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JP MORGAN LOSS: DID US REGULATORS KNOW WHAT CEO JAMIE DIMON APPARENTLY DIDN't


Federal regulators embedded at JP Morgan are supposed to get the reports that CEO Jamie Dimon gets. But in the case of JP Morgan’s $2 billion loss, that might not have been much help.

By Ron Scherer
Christian Science Monitor

NEW YORK — For decades the agencies that regulate the nation’s major banks have had their own employees imbedded in the banks themselves.The regulators run regular exams to make sure the banks are playing by the rules. They get the same reports the top officials of the bank receive.

And, since many of the regulators are former bankers, they generally know what they are looking for.So were the regulators on top of the situation at JP Morgan Chase, which announced last week it would lose at least $2 billion in investment bets gone awry?

If or when Congress holds hearings on the Chase losses, that will likely be a key question for lawmakers, assuming they invite the heads of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to testify.But considering that the top echelons at JP Morgan might not have known of the impending losses, the answer to that question might not be very satisfactory.

The bank’s loss is a congressional concern because it raises questions about the future implementation of the so-called Volcker rule, part of the financial reform legislation that passed after the collapse of the mortgage market in 2008.The Volcker rule, named for the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, seeks to prevent a large bank failure (that might require a taxpayer bailout) by prohibiting banks from speculative trading for their own investment account.

JP Morgan’s CEO, Jamie Dimon, has become one of the banking industry’s leaders in arguing against strict rules in implementing the legislation.“For sure, this JPMC episode will give regulators some backbone in holding firm,” writes Robert Bench, a senior provost fellow at the Boston University Center for Finance, Law & Policy and a former deputy comptroller of the currency in the Reagan administration, in an email. However, the Volcker rules have yet to be implemented, pointed out the OCC in a statement on Tuesday.

 “Even if both (the Volker rule and Dodd-Frank) were assumed to be in effect, the transactions at issue are complex, and whether they would qualify for exceptions under the statute or proposed rule requires careful analysis,” it said.

The regulators, meanwhile, should have had plenty of warning about the problems brewing at JP Morgan, some analysts argue. On April 6th, the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg News both wrote a story about a Britain-based JP Morgan trader, called the “London Whale” because of his enormous financial positions in the derivatives markets.

Derivatives are instruments designed to replicate the price movements of a basket of items such as currencies, commodities or stocks. They can be used by financial companies to hedge their positions.

“One would have thought after the Wall Street Journal article about the London whale, the OCC and the Federal Reserve would have been making inquiries as to the substance of that story and looking into the activities of the trader and the size of the position and the risks inherent in that position,” says Mr. Bench in an interview.However, some wonder whether – even if the regulators discovered the trades – there was anything that should be done.

“It is not the responsibility of the regulators to stop a bank from losing money,” says Myra Rodriguez Valladares, a consultant with her own firm MRV Associates and a former analyst at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

“They should only step in if could become a systemic issue or taxpayer problem.”In JP Morgan’s case, the losses so far are relatively small compared to the size of the bank. It is a point that CEO Dimon is likely to make at the bank’s annual meeting, which is being held Tuesday in Tampa, Fla.

Even though the bank has said it has lost over $2 billion, Mr. Dimon has indicated it will still make about $4 billion in the first quarter.

On Monday, the OCC issued a statement that said, “The loss by JPMC affects its earnings, but does not present an issue of safety or soundness for the bank.”So far, the regulators themselves are keeping quiet about what they did or did not know. Neither the OCC or the New York Fed would answer a direct question whether they were aware of the large loss.

Former bank regulators, however, think the regulators probably only were aware of what the senior management of the bank knew. In short, they most likely were not aware of the burgeoning losses.

“They can only know as much as the banks themselves know,” says Robin Lumsdaine, a professor of finance at American University’s Kogod School of Business and a former associate director at the Federal Reserve Board in Washington. “If the bank is not clear on its position, then it would be unlikely a regulator could know.

”According to a former OCC official who has been involved in bank supervision, regulators can challenge reports if they don’t feel they are accurate, but they generally like to use the reports management uses.

