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May 27 (Bloomberg) — Mike Kennedy, head of payments strategy at Wells Fargo & Co., talks about the bank’s “clearXchange” initiative with Bank of America Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. that allows customers of the three lenders to transfer money using only an e-mail address or cell phone number. He speaks with Betty Liu and Dominic Chu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Kennedy Seeks to Make ClearXchange Service `Ubiquitous’

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More Big Banks Added To Mortgage Securities Investigation

May 24, 2011

JPMorgan Chase & Co., UBS AG and Deutsche Bank AG are being probed in an expanded investigation by New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman into mortgage securitization, according to a person familiar with the matter.

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BofA To Pay Hundreds Of Millions For Overcharging Customers

May 23, 2011

NEW YORK (By Jonathan Stempel) – Bank of America Corp has won tentative approval of a $410 million settlement of lawsuits accusing it of charging excessive overdraft fees to roughly 1 million customers. U.S. District Judge James Lawrence King in Miami granted preliminary approval for the accord on Monday and scheduled a November 7 hearing to consider final approval, court records show. Bank of America, the largest U.S. bank by assets, is among more than two dozen U.S., Canadian and European lenders that had been named as defendants in the class-action litigation, which in 2009 consolidated lawsuits filed across the country. JPMorgan Chase & Co, Citigroup Inc and Wells Fargo & Co are among the other defendants. Critics say overdraft fees, which are typically $25 or $35, disproportionately burden customers with lower incomes or low account balances. In their November 2009 complaint, customers accused Bank of America of routinely processing debit transactions from largest to smallest rather than in chronological order. They said this caused account balances to fall faster, sometimes causing customers to rack up hundreds of dollars of fees, even if they had been overdrawn by just a few dollars. Bank of America spokeswoman Anne Pace said in an email the Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank has eliminated overdraft fees for debit card transactions and significantly lowered fees for customers who overdraw excessively. According to a court filing, Bank of America will not oppose a request by the plaintiffs’ lawyers for attorneys’ fees of up to 30 percent of the settlement fund, net of expenses. Last year, the Federal Reserve prohibited banks from charging overdraft fees on electronic and debit card transactions without advance customer approval. Wells Fargo has appealed an August 2010 court order that it pay $203 million to California customers in an overdraft case. The case is In re: Checking Account Overdraft Litigation, U.S. District Court, Southern District of Florida, No. 09-md-02036. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Andre Grenon)

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JPMorgan CEO: U.S. Debt Default Would Be A ‘Moral Disaster’

May 20, 2011

DENVER — It would be a “moral disaster” if the United States were to default on its debts and become unable to pay its obligations, JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon said at an appearance in Colorado Thursday evening. The U.S. is the financial linchpin of the world, and the economic effects of the U.S. defaulting could be “potentially catastrophic,” he said at a dinner for the University of Colorado Denver Business School. “It will dwarf Lehman,” Dimon said, referring to the 2008 collapse of the investment bank Lehman Brothers, which contributed to the beginning of a global financial crisis. Dimon’s comments came in response to a question about the federal deficit from moderator Tom Petrie, a vice chairman of Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Congress is debating raising the country’s $14.3 trillion borrowing limit. White House officials say the government will run out of cash to pay expenses Aug. 2, but lawmakers have said they want spending cuts before they agree to raise the debt ceiling. Dimon got a standing ovation at the dinner, a marked contrast to JPMorgan’s annual meeting in Ohio on Tuesday, when more than 400 demonstrators shouted outside. The protests were organized by a coalition of clergy and unions, which is pushing for action and legislation around banking practices that hurt troubled homeowners. Along with all the major banks in the country, JPMorgan Chase has been criticized for its handling of mortgage foreclosures. After Petrie noted The New York Times recently called him America’s least hated banker, Dimon quipped he never expected to be in a business where he’d be on the receiving end of so much anger. “Our people work hard, they give a damn, they help their communities,” he said. During the crisis, JPMorgan Chase bought Bear Stearns Cos. and what was left of Washington Mutual Inc. after it failed. It also accepted aid from the federal government’s Troubled Asset Relief Program, even though it didn’t need to, Dimon said. Dimon has said government officials told him that taking the aid would boost the health of the financial system and reduce the stigma of only a few banks accepting aid. At the time, Dimon called TARP money a scarlet letter. Once JPMorgan repaid the aid, Dimon said he was tempted to include a note to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner that said, “P.S. During the whole time you were lending us $25 billion, we were loaning you $200 billion” in the form of Treasury instruments the company holds.

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Video: Feroli Says U.S. Economic Growth Has Lost Some Momentum

May 13, 2011

May 13 (Bloomberg) — Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co., talks about the latest U.S. economic reports and the outlook for the economy. The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary consumer sentiment index rose to 72.4, a three-month high, from a final reading of 69.8 in April. The U.S. consumer-price index increased 0.4 percent in April. Excluding food and energy, the so-called core gauge rose 0.2 percent. Feroli speaks on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness With Margaret Brennan.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Bipartisan Group Of Senators Targets Mortgage Servicers

May 13, 2011

WASHINGTON — Unimpressed by the recent efforts of state and federal regulators to rein in the mortgage servicing industry, a bipartisan group of senators led by Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) and Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) introduced legislation Thursday to make it easier for struggling homeowners to negotiate with their banks. The Regulation of Mortgage Servicing Act would give homeowners seeking mortgage modifications a single point of contact at their bank, end the “dual track” process that lets banks pursue modifications and foreclosures simultaneously and require third-party review before a bank can send a family to foreclosure. In April, federal bank regulators led by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency required the biggest banks to enact reforms nearly identical to those in the Merkley-Snowe bill. Yet Merkley told HuffPost that the OCC’s enforcement action would fail — just like the Obama administration’s voluntary Home Affordable Modification Program, which has so far resulted in more canceled than successful modifications. “Doing this with Olympia is a recognition that neither the reforms pushed by the administration in terms of encouraging the servicers to change habits, nor the settlement with OCC or the [Office of Thrift Supervision] are going to get the job done,” Merkley said. “And so we need to push hard, to say — we need teeth –- ‘You can’t proceed with foreclosure if you have not embraced single point of contact, dual track and third party review.’” Merkley said banks can disobey the regulators with impunity. Of the OCC’s order, he said, “It’s essentially voluntary. It essentially says, ‘Please do these things.’ And the servicer can hire their own person to check on how they’re doing. It hardly hardly constitutes a strong step forward.” The OCC begs to differ. “These orders are not voluntary,” a spokesman said. “They are enforceable through federal district courts, and we can impose penalties of more than $1 million a day for each day the bank is in violation of the order. The orders were signed by all of the directors of each bank, and they are individually subject to these penalties for violations.” As evidence the banks are taking the orders seriously, the spokesman pointed out that one bank — JPMorgan Chase — said it would hire some 3,000 employees to comply. And he said the OCC gets to approve the third-party consultant. Since the housing market collapsed several years ago, banks have made a habit out of repeatedly losing paperwork from desperate homeowners trying to modify their mortgages to avoid foreclosure. And homeowners who successfully start trial modifications are frequently confused and horrified to discover their banks are pursuing foreclosure while the modification process is pending. In some cases , banks even tell homeowners who’ve been making reduced payments as part of trial modification that the reduced payments are causing the foreclosure. “In terms of families calling my office, it’s the exactly the same stories we’ve been hearing for the last two years,” Merkley said. The widely reported abuses have led a coalition of all 50 state attorneys general to launch an ongoing probe that is expected to result in a settlement of some kind. Merkley’s not banking on it. “That is a mirage at this point,” he said, adding that he hoped his bill would put pressure on the state attorneys general. “Until it is signed and delivered, it is a hope.” This story was first reported in HuffPost Hill .

