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Jamie Dimon's testimony was a wake for Dodd-Frank
Interview with
Jun 13, 2012
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon spoke before the Senate Banking Committee today, trying to explain the $2 billion loss his company made in trading. The committee went fairly easy on the banker.
How a CEO prepares for Senate testimony
Interview by
Jun 13, 2012
The CEO of JPMorgan has been summoned to Capitol Hill today. According to his prepared remarks, Dimon will apologize, saying he feels "terrible" about the $2 billion blunder.
JPMorgan Chase's Jamie Dimon to testify before Senate
by
Jun 12, 2012
The CEO of JPMorgan Chase will have to explain the $2 billion loss from a few weeks ago.
The scratching, burning, socially embarrassing financial crisis
by
May 31, 2012
A satirical video from political cartoonist Mark Fiore brought down the house at a conference on the risks of debt to the global financial system.
Why disclosure wasn't enough to stop JPMorgan losses
Interview by
May 22, 2012
After the financial crisis of 2008, regulators focused on the idea of disclosure to prevent further problems in the financial industry. But what happens when the bank itself doesn't know how bad things are?
If JPMorgan lost on trades, who won?
by
May 21, 2012
JPMorgan Chase has gotten a lot of attention for its estimated $3 billion trading loss. But who were the winners in those bets?
JPMorgan losses now estimated at $3 billion
by
May 17, 2012
Problems continue to swell for the banking giant, whose reported $2 billion loss could actually now be something more like $3 billion.
JPMorgan trading loss grows by $1 billion
by
May 17, 2012
A week after JPMorgan said it lost $2 billion on complex trades gone bad, the bank reported is another $1 billion deeper in the hole. How's that?
FBI investigating JPMorgan for criminal behavior
by
May 16, 2012
The FBI is investigating possible criminal behavior at JPMorgan Chase after that $2 billion trading loss disclosed by the bank the other day.
Time to bring back Glass-Steagall?
by
May 16, 2012
Commentator Robert Reich says the Volcker Rule is not strong enough to prevent JPMorgan Chase-style loss.








