Showing posts with label JPMorgan Chase. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JPMorgan Chase. Show all posts

Sunday, October 20, 2013

JPMorgan to pay record $13B to settle US probes: reports


WASHINGTON - Banking giant JPMorgan Chase reached a tentative agreement to pay a record $13-billion fine to the Justice Department to settle probes into its residential mortgage-backed securities, US media reported Saturday.

Citing sources familiar with the decision, The Wall Street Journal newspaper reported in its online edition that the deal was hashed out during a phone call Friday with US Attorney General Eric Holder, his deputy Tony West and JPMorgan's top lawyer Stephen Cutler.

If the amount is confirmed, it would be the largest ever paid by a US company in this type of settlement with the government. It's also significantly larger than JPMorgan's previous offer of $11 billion.

But the still tentative deal wouldn't resolve a criminal investigation into the bank's activities being conducted by a court in Sacramento, California, the Journal said. Both sides still disagree over an admission of wrongdoing that would end the probe.

That case could result in charges against individuals, and could increase the fine for JPMorgan Chase.

The New York Times and the Washington Post, which also reported on the tentative agreement, said that JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon participated in the talks with Holder.

Once finalized, $4 billion would settle allegations by the Federal Housing Finance Agency, a mortgage regulator, that JPMorgan overstated the quality of the mortgages it sold on to the government-sponsored housing finance enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Another $4 billion would be destined for consumer relief, and $5 billion would be paid in penalties, the Journal reported.

Although details are still being worked out, the agreement would also resolve a separate lawsuit filed by New York's Attorney General Eric Schneiderman.

US companies tend to avoid paying fines, and often try to make financial settlements without admitting fault.

JPMorgan, the largest US bank by assets, has been under investigation by several US regulatory agencies. It recently agreed to pay more than $1 billion in fines over the "London whale" trading debacle of 2012.

The bank just reported its first quarterly loss in nearly 10 years, a net loss of $380 million on revenues of $23.12 billion, due in large part to a $9.15-billion charge for legal expenses.

source: interaksyon.com

Sunday, October 13, 2013

JPMorgan Chase on US default: 'You don't want to know'


WASHINGTON - Top US banker Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase warned Saturday that the United States needs to avoid defaulting on its debt, saying the possible repercussions are unfathomable.

"You don't want to know," Dimon said when asked what would happen if the US is forced into default because Congress did not raise the country's borrowing limit.

"It would ripple through the world economy in a way that you couldn't possibly understand," he said at a discussion held by the Institute of International Finance, a leading forum for the world's banks.

He said it would shock the money market, where trillions of dollars in cash are invested in ostensibly top-quality securities like US debt based on expectations that the borrowers will not default.

"You don't know the ripple effect of that through money-market funds," stressed Dimon, head of the largest US bank by assets.

"The money markets are the most fickle markets in the world, they're like a rabbit."

Dimon was speaking as the White House and congressional Republicans remained deeply at odds over passing a budget and raising the US debt ceiling, a move needed to ensure the government can continue to pay its bills.

The US Treasury has repeatedly warned that as soon as October 17 it will be short of cash and forced to default on its obligations, though not saying whether it would skip debt payments or others, like social security payments to retired Americans.

With no compromise apparent, and the government partially shut down now for 12 days due to lack of a budget, Dimon warned that the deadline was looming.

"As you get closer to it, the panic will set in," he said.

On the other hand, he emphasized: "The US cannot default. I think every responsible person knows that."

source: interaksyon.com