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States Shortchange The Unemployed With Junk Debit Card Fees

May 11, 2011

WASHINGTON — Many states shortchange the jobless by distributing unemployment benefits on debit cards loaded with obnoxious fees, according to a new study by the National Consumer Law Center . Of the 40 states that have switched from paper checks to prepaid debit cards, 22 states’ cards charge ATM fees, 24 charge balance inquiry fees, and 28 charge inactivity fees. The cards in Arkansas, Idaho, Nebraska, Ohio, and Oregon come with overdraft fees ranging from $10 to $20. And in Connecticut, Iowa, Rhode Island, and Tennessee, cardholders “must pay for every ATM inquiry or pay a denied transaction fee if they request cash when their balance is insufficient,” the study says. Tennessee stands out for having the card with the most “junk fees,” the study says. Tennessee’s card, provided by JPMorgan Chase, charges $1 for initial ATM withdrawals, 40 cents for balance inquiries, and 25 cents whenever someone swipes the card at checkout. It’s one of just four states that doesn’t provide even one free ATM withdrawal per deposit. Tennessee doesn’t think its card’s fees are junk. “I’m not sure calling them ‘junk fees’ is a fair statement,” said Jeff Hentschell, a spokesman for the Tennessee Department of Workforce Development, which distributes Tennessee Automated Payment cards for jobless benefits. “When you look at the context of where we were and where we are today, the fees are actually minimal compared to where people were going to cash paper checks before.” Indeed: The NCLC study itself points out that for people without bank accounts, “getting cash from a UC prepaid card will usually be cheaper than paying a check casher to cash a paper check.” Hentschell added his department has a handy website that lays out the fees. As for Chase, the bank says it’s giving states a good deal on a valuable service. “Each state negotiates its own contract and fee structure from numerous bidders,” a Chase spokeswoman said in an email. “To date, states have chosen card solutions that cost government nothing and save taxpayer dollars, selecting their card provider based on the best mix of fees and services to the consumer.” The NCLC study says the Bank of America-issued cards in California and New Jersey are the best, since they offer “free and ample access to cash and transactions with no penalty fees.” The study says close runners-up are Chase’s card in Arizona and Citibank’s in Maryland.

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Mary Bottari: Big Bank Backlash: From Coast to Coast People are Moving their Money

May 6, 2011

As the economy continues to stutter and new unemployment claims surge to an eight month high, it hasn’t escaped the notice of people on Main Street that the folks on Wall Street are back in the black. According to Fortune magazine , profits of the 500 largest U.S. corporations have surged 81 percent this past year. FORTUNE editors write, “We’ve rarely seen such a stark gulf between the fortunes of the 500 and those of ordinary Americans.” When Fortune is standing up for the workers, you know it’s bad. The Big Lie As the United States splinters further into two worlds, the American people have not forgotten who got us into this mess in the first place. They are refusing to buy the big lie peddled by new Republican Governors, like Scott Walker in Wisconsin or John Kasich in Ohio, that greedy public sector workers are to blame for our economic woes. They know who inflated the housing bubble and played both sides with credit default swaps, and it wasn’t teachers, firefighters or snowplow drivers. From San Francisco to Wall Street people are taking to the streets reminding governors and their friends on Wall Street and that they remember very well who tanked the global economy putting more than 8 million Americans out of work and creating a revenue crisis for many states. Hundreds protested inside and outside the Wells Fargo shareholder’s meeting in San Francisco this week, and the big bank backlash is gaining steam. Cheeseheads Say Move Your Money from M&I Bank Wisconsin State AFL-CIO is the latest in a wave of businesses, organizations, and individuals who are closing their accounts with M&I Bank . Yesterday the federation closed out a $100,000 CD it held at M&I. Taxpayers bailed out M&I with $1.7 billion of TARP funds. Instead of repaying the money, M&I executives and employees gave $54,000 in political contributions to Governor Scott Walker. Plus, M&I is planning on paying its failed executives $71 millions in bonuses this year when the bank is sold to the Canadian-owned Harris Bank and will close its Milwaukee headquarters. Mark Furlong the CEO of M&I is scheduled to receive $24 million bonus package after the bank is sold. In a letter to Furlong, Stephanie Bloomingdale, Secretary-Treasurer, WI AFL-CIO puts it bluntly: “By contributing money to Scott Walker and other Republicans, you have taken part in the destruction of Wisconsin’s middle class. As a company entirely dependent on American taxpayers for its survival, M&I owes its allegiance to those taxpayers… We care about our families and communities, while you care only about your bottom line. Here’s our bottom line: We’re moving our money.” The AFL-CIO joins the firefighters the teachers, church groups and hundreds of individual who have decided to chose a new bank. More actions are planned. If you are interested in moving your money, you can find a new bank or credit union at the Move Your Money site of the Huffington Post. Buckeyes Tell JPMorgan Chase to Stop the Foreclosures Ohioans will greet Jamie Dimon, “the most dangerous banker in the world,” at J PMorgan Chase’s annual shareholder’s meeting in Columbus, OH. After taking $25 billion in TARP bailout money and after acquiring Bear Sterns and Washington Mutual, Jamie Dimon thinks that the big banks aren’t big enough and neither is his bonus. In 2010, his total compensation topped $28 million. Hard to imagine what the spinmeisters were thinking when they advised Dimon to flee Wall Street for Ohio. Ohio is one of the states hardest hit by the epidemic of foreclosures and joblessness caused by Wall Street. It is a state where unions have been under attack, and where hard-won labor rights that built the middle class have been stripped away from public sector workers. Next week National People’s Action will release a study showing a projected one out of every ten homes in Cleveland, Cincinnati and Columbus received a foreclosure filing since the start of the housing crisis. Wall Street firms have long been big backers of Kasich. According to Ohio Citizen Action, Chase employees gave $29,000 to Kasich’s gubernatorial campaign. “Protesters will deliver a message to Wall Street – it is time for big banks like JPMorgan Chase to stop the foreclosures, pay their fair share, create jobs, and end the revenue crisis,” says Adam Keck, Senior Organizer, Mahoning Valley Organizing Collaborative. You are invited to join the Buckeyes in Columbus on May 17th and you can find more information at: Showdown in America . The Madison-based Center for Media and Democracy tracks corporate spin and spinmeisters at PRWatch.org.

