JPMorgan loses $2 billion as 'mistakes' trounce hedges
The firm's chief investment office, run by Ina Drew, 55, took flawed positions on synthetic credit securities that remain volatile and may cost an additional $1 billion this quarter or next, Dimon told analysts yesterday. Losses mounted as JPMorgan tried to mitigate transactions designed to hedge credit exposure, Bloomberg reports.
"There were many errors, sloppiness and bad judgment," Dimon said as the company's stock fell in extended trading. "These were grievous mistakes, they were self-inflicted."
The chief investment office was thrust into the debate over U.S. efforts to ban proprietary trading when Bloomberg News reported last month that the unit had taken bets so big that JPMorgan, the largest and most profitable U.S. bank, probably couldn't unwind them without losing money or roiling financial markets. Dimon, 56, had transformed the unit in recent years to make bigger and riskier speculative trades with the bank's money, five former employees said.
Dimon had defended the unit as a "sophisticated" guardian of the bank's funds on an April 13 conference call, calling news coverage "a complete tempest in a teapot." On May 2, he led fellow Wall Street CEOs in a closed-door meeting to lobby the Federal Reserve about softening proposed U.S. reforms that might crimp their profits.
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