Jennifer Piepszak will become chief operating officer of JPMorgan this summer, and signaled she would not seek the chief executive’s job. The current C.O.O., Daniel Pinto, plans to retire.
Category: Dimon, James
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Wall St. Is Minting Easy Money From Risky Loans. What Could Go Wrong?
Everyone from Jamie Dimon to the International Monetary Fund is ringing alarms about the shadowy world of private credit. But the money keeps rolling in.
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Wall Street’s Titans Can’t Wait for Trump 2.0
The financial world sees plenty of opportunity in the return of President-elect Donald J. Trump. For now, Wall Streeters are looking past the risks.
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A November Surprise That’s Jostling the Markets
The dollar, Treasury yields and crypto currencies have fallen, reversing some elements of the so-called Trump trade after an unexpected poll result.
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The Donor Report Card on Kamala Harris
Taxes, antitrust, closer ties with business: These were some of the issues corporate backers sought more clarity on at the Democratic National Convention.
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The Jobless Claims Report Could Upset Topsy-Turvy Markets
A key jobless claims report could join a hiring slowdown, corporate earnings, growth worries in weighing on investors during an August to forget.
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Why Many C.E.O.s Are Silent on the Biden-Trump Rematch
The C-suite has been relatively quiet about the presidential election, as executives fear becoming a political target.
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In About-Face, Wall Street’s Big Donors Warm to Trump
They may “hate the man,” as one put it, but major business players from coast to coast are increasingly on board for a second term after the first one alienated them.
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Markets Brace for Israel’s Next Move
Global equities and oil prices were stable following Iran’s missile and drone attack on Israel, but analysts warn that the calm may not last.
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Dimon Warns of ‘Unsettling’ Pressures as JPMorgan Reports Earnings
Warnings from the chief executive of the nation’s largest bank have been consistently at odds with heady financial markets.
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The Worst Part of a Wall Street Career May Be Coming to an End
Artificial intelligence tools can replace much of Wall Street’s entry-level white-collar work, raising tough questions about the future of finance.