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SEC Subpoenas JPMorgan Over Failed Mortgages

May 6, 2011

JPMorgan Chase & Co has received a subpoena from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission over failed mortgages, Bloomberg said, citing a person familiar with the investigation. The SEC is probing banks including Credit Suisse Group AG for allegedly failing to share refunds from sellers of faulty debt, Bloomberg said. JPMorgan and SEC declined to comment to Bloomberg. Reuters could not immediately reach either of the parties. The SEC subpoenaed Credit Suisse this week for documents on securitized home loans, according to court documents filed on Thursday by bond insurer MBIA Inc in a lawsuit against the Swiss bank. (Reporting by Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Banks Illegally Foreclosed On Dozens Of Military Borrowers

May 5, 2011

WASHINGTON — Two of the nation’s largest mortgage firms illegally foreclosed on the homes of “almost 50″ active-duty military service members, according to a Thursday report by the Government Accountability Office. The report does not identify the two mortgage companies. GAO investigators attributed the finding to federal bank regulators, who recently completed a three-month probe into allegations of improper foreclosures carried out by the nation’s 14 largest home loan servicers. The GAO report, which focused on problems in the mortgage industry and the lack of federal oversight, is the first official study to feature a partial tally of military families whose homes have been illegally seized. The 50 or so wrongful foreclosures were discovered during regulators’ review of only about 2,800 loans that experienced foreclosure last year. Millions of other foreclosures in recent years have not been reviewed by regulators. More than 2.8 million homes received a foreclosure filing in 2009, and nearly 2.9 million residences got one last year, according to RealtyTrac, a California-based data provider. Federal bank supervisors “could not provide a reliable estimate of the number of foreclosures that should not have proceeded,” they said in their April report on improper mortgage servicing. Two months earlier, the head of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which oversees national banks like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, said that only a ” small number ” of home seizures should not have occurred. The large number of wrongful foreclosures identified by the GAO from such a small sample suggests that the problem could be more widespread. As foreclosures have surged to record levels, banks and other mortgage firms have been caught ill-equipped to handle the ever-increasing workload, Treasury Department and Federal Reserve officials have repeatedly said. Due to years of under-investment by banks in their mortgage processing operations, regulators and experts have found that shortcuts were taken and procedures were not followed. Homeowners are bearing the brunt of these decisions. Improper mortgage practices affecting military borrowers are ” perhaps the most egregious cases ,” wrote five Democratic lawmakers in a joint letter Thursday to bank regulators. “The idea of wrongfully forcing service members’ families from their homes while their loved ones are risking their lives to protect our country is not only unconscionable, it’s illegal,” said Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.), one of the co-signers, in an emailed statement. Members of the armed forces on active duty are covered by the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act , a law designed to protect them from financial distress. The legislation restricts foreclosure of properties owned by active-duty members of the military. Violations are handled by the Justice Department’s civil division. The Justice Department has reportedly said it’s investigating allegations of improper foreclosures on service members that were commenced by mortgage subsidiaries of Morgan Stanley and Deutsche Bank AG, two of the world’s largest banks. Bank of America recently announced it would change the way it handles military borrowers. A 50-state coalition of attorneys general and bank supervisors along with the Obama administration are also in talks with the nation’s five largest mortgage firms — Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally Financial — to resolve allegations of wrongful foreclosures and improper mortgage practices. Fines could reach up to $30 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. JPMorgan Chase disclosed in February that it had improperly foreclosed on the homes of 18 military families. Stephanie Mudick, an official at the nation’s second-largest bank by assets, told a House panel that the lender had either rescinded the foreclosure sale or reached a settlement for 12 of those military borrowers, and was working through the rest. The firm’s mistakes were a ” painful aberration ,” Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan’s chairman and chief executive, said in a February statement. In April, the bank agreed to pay $56 million to settle claims of improper mortgage practices when dealing with military borrowers. On Thursday, JPMorgan spokesman Tim Keefe said that the bank had found additional cases of military families whose homes were illegally seized. Although he did not specify the exact number, a separate JPMorgan official said the total was less than 30. Keefe said the bank had committed to providing new homes and full forgiveness of any mortgage debt owed to the lender for these borrowers. By taking shortcuts in processing troubled borrowers’ home loans, the nation’s five largest mortgage firms have saved more than $20 billion since the housing crisis began in 2007, according to a confidential presentation prepared for state attorneys general by the nascent Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection inside the Treasury Department and obtained by The Huffington Post in March . In February, Holly Petraeus, who leads the bureau’s unit overseeing military borrowers, sent a letter to the chief executives of the nation’s 25 largest banks urging them to follow the law when it comes to dealing with service members. “I appreciate your assistance in ensuring that your bank does not overlook its obligations -– legal and otherwise -– to your military customers,” wrote Petraeus, whose husband, David, leads U.S. forces in Afghanistan.

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Credit Card Executives Optimistic In Face Of Looming Dodd-Frank Rules

May 2, 2011

MIAMI BEACH, Florida (Maria Aspan) For the first time in years, credit card executives are looking beyond the losses of the financial crisis — and they’re even losing less sleep over the prospect of tighter government oversight. Losses from credit defaults keep falling, an explosion in smartphone payment systems and other technology has raised the prospect of new long-term revenue growth, and executives now believe they can mitigate the effects of the latest regulatory overhaul of the U.S. card industry. “I am optimistic … Nothing has been done that can’t be rolled back quickly,” longtime credit card executive Stephen Eulie said in an interview last week. Eulie, who has worked at JPMorgan Chase & Co and Citigroup Inc, is now the head of First National Bank of Omaha’s card unit, which runs credit card programs for companies, including Chrysler Group LLC. He spoke to Reuters last week on the sidelines of an annual credit card industry conference hosted by the publisher, SourceMedia. As in recent years, much of the conference was dominated by discussion about new regulation — from the lingering effects of a sweeping credit card law passed in 2009, to the so-called Durbin amendment to last year’s Dodd-Frank financial reform law. That provision would slash processing fees merchants pay banks every time a customer uses a debit card to buy something. The fee cuts would cost U.S. banks an estimated $13 billion in annual revenues under rules the Federal Reserve proposed in December. U.S. banks are also struggling to grow other sources of revenue, as consumers resist adding to their credit card balances. Revolving consumer credit fell at an annual rate of 4.1 percent, to $794 billion, in February, according to Fed data. Now banks are increasingly looking to new technology, such as mobile phone and ecommerce payments, to grow businesses in developing countries where people do not regularly use credit and debit cards. Citigroup and American Express Co executives emphasized those opportunities at the conference, using their keynote speeches to discuss new types of payments technology instead of regulation. “We need to figure out ways in which we can grow our business in a way that aligns with what Durbin’s rules are,” former Citigroup credit cards chief Paul Galant, who now runs a new payments group for the bank, told Reuters in an interview. “The cards businesses are incredibly vibrant and power virtually all of us today. These businesses are not going to disappear because of a single law.” CLOUDS CLEARING The Fed was supposed to finalize its rules on debit fee limits a week before the conference, but said in March it needed more time to sort through an overwhelming number of comments on its proposals. The delay has given some bankers and credit card executives hope a broad industry campaign in Washington to repeal or delay the debit fee cuts will ultimately be successful. Opponents of the crackdown are pushing for a vote soon on a proposal from Senator Jon Tester that would delay the rule for two years. While “the odds are looking better for a DC fix, I don’t think it’s something that can be relied upon by the industry, because there are so many procedural hurdles” in Congress, Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Frisch said during a panel discussion at the conference. Key Republican lawmaker Representative Spencer Bachus urged hundreds of small U.S. banks on Monday to “slay the dragons” when they battle Congress over the debit fee crackdown. The debit card fee restrictions are only part of a slew of regulation affecting the payments industry since 2009. A sweeping credit card law passed that year restricted the fees and interest rate changes that lenders could levy on their customers. The Dodd-Frank law of last year also created a new consumer financial protection bureau that is expected to further scrutinize consumer lending practices. Yet the atmosphere — and attendance — at the annual conference was the sunniest in years. About 750 bank employees, consultants and vendors descended on the Fontainebleau resort in Miami Beach, sipping pineapple-flavored water and sharing post-panel cocktails on a patio overlooking the ocean. The crowd included employees of Bank of America Corp, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, American Express, MasterCard Inc and Visa Inc, as well as other large U.S. lenders and networks. It was the conference’s best attendance since 2008, when consumers started losing their jobs — and stopped paying credit card bills — in record numbers. As losses surged during the financial crisis, few lenders could afford either the expense or the reputation of sending employees to hobnob at a beach resort with the size and opulence of a French chateau. But last week those employees were eager to talk about new business — and to trade tips for recouping the revenue losses of whatever regulations are finalized. Banks, including JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, have already started discontinuing perks on debit cards or added fees to checking account services that were once free. As one conference attendee said, the industry is no longer focusing just on how to stop regulations: “Now it’s, ‘How do we get around it?’” The shares of the top six credit card lenders were mixed on Monday, with American Express shares closing up about 1.2 percent and Citigroup closing down about 2.2 percent. (Reporting by Maria Aspan; editing by Andre Grenon) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Chase Ends $5 ATM Fees

