NEW YORK — JPMorgan Chase Co. said it faces a U.S. criminal probe into foreign-exchange dealings and boosted its maximum estimate for “reasonably possible” losses on legal cases to the highest in more than a year. The firm is cooperating with the criminal investigation by the Department of Justice as well as inquiries by regulators in Britain and elsewhere, it said Monday in a quarterly report. The largest U.S. bank said it might need as much as $5.9 billion to cover losses beyond reserves for legal matters, up $1.3 billion from the end of June, and the most since since mid-2013. “In recent months, U.S. government officials have emphasized their willingness to bring criminal actions against financial institutions,” the bank wrote of the general legal environment. “Such actions can have significant collateral consequences for a subject financial institution, including loss of customers and business.” Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon, 58, who led the New York-based firm through $23 billion in settlements last year, is contending with an international probe into whether traders at the biggest banks sought to profit by rigging currency rates. Citigroup and Zurich-based UBS disclosed last week they also face Justice Department criminal inquiries into foreign-exchange dealings. Citigroup cut third-quarter results to include a $600 million legal charge. “These investigations are focused on the firm’s spot FX trading activities as well as controls applicable to those activities,” JPMorgan said its report. While the company is in talks to resolve the cases, “there is no assurance that such discussions will result in settlements,” it said. Banks are facing foreign-exchange probes by authorities on three continents, people with knowledge have said. JPMorgan booked $1.01 billion in legal expenses during the third quarter, tied “in large part” to the currency probes, Chief Financial Officer Marianne Lake said on Oct. 14. Cases could cost banks as much as $41 billion combined to settle, analysts at New York-based Citigroup, led by Kinner Lakhani, said last month. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced in May that authorities were pursuing criminal cases against banks, showing that financial institutions aren’t too big to prosecute. The Justice Department later wrested guilty pleas — once viewed as a death penalty for a bank — from Credit Suisse Group’s main bank subsidiary for helping Americans avoid taxes, and from BNP Paribas for handling banned transactions involving Sudan, Iran and Cuba. U.S. firms began disclosing estimates for possible legal losses after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission told finance chiefs in 2010 they should provide investor guidance “when there is at least a reasonable possibility” costs will be incurred, even if the risk is too low to require reserves. JPMorgan said it has set aside money to cover several hundred legal proceedings, and may boost those accruals further if additional expenses become probable.
Article source: http://www.freep.com/story/news/nation/2014/09/20/nbc-chris-christie-bridge-scandal/15950527/
NEW YORK — JPMorgan Chase Co. said it faces a U.S. criminal probe into foreign-exchange dealings and boosted its maximum estimate for "reasonably possible" losses on legal cases to the highest in more than a year.The firm is cooperating with the criminal investigation by the Department of J...
bussiness




0 comments:
Post a Comment