Reuters
– 5 hours ago
By
Emily Flitter and Matthew Goldstein
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - U.S. authorities are considering arresting two former JPMorgan
Chase & Co (NYS:JPM) employees for their alleged role in masking $6.2 billion
"London Whale" losses, according to two people familiar with the
situation.
In
the latest twist in a scandal that has tainted the reputation of the largest
U.S. bank and led to calls for greater oversight of its chief executive, Jamie
Dimon, the main target of the investigation is Javier Martin-Artajo, who worked
in London as the direct supervisor of Bruno Iksil, the trader who became known
as "the London Whale," the sources said.
The
United States is also looking at Julien Grout, Iksil's junior trader, according
to one of the sources. Both sources spoke on condition that they not be
otherwise identified as the investigation is ongoing.
Reuters
reported on Thursday that Iksil, who earned his nickname after making outsized
bets in a thinly traded derivatives market, is cooperating with the government
and will not face any charges. His cooperation is essential to any arrest, the
same sources said.
The
timing of the possible arrests, which would take place in London, was not
clear, the sources said. U.S. authorities plan to extradite the former
employees to the United States, they said.
Lawyers
for Martin-Artajo, Iksil and Grout did not immediately respond to requests for
comment on Friday. All three employees have since left the bank.
A
HARD YEAR FOR JPMORGAN
JPMorgan
had to scramble to unwind Iksil's derivatives positions after they came to
light in April 2012, leading to the massive loss. The loss highlighted the
scale of the bank's risk-taking activities and sparked public outrage. Critics
said JPMorgan should not have been able to engage in such risky behaviour while
it engaged in commercial banking.
Iksil
and his team were employees of the bank's chief investment office, a group of
traders and strategists whose mandate to earn money through bets on exotic
products increased after the 2008 financial crisis. Martin-Artajo's boss,
Achilles Macris, the chief investment officer for Europe and Asia, earned
billions for the investment office, buying cut-price mortgage-backed securities
in the immediate aftermath of the crisis.
The
trading losses also sparked civil and criminal investigations, and led to
multiple Congressional hearings.
Around
a dozen of the bank's employees changed jobs and several, including Chief
Investment Officer Ina Drew, left the firm.
JPMorgan's
board cut Dimon's 2012 bonus and a shareholder movement to strip Dimon of his
dual role as chairman of the board drew some support, though it ultimately
failed. Two JPMorgan directors left earlier this year.
A
QUESTION OF MARKS
The
criminal investigation is focusing on whether anyone responsible for the trades
tried to deliberately hide the losses them by inflating the value at which they
were recorded on JPMorgan's books at the height of the scandal, during the
first half of 2012.
A
source familiar with the structure of the group said Grout recorded the prices
of positions on the trading book for the team.
A
series of communications between Iksil, Martin-Artajo and others in the bank
also show that throughout the early spring, as losses mounted in the portfolio,
Iksil argued for the group to cut their losses and sell their positions, but he
was ordered to keep increasing them.
(Reporting
by Emily Flitter, Matthew Goldstein and Sam Forgione; Editing by Ken Wills and
David Brunnstrom)
1 comment:
...pathetic!!!
CONSIDERING???
HOW ABOUT ARRESTING THE CEO, J.DIMON - FOR FRAUD AND CRIMINAL ACTIVITY?
HOW ABOUT ARRESTING JP MORGAN FOR SILVER & GOLD RIGGING/MANIPULATION??
HOW ABOUT ARRESTING JP MORGAN'S crime rigging buddy GOLDMAN SACH TOO???
UNTIL THIS CREW ARE IN SHACKLES AND/OR GIVING BACK THE MONEY THEY STOLE FROM THE AMERICAN PEOPLE, MORE NOISE BY MSM....so people will "THINK" something is FINALLY BEING DONE --- NOT!
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