May 2, 2011

JPMorgan Chase (JPM, Fortune 500) said Monday it has finished testing $4 and $5 ATM fees for non-customers in two states, and it is now going back to the $3 fees it previously charged.

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JPMorgan Pays Millions To Settle Wrongful Military Foreclosure Suit

April 25, 2011

Bloomberg: JPMorgan Chase & Co., one of the lenders criticized over improper foreclosures on military families’ homes, agreed to pay $56 million to settle claims it overcharged service members on their mortgages.

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Bank Of America Makes Easy Profits Off Fed While Depositors Get Shortchanged

April 21, 2011

Households are earning so little from their bank accounts that Bank of America, the largest U.S. lender, has pocketed about twice as much cash this year parking money at the Federal Reserve than it has paid to savings-account holders. The North Carolina-based bank paid U.S. depositors a 0.43 percent interest rate last quarter, according to earnings documents the company released last week. Savings-account holders took home even less, with total interest on their accounts reaching just $32 million for the three-month period ending in March. Meanwhile, Bank of America raked in $63 million simply by stashing cash at the Fed. The nation’s central bank only recently began compensating commercial banks for storing their money at the Fed as part of its response to the financial crisis. Thanks to Fed policy and banking industry consolidation, the largest banks are booking easy profits as households and businesses plow record amounts of cash to lenders despite a record-low rate of return. Rather than lending that cheap money out to consumers or small businesses, banks are either investing it or hoarding it at other institutions, where they earn a much higher rate than what they pay their own customers. Bank of America’s $1 trillion in deposits worldwide cost the firm just 0.33 percent last quarter, down from 0.46 last year, including non-interest bearing accounts. Americans stored about $713 billion at JPMorgan Chase as of March 31, but the second-largest U.S. bank only paid a 0.53 percent rate on interest-bearing deposits, a figure that shrinks to about 0.3 percent when all deposits are considered. Citigroup, the third-largest bank, continued to reduce the rate it paid its depositors even though the yield it earned from its own deposits continue to rise, while Wells Fargo, ranked fourth in total assets, lowered the amount it paid depositors to just $615 million, a figure eclipsed by the $1 billion in service fees it charged those very same customers. All the while, deposits at these four firms continue to increase as consumers “hoard powder for a rainy day,” said Greg McBride, senior financial analyst at Bankrate.com. Analysts at Barclays Capital call it “lazy” money, according to an April 8 research note for clients. Charles H. Noski, chief financial officer at Bank of America, told analysts last week that the lender’s commercial customers “continued to prefer to hold rather than invest cash.” The amount of readily deployable cash sitting idle in U.S. accounts reached a record $5.9 trillion in March, according to Market Rates Insight, a California-based data provider. That cash, which doesn’t include certificates of deposit, was earning an average of less than 0.5 percent interest, the research firm said. Asked last week how his bank funded an increasing amount of investments in various securities, which led to increased earnings, JPMorgan Chase chief executive Jamie Dimon pointed to rising deposits. Dimon’s firm saw the rate it earned from other banks for deposits nearly double to 1.11 percent over the past year, company records show. During the first quarter of 2010, the rate it earned versus the rate it paid its own depositors differed by just 0.09 percent. In a year, that spread increased six-fold. Record deposits have enabled banks to reduce their costs to record lows. Deposits now make up about 80 percent of the industry’s liabilities, up from 72 percent in 2007, according to Market Rates Insight. For the first time since 1962, banks last year paid less than 1 percent annually for their funds, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation data show. In 2007, banks paid 2.76 percent. The biggest banks paid even less. Lenders with at least $10 billion in assets paid just 0.77 percent for their funds during the three-month period ending in December, nearly half a percentage point less than banks with fewer than $1 billion in assets, according to the FDIC. Experts point to increased consolidation in the banking industry and the rise of so-called Too Big to Fail banks. As of Dec. 31, the nation’s four largest banks held 48 percent of the industry’s assets, Federal Reserve data show. In 2001, it took 16 banks to achieve such a grip over the industry. Today, banks boast about their low cost of funds. Bank of America said its “solid deposit growth” coupled with what it termed “disciplined pricing” enabled it to bring down its overall deposit rates to 0.33 percent, a point it highlighted in a presentation to analysts. Wells Fargo told analysts about its “continued strength in attracting low-cost deposits,” which has enabled the nation’s largest home-loan lender to bring down its overall cost of deposits to just 0.30 percent interest. “The deposit growth continues to be beyond our expectations and we’re really, really pleased with that growth,” said Timothy J. Sloan, Wells Fargo’s chief financial officer. Deposits averaged about $841 billion last quarter, up 4.6 percent since the same period last year. For Wells Fargo, that increased cheap funding has resulted in higher returns. About 60 percent of the lender’s $1.1 trillion in interest-earning assets is funded by interest-bearing deposits that yield just 0.38 percent. Those assets include credit card accounts that yield 13.2 percent, mortgage-backed securities that yield 9.7 percent, and municipal obligations that generate about 5.5 percent in interest. At Bank of America, surging deposits enabled the lender to earn $88 million in interest last quarter for the cash it parked at other banks. While depositors at the lender have seen their rates slide, BofA has been earning more for its own deposits at other institutions. Last quarter, BofA earned 1.14 percent on its own cash at other banks, up from 0.89 percent during the same period last year.