“It gives them a window into what senior management is looking at,” says the former official, who did not want to be further identified.The former OCC official, now at a private investment firm, says another red flag for the regulators should have gone up if JP Morgan began to change the way it accounted for its trading activity. Normally, banks consider their trading to be short-term events.

However, JP Morgan moved the derivatives activities to the Chief Investment Office, which implies that it expected to hold the derivatives for a longer period of time. “If that happened, the regulators should have become a lot more active,” says the former OCC official.In the future, the OCC has indicated it will be closely monitoring JP Morgan as well as other financial institutions.

Mr. Bench says that will be necessary, in part, because JP Morgan has yet to extricate itself from its positions.“Two billion is not the final number,” he says. “There are lingering positions that must be unwound and how that plays out no one knows.”

 

JP MORGAN LOSS: DID US REGULATORS KNOW WHAT CEO JAMIE DIMON APPARENTLY DIDN't


Federal regulators embedded at JP Morgan are supposed to get the reports that CEO Jamie Dimon gets. But in the case of JP Morgan’s $2 billion loss, that might not have been much help.

By Ron Scherer
Christian Science Monitor

NEW YORK — For decades the agencies that regulate the nation’s major banks have had their own employees imbedded in the banks themselves.The regulators run regular exams to make sure the banks are playing by the rules. They get the same reports the top officials of the bank receive.

And, since many of the regulators are former bankers, they generally know what they are looking for.So were the regulators on top of the situation at JP Morgan Chase, which announced last week it would lose at least $2 billion in investment bets gone awry?

If or when Congress holds hearings on the Chase losses, that will likely be a key question for lawmakers, assuming they invite the heads of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to testify.But considering that the top echelons at JP Morgan might not have known of the impending losses, the answer to that question might not be very satisfactory.

The bank’s loss is a congressional concern because it raises questions about the future implementation of the so-called Volcker rule, part of the financial reform legislation that passed after the collapse of the mortgage market in 2008.The Volcker rule, named for the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, seeks to prevent a large bank failure (that might require a taxpayer bailout) by prohibiting banks from speculative trading for their own investment account.

JP Morgan’s CEO, Jamie Dimon, has become one of the banking industry’s leaders in arguing against strict rules in implementing the legislation.“For sure, this JPMC episode will give regulators some backbone in holding firm,” writes Robert Bench, a senior provost fellow at the Boston University Center for Finance, Law & Policy and a former deputy comptroller of the currency in the Reagan administration, in an email. However, the Volcker rules have yet to be implemented, pointed out the OCC in a statement on Tuesday.

 “Even if both (the Volker rule and Dodd-Frank) were assumed to be in effect, the transactions at issue are complex, and whether they would qualify for exceptions under the statute or proposed rule requires careful analysis,” it said.

The regulators, meanwhile, should have had plenty of warning about the problems brewing at JP Morgan, some analysts argue. On April 6th, the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg News both wrote a story about a Britain-based JP Morgan trader, called the “London Whale” because of his enormous financial positions in the derivatives markets.

Derivatives are instruments designed to replicate the price movements of a basket of items such as currencies, commodities or stocks. They can be used by financial companies to hedge their positions.

“One would have thought after the Wall Street Journal article about the London whale, the OCC and the Federal Reserve would have been making inquiries as to the substance of that story and looking into the activities of the trader and the size of the position and the risks inherent in that position,” says Mr. Bench in an interview.However, some wonder whether – even if the regulators discovered the trades – there was anything that should be done.

“It is not the responsibility of the regulators to stop a bank from losing money,” says Myra Rodriguez Valladares, a consultant with her own firm MRV Associates and a former analyst at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

“They should only step in if could become a systemic issue or taxpayer problem.”In JP Morgan’s case, the losses so far are relatively small compared to the size of the bank. It is a point that CEO Dimon is likely to make at the bank’s annual meeting, which is being held Tuesday in Tampa, Fla.

Even though the bank has said it has lost over $2 billion, Mr. Dimon has indicated it will still make about $4 billion in the first quarter.

