a list of the 10 companies that pay the most in corporate taxes.
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon held back showing federal regulators reports in May that revealed the bank had accumulated billions of dollars in trading losses, according to congressional testimony Friday from the firm's former chief financial officer.
A Senate panel issued a scathing report on JPMorgan's $6.2 billion trading loss last year, saying the bank ignored growing risks and hid losses from investors and regulators.
JPMorgan Chase reported a 55 percent jump in earnings for the fourth quarter as mortgage fees and other income surged. The bank also released its reviews of a $6 billion trading loss that drew sanctions from regulators, and said it would cut CEO Jamie Dimon's pay by more than half as a result.
The post-"London Whale" housecleaning at JPMorgan Chase isn't over yet. On Thursday, the country's biggest bank by assets announced sweeping changes in both its top-level management and its organization.