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Video: Kos Cites `Struggling’ First-Quarter U.S. Bank Revenues

April 19, 2011

April 19 (Bloomberg) — Dino Kos, managing director at Hamiltonian Associates, talks about the performance of U.S. banks in the first quarter, business strategies of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co., and yesterday’s decision by Standard & Poor’s to lower its outlook for the U.S. credit rating. Kos talks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Lee Sees U.S. Stocks Rising as Job, Home Markets Improve

April 19, 2011

April 19 (Bloomberg) — Thomas Lee, chief U.S. equity strategist for JPMorgan Chase & Co., talks about the outlook for U.S. stocks. Lee also discusses his investment strategy and prospects for technology shares. He speaks with Carol Massar and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Banking Industry Now Breaks Down To ‘Have’ And ‘Have-Nots’

April 13, 2011

Investors will get their best glimpse yet of the new financial landscape — known as the New Normal in banker-speak — when JPMorgan Chase begins the earnings season on Wednesday. Much of the attention is likely to focus on the ability of banks to increase revenue amid many tough new regulations, volatile markets and a still-fragile economy where housing prices have yet to rebound. These trends, analysts say, could further divide the industry between the weak and the strong, as banks with more diversified businesses and lower operating costs gradually pull ahead of the pack.

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JPMorgan Chase & Co Q1 Earnings

April 13, 2011

JPMorgan Chase & Co Q1 Earnings

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Video: Goldberg Expects `Upside Surprise’ From JPMorgan

April 12, 2011

April 12 (Bloomberg) — Jason Goldberg, senior analyst at Barclays Capital Inc. discusses U.S. banking industry earnings and the outlook for JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Bank of America Corp. He speaks with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Wall Street May Allow Shareholders To Vote On Executive Pay

April 1, 2011

Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase & Co will soon join Citigroup and Bank of America Corp in allowing shareholders to vote on executive compensation, the Wall Street Journal said, citing people familiar with the matter. Last year’s Dodd-Frank financial reform law requires a say-on-pay vote at least three years at most big U.S. companies. Other companies that already have recommended shareholders’ vote on the executive pay are Monsanto Co, Tyco International, Toll Brothers Inc, the newspaper said. Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan are expected to recommend an annual vote in their coming filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, WSJ said, citing people familiar with the matter. The banks were not immediately available for comment. (Reporting by Megha Mandavia; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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JPMorgan Could Be Forced To Repurchase Home Equity Loans

March 28, 2011

NEW YORK (Reuters) – JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) could be forced to repurchase thousands of home equity loans, after a judge ruled in favor of a bond insurer that argued it could build its case based on a sampling of loans. The ruling against EMC Mortgage Corp, once a unit of Bear Stearns Cos, comes amid many lawsuits seeking to force banks to buy back tens of billions of dollars of mortgage and other home loans that went sour. JPMorgan bought Bear Stearns in 2008. Syncora Guarantee Inc now can pursue claims concerning the entire 9,871-loan pool that backed a securities issue, according to the ruling late Friday from U.S. District Judge Paul Crotty in Manhattan. The ruling lowers the hurdle for insurers trying to prove they were deceived by banks, and increases the potential that banks could be forced to buy back more loans. Crotty rejected EMC’s claim that Syncora be forced to show breaches related to individual loans. Syncora had insured the interest and principal payments on part of a $666 million mortgage bond backed by the loans. EMC is reviewing the ruling, said John Callagy, a lawyer for the company. A lawyer for Syncora, Philip Forlenza, declined to comment. Syncora said it was misled before agreeing to insure investors who bought pieces of the bond, which was created in March 2007 by EMC and backed by the 9,871 home loans. Once known as XL Capital Assurance Inc, Syncora contended that EMC breached its representations on 85 percent of the loan pool, based on a random sample of about 400 loans. It said this prevented it from evaluating how risky it would be to insure the securities. Crotty concluded that Syncora has “especially broad” rights because “it bears the greatest loss if the loans underperform and the other parties break their contractual obligations.” The judge also chided EMC for the speed with which it appeared to fix problem loans. He said EMC had remedied only 20 of the 1,300 loans Syncora had submitted for repurchase. “EMC cannot reasonably expect the court to examine each of the 9,871 transactions to determine whether there has been a breach, with the sole remedy of putting them back one by one,” Crotty wrote in a footnote. The case is Syncora Guarantee Inc v. EMC Mortgage Corp, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 09-3106. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel and Clare Baldwin, editing by Gerald E. McCormick) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions

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After ‘Stress Tests,’ Banks Cleared To Boost Payouts To Shareholders

March 18, 2011

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve on Friday cleared the way for some major banks to boost stock dividends, prompting announcements from JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and U.S. Bancorp. JPMorgan Chase said it is increasing its dividend to 25 cents a share from 5 cents, Wells Fargo hiked its dividend to 12 cents a share from 5 cents and U.S. Bancorp boosted its dividend. JPMorgan also authorized a $15 billion stock repurchase program with up to $8 billion approved for this year. U.S. Bancorp authorized a buyback program of up to 50 million shares. Banks can increase dividends if they pass “stress tests” showing that they can weather another recession. The Fed said it had completed those tests and expects that “some firms” will increase or resume dividend payments, buy back shares or repay government capital. The Fed isn’t revealing either the names or number of banks that are expected to do so. All of the 19 largest banks overseen by the Fed were subject to the examinations. Those banks include Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Wells Fargo & Co. During the financial crisis banks slashed dividends to build capital cushions to absorb losses. Regulators barred banks from boosting dividends without obtaining approval. By increasing payments, banks may be able to attract new investors, which should lead to more lending to people and businesses, the Fed said. The Fed said it is taking a “measured and conservative approach” on banks’ dividend requests. The Fed said it expects banks to limit dividends to 30 percent or less of their anticipated earnings. A green light from the Fed on bigger dividend payments also would signal that banks are in better financial shape. Federal regulators have been working closely with banks to strengthen operations and get lending flowing more normally again after the worst crisis since the 1930s. The Fed said Friday that the 19 banks had increased common equity by more than $300 billion from the end of 2008 to the end of 2010. Overall, both the banks’ amount and mix of capital have improved since the financial crisis, the Fed concluded in a paper released Friday. Under the stress tests, banks had to show that they could weather another recession. That was defined as a scenario in which U.S. economic activity would shrink 1.5 percent this year and unemployment would spike to 11 percent. In addition, stocks and home prices would fall sharply. Across the Atlantic, European regulators pledged to make their banks’ stress tests this year more difficult than last year’s. The Fed didn’t publicly release the results of this latest round of stress tests. It is keeping the information confidential, which is standard practice in bank exams. However, the Fed deviated from that practice when it conducted its first stress tests in 2009. The country was reeling from a severe recession and financial crisis. Those results were made public in a move to boost confidence in the fragile U.S. banking system. At the time, the government had launched a taxpayer-funded bailout of banks. The fear was that by withholding information on banks’ health, investors’ and the American public’s shaky confidence would be further hurt, worsening the recession.

