http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-0511-jpmorgan-chase-20120511,0,4625412.story
The CNBC story here: http://www.cnbc.com/id/47377555
A few thoughts.
If this doesn't demonstrate that the derivatives market (a closed and opaque market) presents a real and present threat to the nation's financial system, I don't know what does.
The question is what interconnectedness is there between JP Morgan and the other major financial institutions? If this has been worse, would we be looking at systematic failures in the system? My hunch is the answer is yes.
Further, I think that this goes to show (again) that banks are engaged in "casino banking" in order to make money for themselves, not their clients. Which isn't necessarily a bad thing, except for when you realize that they also are an FDIC bank; if JPM goes down, the taxpayers are on the hook, at a minimum, for all the FDIC insured deposits. In short, JPM and many other banks are gambling with taxpayer money.
What will come of this? I don't know. I would like to see Glass-Steagall reinstituted with additional provisions to prevent international slip-through, the publicization of the derivatives market, and increased regulatory powers of the SEC and other relevant regulatory agencies.
Barely four years after Wall Street's wrong-way bets plunged the world into a financial crisis, JPMorgan Chase & Co. admitted it lost $2 billion from a trading portfolio that was supposed to have helped the bank manage credit risk.
"These were egregious mistakes," said Chief Executive Jamie Dimon, who is considered one of the world's savviest bankers. "We have egg on our face, and we deserve any criticism we get."
...
Dimon told analysts that the bank racked up $2 billion in trading losses during the last six weeks, and that could "easily get worse." He said JPMorgan could suffer an additional $1-billion loss from the portfolio during the second quarter.
...
The losses stemmed from derivative bets that backfired in the company's Chief Investment Office. This part of the bank was in charge of trading to balance the company's assets and liabilities, although it had been criticized by some analysts for operating more like a hedge fund.
...
Critics of Wall Street lost no time in calling for regulators to proceed with cracking down on big banks such as JPMorgan, which began the year with $863 billion in federally insured domestic deposits.
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At a minimum, JPMorgan's admission shows that large and unforeseen losses can erupt at any time despite the banks' efforts to limit risk-taking.
"It demonstrates that even at an institution like JPMorgan, which has done a remarkable job at staying out of trouble compared to other banks, a bolt out of the blue can come at any time," said Anthony Sabino, a law professor at St. John's University in New York.
The CNBC story here: http://www.cnbc.com/id/47377555
A few thoughts.
If this doesn't demonstrate that the derivatives market (a closed and opaque market) presents a real and present threat to the nation's financial system, I don't know what does.
The question is what interconnectedness is there between JP Morgan and the other major financial institutions? If this has been worse, would we be looking at systematic failures in the system? My hunch is the answer is yes.
Further, I think that this goes to show (again) that banks are engaged in "casino banking" in order to make money for themselves, not their clients. Which isn't necessarily a bad thing, except for when you realize that they also are an FDIC bank; if JPM goes down, the taxpayers are on the hook, at a minimum, for all the FDIC insured deposits. In short, JPM and many other banks are gambling with taxpayer money.
What will come of this? I don't know. I would like to see Glass-Steagall reinstituted with additional provisions to prevent international slip-through, the publicization of the derivatives market, and increased regulatory powers of the SEC and other relevant regulatory agencies.
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