Jump to Navigation
Home

Main menu

  • Home
  • News
  • Markets Map
  • Topics
  • Data
  • Comments
  • Images
  • Blog
  • About

Secondary menu

  • Latest News
  • Top Rated
  • Most Popular
  • Archive
  • Discussions
  • Oxbow wins Preakness Stakes
  • Poll Shows 46% in UK Want to Exit EU, 30% Want to Stay In
  • Fiscal prioritisation: Lessons from three wars
  • Pakistani lawmaker killed ahead of vote
  • Car plows into parade-goers in U.S.
  • Home fans bid adieu to Beckham
  • Sunday Newspaper Summaries
  • The Bermuda Triangle Of Economics
  • Amazon's tax arrangements are nothing short of a...
  • Three reasons why the US got itself out of an economic...

    Whale of a Story: JPMorgan Loses $2 Billion on "Ineffective, Poorly Monitored, Poorly Constructed" Hedging Strategies; Reflections On the Volcker Rule

    Thu, 05/10/2012 - 23:46 EDT - Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis
    • RDF10

    In a special conference call this evening Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan disclosed a "trading loss" of at least $2 billion from a failed hedging strategy.

    The strategy "morphed over time" and it was "ineffective, poorly monitored, poorly constructed and all of that," said Dimon.

    Last month, Dimon he denied there were any problems, most likely hoping they would go away or he could cover them up. Instead, Dimon went to the confessional.

    Bloomberg has additional details in JPMorgan has trading loss of at least $2 billion, reputation hit.

    The April Wall Street Journal report said a trader in JPMorgan's Chief Investment Office, nicknamed the 'London Whale' had amassed an outsized position that had caused hedge funds to bet against his position. In the bank's earnings conference call in April, Dimon called the concern "a complete tempest in a teapot."

    Regulators and lawmakers are now likely to push Dimon for more details about the trades. Those details will guide how regulators now view the issue and its impact on the Volcker rule, said Karen Petrou, managing partner of Washington-based Federal Financial Analytics. 
    Reflections on the Volcker Rule

    Interestingly, Dimon says this should not be an excuse to implement the Volcker Rule (a ban on proprietary trading). The problem at JPMorgan, he said, was with the execution of the hedging strategy.

    That's his opinion. Here's mine.

    I believe banks should be banks and not hedge funds. I believe "too big to fail" means too big period. And finally I believe this should cost Dimon and the entire board their jobs.

    That said, if we would just end fractional reserve lending and the mammoth leverage it allows (and end FDIC insurance right along with it), we would not be discussing this kind of monumental greed coupled with monumental stupidity in the first place.

    Mike "Mish" Shedlock
    http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
    Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List

    Mike "Mish" Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction.
    Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/account_management.html to learn more about wealth management and capital preservation strategies of Sitka Pacific.

    • Original article
    • Login or register to post comments
     

    Related

    • JPMorgan Execs Will Get Grilled Today After Brutal Senate Report That Said The Bank Of Misleading Investors

      A bunch of current and former JPMorgan Chase executives will head to Capital Hill this morning for a senate hearing on the "London Whale" trade that caused the bank to lose billions last year. 

    • JPMorgan May Release A Report Blaming CEO Jamie Dimon For The 'Whale' Trades

      (Adds other probe details starting in eighth paragraph.)

    • JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon misled investors, dodged regulator to hide ‘monstrous’ derivatives bet that went bad

      JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon sought to hide escalating trading losses that surpassed US$6.2 billion, misled investors and dodged regulators as a “monstrous” derivatives bet deteriorated last year, a Senate probe found.

    • What Have We Learned? 3 Lessons from the London Whale Trading Debacle

      Of the many scandals that have plagued Wall Street of late, the “London Whale” trades, which cost banking giant JPMorgan Chase more than $6 billion, has captured the attention of the financial media more than any other. The biggest reason for journalists’ obsession with this story is that it tarnished the reputation of JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, who is widely thought to be one of the most competent bank CEOs in the business, and one of the few who ably steered his bank through the subprime mortgage crisis.

    • What Have We Learned? 3 Lessons from the London Whale Trading Debacle

      Of the many scandals that have plagued Wall Street of late, the “London Whale” trades, which cost banking giant JPMorgan Chase more than $6 billion, has captured the attention of the financial media more than any other. The biggest reason for journalists’ obsession with this story is that it tarnished the reputation of JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, who is widely thought to be one of the most competent bank CEOs in the business, and one of the few who ably steered his bank through the subprime mortgage crisis.

    • Has JPMorgan Lost Its Way?

      By Jake Zamansky: [See Disclosure at bottom.] John Pierpont Morgan must be spinning in his grave.In the wake of revelations about billions of dollars in high-risk trading losses and brokers pushing proprietary mutual funds, the preeminent bank old JP created seems more like an out of control "boiler room" than a venerable institution.

    • JPMorgan has trading loss of at least $2 billion, reputation hit

      (Reuters) -

    • BLOOMBERG SPYING SCANDAL ESCALATES: Reporters Used Terminals To Spy On JPMorgan During 'London Whale' Disaster

    • JPMorgan Bet Against Itself In The 'Whale' Trade

      * Investment bank bet against CIO in derivatives market * Bank said to have discussed merging opposing trade books * Opposing bets could fuel claim JPM is too big to manage

    • JPMorgan's Whale Of A Tale

      By Daryl Montgomery: JPMorgan Chase (JPM) revealed yesterday that one of its traders, Bruno Iksil, was responsible for a $2 billion loss in the last six weeks. Apparently, little has changed since 2008 when the irresponsible activities of the big banks and trading houses almost brought down the world financial system.

    Latest

    UK exporters look beyond sluggish EU
    UK exporters look beyond sluggish EU
    Woman killed at Edmonton Food Bank fundraiser as Jeep demonstration goes disastrously wrong
    Woman killed at Edmonton Food Bank fundraiser as...

    User login

    • Create new account
    • Request new password
    • Click on the icon to sign in with your social network login or enter your Bullfax.com login

    Our Blog

    • Aviva steps up drive for cost cuts
    • Food Demand, JM Financial, UK Startups Incubator and Sina in Our News for Today 05/17/2013
    • Budget black hole at heart of George Osborne’s finances

    Markets Map

    Markets Map

    Follow Us

    Follow Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and RSS LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Plus RSS
    S&P 500: 1667.47 1.02% FTSE: 6723.06 0.52% Nikk.: 15138.12 0.67% DAX: 8398.00 0.33% HSI: 23082.68 0.17% FX: EUR/GBP: 1.1821 USD/EUR: 1.2833 JPY/USD: 103.165 Commodities: Gold: 1360.15

    Bullfax.com - Market News & Analysis 2008-2011
    Contact Us | About Us | Terms & Conditions

    Follow Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and RSS LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Plus RSS .

    Secondary menu

    • Latest News
    • Top Rated
    • Most Popular
    • Archive
    • Discussions