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Chase Tests $5 ATM Fee

March 17, 2011

Bank customers could face $5 ATM fees. In Illinois, JPMorgan Chase is testing $5 fees for non-customers, in Texas, it’s $4. If the trial runs make enough money, the fees could be rolled out nationwide, the Wall Street Journal reports. HSBC has already hiked rates, charging all non-customers $3 for using the banks’ machines. TD Bank, and PNC Bank are now charging their own own customers $2 for using out-of-network ATMs, unless they sign up for accounts with monthly fees as high as $25, the paper reports. Faced with losing billions of dollars in revenue once new regulations limiting debit card and overdraft charges kick in as part of the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, banks are looking for new ways to make money. The same scramble led Chase to consider a $50 spending limit for debit cards. Banks are increasingly charging both for using their ATMs if you’re not a customer, and using another banks machines if you are. Banks made $7.1 billion from ATM fees last year, the WSJ reports, $3 billion from charging their own customers for using out-of-network ATMs. “It’s easy to compare debit cards by looking at the monthly fee, so banks are going to try to minimize the monthly fees and load you with fees in different ways — and ATM fees are going to become one of the most popular ways to do that,” Odysseas Papadimitriou, CEO of CardHub.com told CNNMoney . Banks justify charging you to get hold of your own money with claims that ATM networks are expensive to build and maintain. But, the WSJ reports, most of the 425,000 ATMs in the U.S. are not owned by banks, they’re owned by the companies who place terminals in delis, bars and casinos.

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Video: Lee Downplays Japan Quake Impact on U.S. Economy, Stocks

March 11, 2011

March 11 (Bloomberg) — Thomas Lee, chief U.S. equity strategist at JPMorgan Chase & Co., talks about the impact of a record-setting earthquake in Japan on the U.S. economy and stock market. Lee, speaking with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop,” also discusses his expectation for oil prices. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: JPMorgan’s Frenkel Sees U.S. Recovery Proceeding Slowly

March 4, 2011

March 4 (Bloomberg) — Jacob Frenkel, chairman of JPMorgan Chase International, talks about global banking regulation, U.S. employment and growth. He speaks from Paris with Andrea Catherwood on Bloomberg Television’s “Last Word.”

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JPMorgan Fires Back At Madoff Trustee

March 3, 2011

JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), sued for $6.4 billion by the trustee for Bernard L. Madoff’s firm, said the trustee has no right to “abrogate” a yearlong agreement to protect trade secrets by revising his rules for handling confidential information.

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Raymond J. Learsy: It’s All About The Money. Jamie Dimon’s Big Pay Hike While Foreclosing the Homes of Our Servicemen

February 19, 2011

It was always about the money, but over the past few years that truism has descended into a miasma of self interested perversity that has begun to put the entire game at risk with more and more of the nations economically disenfranchised sensing that they have become powerless in a system that looks only after the well heeled and well connected. The disparity between have and have not’s escalating to a degree that earlier generations of Americans post the Civil War, would not have tolerated. The level playing field that was America, even with the occasional pothole, was a system in which Americans believed in and in and in which they took comfort and pride. With the financial events of the past few years, and with the insatiable self-engorgement of the financial sector and a complicit or haplessly blind government, forever coming to the financial sectors rescue at the expense and risk to the nation at large, trust in our institutions has been profoundly shaken. Rather than enough being enough and to add insult to injury, we are given another ignoble example of the tone deafness and the disregard with which the system now works Over the past days we have learned that J.P. Morgan Chase, the nation’s second largest bank, increased its CEO Jamie Dimon’s 2011 payout by more than 50% of the initial value of the one Mr. Dimon received in 2010 (“JPMorgan Gives Dimon a $17 Million Payday” NYT 02.17.11) .- Yes, I know, some ballplayers get paid more. But they don’t have the ability of wrecking peoples lives by foreclosing on their homes as our government shovels our rescue money to the very same financial institutions who do, all the while covering their bonuses and salaries. We, at the very least, have the choice of going to the ball park or not,- Certainly, under Dimon’s stewardship J.P. Morgan Chase brought home the bacon, making some $17.4 billion in profit, a gain of 48 percent from the year before. Big numbers deserve a big salary, or so we are told. After all, it’s all about the money, Right? Well, maybe. First of all it’s not hard to make big money if you have access to virtually cost free money at the Fed window, or vast pools of money from your depositors accounts insured by you and me through the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) giving Morgan almost limitless chips to speculate in the oil market (thereby helping to push oil prices ever higher without ever having to say thank you to us when we pay at the pump), or engaging in such community enhancing banking services as that reported by Reuters (“JP Morgan holds dominant LME copper stock position-Telegraph” 12.05.10) that JP Morgan Chase “holds between 50 and 80 percent of the 350,000 tonnes of copper held in London Metal Exchange warehouses.” Not to speak of extensive dallying in the silver market and on. Certainly these forays into money making commodity speculation must have held much of Mr. Dimon’s attention. Clearly he was too busy to notice, or perhaps he didn’t care (not much money here) when, in breach of law, members of our military on active duty in Iraq and Afghanistan were being dispossessed of their homes by J.P. Morgan in contravention of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, and while more than 4500 servicemen were being overcharged on their mortgages and/or threatened with foreclosure. All the while the servicemen had tried to protect their rights in the courts trying to get J.P Morgan to obey the law (NYTimes Frank Rich Op-ed 02.12.11). A thimble of the money pouring into the J.P. Morgan’s oil and copper trades could have easily accommodated a workout with our servicemen permitting them and their families to have a fragment of continuum in their lives. Yet, in spite of the public opprobrium at J.P. Morgan’s abrogation of its basic societal banking responsibilities, – it clearly wasn’t about the money in sufficient degree to garner the attention of Mr. Dimon and his entourage. That our soldiers were being stripped of their homes on Jamie Dimon’s watch and to J.P. Morgan’s shame clearly didn’t figure in the compensation committee deliberations. Enterprise reputation and its mandate to being responsible tillers of the business soil doesn’t come into play. You see, in this day and age and sadly more than ever before, it’s all about the money.

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Video: JPMorgan Boosts Dimon’s Stock Payout 22% to $17.4 Mln

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — JPMorgan Chase & Co., the second-largest U.S. bank by assets, boosted Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon’s 2010 restricted stock payout by 22 percent to $17.4 million. Deirdre Bolton reports on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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JPMorgan Accused of Fraudulently Selling Securities

February 16, 2011

JPMorgan Chase is being sued by Allstate insurance company for fraud, in the latest example of a big bank being accused of knowingly selling a poor-quality product. In a lawsuit dated Wednesday, the insurance company accuses the bank of knowing that the bundles of loans it was selling were very likely to go bad. The suit joins a host of similar accusations from insurance companies and investors, who suffered losses when securities that were sold as high-quality instead turned sour. An industry of originating, selling and investing in risky mortgages helped bring about the worst economic downturn since the Depression. When the real estate market crashed, investors, insurers and homeowners saw the value of their assets tumble. Allstate is claiming that JPMorgan and the banks it now owns fraudulently sold it more than $750 million of such mortgage-backed securities, CNBC reports. In another lawsuit , recently unsealed, Ambac insurance company has accused Bear Stearns (now owned by JPMorgan) not only of knowing the loans it was selling were toxic, but also of accepting payments from mortgage companies to compensate for those loans. From the Allstate lawsuit: Whereas Allstate was made to believe it was buying highly-rated, safe securities backed by pools of loans with specifically-represented risk profiles, in fact, Defendants knew the pool was a toxic mix of loans given to borrowers that could not afford the properties, and thus were highly likely to default. READ the suit below: document

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Real Money: Capital Raisings, Financings & Refinancings

February 14, 2011

Inland Western Retail Real Estate Trust Inc. closed on an oversubscribed two-year $585 million secured credit facility, including a $435 million revolving line of credit and a $150 million term loan. The new credit facility, arranged by KeyBanc and J.P. Morgan Chase Bank and a syndicate of banks including Citibank, Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas, RBC Bank (USA) Bank of Montreal, Norddeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale, Bank of America, Regions…

