Here is a summary of JPM's recent exorbitant and seemingly endless fines.
Courtesy of the Daily
Beast:
Date: April
2011
Amount: $56 million
Behavior: JPMorgan was one of several banks called out in a
class-action lawsuit for overcharging or wrongfully foreclosing on active-duty
military personnel. The company apologized, paid out $27 million in cash, cut
interest rates on home loans and returned houses that were wrongfully foreclosed
upon.
adual shift to inflation from deflation
Date: June
2011
Amount: $153.6 million
Behavior: The Securities and Exchange Commission sued JPMorgan for
misleading buyers by allegedly failing to inform investors that a hedge fund
assisted in picking and betting against securities in a collateralized debt
obligation JPMorgan had sold in 2007. JPMorgan paid $153.6 million to settle the
charges without admitting or denying the allegations.
Date: July
2011
Amount: $229 Million
Behavior: In response to a suit by federal and state authorities,
JPMorgan settled allegations that it rigged the bidding process for reinvesting
bond transactions that affected 31 state governments. The bank paid $229 million
to settle the charges without admitting or denying the allegations.
Date: August
2011
Amount: $88.3 Million
Behavior: Talk about shady dealings. The Treasury Department alleged
the banking giant violated sanction orders by conducting transactions with
people or entities tied to Iran, Sudan, Cuba, and Liberia. JPMorgan Chase
settled the charges and violations by paying $88.3 million civil penalty.
Date: February
2012
Amount: $5.29 Billion
Behavior: JPMorgan and four other major mortgage servicers agreed to
pay a combined $25 billion to settle charges with state attorneys general, the
Justice Department, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development relating
to what Washington Attorney General Rob McKenna called years of “shoddy loan
servicing, illegal robo-signing, and faulty foreclosure processing.” JPMorgan
Chase’s share of the settlement came to $5.29 billion.
Date: February
2012
Amount: $110 million
Behavior: Along with Bank of America and a few smaller lenders,
JPMorgan settled consumer litigation that claimed the banks processed checks by
size—rather than by chronological order—so they could charge unwarranted
overdraft fees.
Date: March
2012
Amount: $150 million
Behavior: After being sued by pension funds and investors for
investing their funds in a risky structured investment vehicle that failed at
the height of the global financial crisis in 2008, JPMorgan settled the suit
without admitting wrongdoing.
Date: November
2012
Amount: $296.9 million
Behavior: The Securities and Exchange Commission charged JPMorgan
with misleading investors about the quality of mortgages that underlay
mortgage-backed securities it sold. The bank settled the charges without
admitting or denying guilt.
Date: January
2013
Amount: Unclear
Behavior: Ten banks, including JPMorgan Chase, agreed to an $8.5
billion settlement with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the
Federal Reserve over “robo-signing” and other alleged abuses of the foreclosure
process. The banks were to pay $3.3 billion to harmed borrowers and provide a
combined of $5.2 billion in assistance in the form of principal reductions or
mortgage modifications. JPMorgan Chase didn’t disclose its share of the
settlement.
Date: March
2013
Amount: $100 million
Behavior: JPMorgan Chase agreed to return $546 million to former
customers of MF Global Holdings, the investment firm run by former New Jersey
governor Jon Corzine that collapsed in 2011. While it did not admit wrongdoing,
JPMorgan had been threatened with a lawsuit if it didn’t return the cash that
had been transferred from MF Global during the firm’s chaotic final days.
* * *
Today we can add the following:
Date: July
2013
Amount: $410 million
Behavior: FERC accuses JPM of manipulating energy prices. JPM
"admitted the facts" it was charged with, but "neither admitted nor denied the
violations." Instead of being shut down like Enron for
engaging in essentially the same activity if to a more modest degree, JPM is
fined $410 million or 0.4% of its annual projected revenue of just under $100
billion.
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