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Top House Democrat: JPMorgan Responsible For "Homicide" Of Soldiers

February 9, 2011

WASHINGTON — A leading House Democrat said on Wednesday that executives at JPMorgan Chase are responsible for the deaths of soldiers who take their own lives under illegal financial pressure from the bank. That charge, leveled by Rep. Bob Filner (D-Calif.), the ranking Democrat on the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee, came at the panel’s hearing Wednesday on violations of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act by the megabank. The law limits interest rates that banks can charge soldiers who are deployed abroad at 6 percent, a rule an executive at the hearing admitted the bank has broken. “People who are under pressure commit suicide. I would call it homicide, frankly, because you are putting them under pressure. You are responsible for that,” Filner told Stephanie B. Mudick, a JPMorgan Chase executive vice president of consumer practices. Mudick didn’t directly respond to Filner, but said that JPMorgan would working to correct its mistakes in the future. A JPMorgan Chase spokesman referred HuffPost to her testimony. The bank also came under fire from committee Republicans. “Our nation’s war fighters — and their families — should not have to fight to keep their piece of the American Dream while they are on foreign ground defending that fundamental right for all of us,” Chairman Jeff Miller (R-Fla.) said. “While I am heartened that JPMorgan Chase Bank is attempting to fix these errors with respect to wrongful foreclosures and is refunding over $2.4 million in excessive interest charges, more must be done to ensure that this never happens again. I hope this is a wake-up call for the entire financial services industry.” The thrust of the hearing focused on the difficulty of getting banks to comply with the law, given that the bank has a financial incentive to pay occasional fines rather than strictly adhering to it. Filner made his remark during a discussion about what legal responsibility the bank might have for wrongful deaths. In 2010, 156 active-duty soldiers committed suicide, down six from the year before. Suicides among soldiers not on active duty jumped from 80 to 145.

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Bank Bailouts: ‘The Screwing Of The American People’ (VIDEO)

January 28, 2011

In a video exploration of the bank bailouts, two cute creatures decide the bank bailouts amount to “the screwing of the American people.” In the new video, from Omid Malekan , one character asks why the banks were bailed out, and the other responds “Because they said the banks were too big to fail, and if they failed, there would be too many foreclosures, and no new mortgages.” The video goes on to point out that after the bailouts, banks didn’t stop foreclosures, or issue new mortgages. But one executive at Bank of America did pay bill on his $70,000 desk. (Scroll down to watch.) The banks also bought other banks, becoming “too bigger-er to fail.” Among the banks too bigger-er to fail: “JP Morgan Chase Bear Stearns Washington Mutual and the Bank of America Countrywide Merill Lynch.” What about Goldman Sachs, did they buy another bank? The character in blue asks. “No,” the other replies. “Because when you already own the US government, you don’t need to buy any more banks.” WATCH below The video follows Malekan’s popular explanation of the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing policy, which presented it as a hopelessly misguided effort to save the world economy. WATCH below

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Video: Dimon Says Regulation Needs to Be More Intelligent

January 28, 2011

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) — Jamie Dimon, chief executive officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co., discusses financial regulation and the need for fiscal discipline in the U.S. Dimon speaks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness” at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Sam Pizzigati: Life at the Top: An Endless Bowl of Bonuses

January 24, 2011

Back in the Great Depression, even at the height of America’s misery, some people made quite a bit of money. Chase National Bank chair Albert Wiggin, for instance, netted a windfall worth over $4 million after the 1929 stock market crash — the equivalent of over $52 million today — trading his own bank short. But most of America’s rich actually saw their fortunes sink, and significantly so, during the Great Depression. The average incomes of the nation’s richest tenth of 1 percent, calculates economist Emmanuel Saez, fell from $1,242,237 in 1928, the last full year before the Great Depression, to $737,861 in 1931, as measured in today’s dollars. Our current Great Recession is most definitely not repeating this sinking-at-the-top history. Our rich today are more than holding their own. On Wall Street, business has hardly ever been better, with profits this past year projected to settle at the fourth-highest all-time total. Wall Street bonuses, new data show, are enriching bankers and traders at levels not far off the records set in the go-go years right before the 2008 financial industry meltdown. At JPMorgan Chase, news reports last week detailed , $9.33 billion in 2010 compensation will be divvied up among 26,314 employees, for a $369,651 per employee average, about the same as the $378,600 average in 2009. But few “average” JPMorgan employees will make anywhere near that $369,651 figure. Bonuses at JPMorgan — and every other Wall Street giant — go disproportionately to top bankers and traders. At Goldman Sachs , 35,700 employees will “share” $15.4 billion in compensation for 2010, a $430,700 average, down somewhat from 2009′s $498,246 average. For Goldman execs, not to worry. The $15.4 billion 2010 pay total doesn’t include any of the stock trading windfalls that Goldman’s top executives — the bank’s 475 managing “partners” — will soon be reaping. Back in December 2008, with Wall Street reeling and Goldman shares selling at a bargain-basement $78 each, Goldman’s power suits awarded themselves options to buy 36 million shares of Goldman stock at that bargain price, ten times more options than Goldman granted the year before. Goldman shares have lately been selling around $175 each, creating a potential $100 per share personal profit for Goldman’s elite. Overall, analysts reported last week, Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein and his family are now sitting on a stash of Goldman shares worth $355 million. All these dollars cascading onto Wall Street, says JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, signal “the foundation of a broad-based economic recovery.” That signal, outside Wall Street, remains exceedingly weak. Unemployment rates in the United States are running substantially above jobless rates in Germany, Japan, and other peer nations. And U.S. wages, the Wall Street Journal noted earlier this month, “have taken a sharp and swift fall” all across the nation. One consequence: America’s “doubled-up” population — families that have lost their homes and moved in with friends or relatives — has hit the 6 million mark. These hard times everywhere but at the top, New York Times analyst David Leonhardt suggested last week, most likely at root reflect contemporary America’s deep-seated power imbalance “between employers and employees.” U.S. employers , notes Leonhardt, now “operate with few restraints.” With labor protection laws loophole-ridden and courts tilting aggressively the corporate way, companies can dictate outright labor relations terms with their employees. To maintain profit rates, these companies can downsize, outsource, and replace full-timers with temps. Or shove down wages and slash benefits. Or hoard cash and speculate on financial markets — and never have to worry that anyone in government will intervene. We historically, here in the United States, have had a word for power imbalances this striking and stark: plutocracy, or rule by the rich. The plutocratic rule we experience today can seem all-encompassing. The rich and powerful appear to slide endlessly and effortlessly from the summit of one sphere of American economic and political power to another . Some of these moves make national headlines. Peter Orszag, after running the federal budget office for the Obama White House, moves to a plush senior global banking slot at Citigroup. Former JPMorgan Chase executive Bill Daley becomes the new White House chief of staff. Other moves go more under the radar. Former U.S. senator Mel Martinez, a Florida Republican, moves to JPMorgan Chase. Theo Lubke, the lead derivatives expert at the New York Federal Reserve Bank, hops in bed with Goldman Sachs. The top exec in the New York City public school system, Joel Klein, joins the Rupert Murdoch media empire as an executive vice-president. In this clubby atmosphere , backs get scratched at the power summits — and everyday people get shafted. New York City’s richest 1 percent, as one new report details, now average more income per day — about $10,000 — than New York’s poorest 1 million residents average in a year. How long can this state of affairs continue? History can be a guide — and an inspiration, too. In the Great Depression, over five years passed before Congress felt enough grassroots heat to start passing the landmark bills — like the Wagner labor rights legislation — that truly upended America’s power dynamics. We’re still only three years into the Great Recession. Wall Street’s bonus boys may not be as home-free as they think. Sam Pizzigati edits Too Much , the online weekly on excess and inequality published by the Washington, D.C.-based Institute for Policy Studies. Read the current issue or sign up to receive Too Much in your email inbox.

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Citigroup CEO No Longer Earning $1 Per Year

January 22, 2011

NEW YORK — Citigroup Inc. is giving its CEO a big raise. The New York-based bank is lifting Vikram Pandit’s base salary to $1.75 million from just $1 a year effective immediately, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday. The announcement comes after Citi reported its first full year of profits since Pandit took over the top job in 2007. The bank also repaid the last of its bailout money last year. Citi was one of the hardest-hit U.S. banks during the credit crisis, and received $45 billion in taxpayer aid. Pandit in 2009 pledged to take a $1 salary until the troubled bank returned to profitability. The government sold off the last of its stake in the bank in December for a profit of $12 billion. Richard Parsons, chair of Citigroup Inc.’s board, said in Friday’s filing that the board is “very pleased” with the progress that the bank has made under Pandit’s leadership. Parsons said Pandit has “worked tirelessly to put Citi back on the right track.” The raise was not a surprise. In September, when the bank doled out raises to a number of top executives, Parsons had hinted that Pandit was in store for a big payout. The base salary also does not include stocks, options and other compensation that executives typically receive as part of their pay package. Citigroup reported its fourth straight quarterly profit on Tuesday. With more customers paying their mortgages and credit card payments on time, the bank was able to reach into its reserves it no longer needed to cover loan losses. Like others in its industry, however, the bank saw revenue from trading stocks and bonds fall sharply in the quarter. Citi shares also rose 40 percent last year, making it the best-performing stock among major U.S. banks. Shares still remain far below the $50-range they traded at pre-crisis, however. Before agreeing to a $1 salary in 2009, Pandit had already received $125,000 in salary. His only other compensation that year was $3,750 in 401(k) benefits. In 2008, Pandit’s compensation package was valued at $38.2 million. But most of that pay was made up of restricted stock and stock options. Pandit still has plenty of work ahead of him. At the end of the 2010, Citi had set aside $40.7 billion or 6.3 percent of its total loans, for future losses. By comparison, its larger rival JP Morgan Chase & Co. set aside $32 billion, or 4.5 percent of its total loans, last year. That means Citi has more troubled loans than some of its peers.

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Wall Street Bonus Season Begins

January 21, 2011

It’s bonus season for Wall Street, and while Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s employees are learning the extent of their 2010 pay cuts, they’ll still take home more than rivals at JPMorgan Chase & Co. JPMorgan started telling employees of year-end payouts this week, while Morgan Stanley will do it today, people told of the banks’ plans said, requesting anonymity because the timing isn’t public.

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Video: Stocks Rise as S&P 500 Extends Longest Rally Since 2007

January 14, 2011

Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Courtney Donohoe reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks rose, sending the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index to its longest weekly rally since 2007, as JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s record profit overshadowed lower-than-forecast consumer confidence and retail sales. Bloomberg’s Pimm Fox also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Konrad Says JPMorgan Has Built `Fortress Balance Sheet’

January 14, 2011

Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) — David Konrad, chief financial analyst at KBW Inc., discusses JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s fourth-quarter profit reported today and the outlook for earnings reports from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Citigroup Inc. The second-biggest U.S. bank by assets said profit rose 47 percent to $4.83 billion, or $1.12 a share, from $3.28 billion, or 74 cents, in the same period a year earlier. Konrad speaks with Lisa Murphy on Bloomberg Television’s “Fast Forward.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Cassidy Sees `Big Wave’ of Bank Mergers and Acquisitions

January 14, 2011

Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) — Gerard Cassidy, analyst at RBC Capital Markets, talks about fourth quarter earnings at JPMorgan Chase & Co. and the outlook for the banking industry. JPMorgan, the second-biggest U.S. bank by assets, posted a record $4.83 billion profit, buoyed by $2 billion in reserves added back to earnings as credit quality and the U.S. economy improved. Cassidy talks with Mark Crumpton on Bloomberg Television’s “Mark Crumpton.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Ariel’s Tyler Calls JPMorgan’s Earnings `High Quality’

January 14, 2011

Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) — Jason Tyler, director of research operations at Ariel Investments LLC, talks about JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s earnings, dividend outlook and share performance. JPMorgan, the second-biggest U.S. bank by assets, said fourth-quarter profit rose 47 percent. Tyler, speaking with Erik Schatzker and Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack,” also discusses the leadership of JPMorgan Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon and the investment banking industry. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Holland Says Financial Stocks May See `Major’ Rise

January 14, 2011

Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) — Michael Holland, chairman of Holland & Co., discusses JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s fourth-quarter profit reported today and the outlook for financial stocks. JPMorgan’s fourth-quarter net income climbed 47 percent to $4.83 billion, or $1.12 a share, JPMorgan said in a statement. Holland speaks with Betty Liu and Scarlet Fu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Holland Says Financial Stocks May See `Major’ Rise

January 14, 2011

Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) — Michael Holland, chairman of Holland & Co., discusses JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s fourth-quarter profit reported today and the outlook for financial stocks. JPMorgan’s fourth-quarter net income climbed 47 percent to $4.83 billion, or $1.12 a share, JPMorgan said in a statement. Holland speaks with Betty Liu and Scarlet Fu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: JPMorgan Profit Rise 47% on Reduction to Loss Provisions

January 14, 2011

Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) — JPMorgan Chase & Co., the second-biggest U.S. bank by assets, said profit rose 47 percent, higher than analysts estimated, as provisions for soured mortgages and credit-card loans declined. Fourth-quarter net income climbed to $4.83 billion, or $1.12 a share, from $3.28 billion, or 74 cents, in the same period a year earlier and from $4.42 billion, or $1.01 a share in the third quarter, the New York-based company said today in a statement. Bloomberg’s Jon Erlichman reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Dawn Kopecki Says Bank Analysts Expect `Noisy’ Results

January 13, 2011

Jan. 13 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Dawn Kopecki discusses the outlook for JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s fourth-quarter results. The company is likely to show a profit of $4.2 billion, or $1 per share, based on the average estimate of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Kopecki speaks with Matt Miller and Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Dawn Kopecki Says Bank Analysts Expect `Noisy’ Results

January 13, 2011

Jan. 13 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Dawn Kopecki discusses the outlook for JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s fourth-quarter results. The company is likely to show a profit of $4.2 billion, or $1 per share, based on the average estimate of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Kopecki speaks with Matt Miller and Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Banks Prep 4 Bln CMBS

January 5, 2011

Deutsche Bank UBS and JPMorgan Chase are said to be preparing issues of commercial mortgagebacked securities totaling 4 billion reports Bloomberg

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