On Monday, the OCC issued a statement that said, “The loss by JPMC affects its earnings, but does not present an issue of safety or soundness for the bank.”So far, the regulators themselves are keeping quiet about what they did or did not know. Neither the OCC or the New York Fed would answer a direct question whether they were aware of the large loss.

Former bank regulators, however, think the regulators probably only were aware of what the senior management of the bank knew. In short, they most likely were not aware of the burgeoning losses.

“They can only know as much as the banks themselves know,” says Robin Lumsdaine, a professor of finance at American University’s Kogod School of Business and a former associate director at the Federal Reserve Board in Washington. “If the bank is not clear on its position, then it would be unlikely a regulator could know.

”According to a former OCC official who has been involved in bank supervision, regulators can challenge reports if they don’t feel they are accurate, but they generally like to use the reports management uses.

“It gives them a window into what senior management is looking at,” says the former official, who did not want to be further identified.The former OCC official, now at a private investment firm, says another red flag for the regulators should have gone up if JP Morgan began to change the way it accounted for its trading activity. Normally, banks consider their trading to be short-term events.

However, JP Morgan moved the derivatives activities to the Chief Investment Office, which implies that it expected to hold the derivatives for a longer period of time. “If that happened, the regulators should have become a lot more active,” says the former OCC official.In the future, the OCC has indicated it will be closely monitoring JP Morgan as well as other financial institutions.

Mr. Bench says that will be necessary, in part, because JP Morgan has yet to extricate itself from its positions.“Two billion is not the final number,” he says. “There are lingering positions that must be unwound and how that plays out no one knows.”

   

LAS VEGAS RANKS FIFTH IN NATION IN QUESTIONABLE SLIP AND FALL CLAIMS


CARSON CITY – According to the latest report by the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB), Las Vegas ranks fifth in the nation for questionable slip-and-fall claims despite being only the 30th largest city in the United States.

Most businesses carry insurance to financially protect them should someone become injured as a result of a legitimate accident. However, criminals fake slip-and-fall injuries in order to submit fraudulent claims against the business or the business’s insurer.

“The cost of these claims goes into the cost we all pay for retail goods,” said Bryan Wachter, director of Government Affairs for the Retail Association of Nevada.

Read more: LAS VEGAS RANKS FIFTH IN NATION IN QUESTIONABLE SLIP AND FALL CLAIMS

   

LAS VEGAS RANKS FIFTH IN NATION IN QUESTIONABLE SLIP AND FALL CLAIMS


CARSON CITY – According to the latest report by the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB), Las Vegas ranks fifth in the nation for questionable slip-and-fall claims despite being only the 30th largest city in the United States.

Most businesses carry insurance to financially protect them should someone become injured as a result of a legitimate accident. However, criminals fake slip-and-fall injuries in order to submit fraudulent claims against the business or the business’s insurer.

“The cost of these claims goes into the cost we all pay for retail goods,” said Bryan Wachter, director of Government Affairs for the Retail Association of Nevada.

Read more: LAS VEGAS RANKS FIFTH IN NATION IN QUESTIONABLE SLIP AND FALL CLAIMS

   

OUR CHOICE FOR CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT SEAT 1

Congressional District Seat 1
Las Vegas Tribune’s recommendation and considerations for the coming election

In only a few days, early voting will start. It will take place Saturday, May 26, through Friday, June 8; and even if the Las Vegas Tribune does not believe in the modern way of voting (ahead of time), the newspaper has to go along with the flow and accept it as part of the evolution of our lives.

Many people will be turning out during those days of early voting and it is the newspaper’s journalistic duty to inform voters who may be a good candidate to vote for and who will not.

The Las Vegas Tribune is not in any way, shape or form claiming to be an expert or mind-reader when it comes to electing the best candidates, but it can certainly act as a “second opinion” or even an “opinion-prodder” for those who may be a little too busy to keep up with what is going on in the political scene, explained the Las Vegas Tribune’s managing editor, Maramis Choufani.

Read more: OUR CHOICE FOR CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT SEAT 1

   
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Local Headlines

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DON'T VISIT RENO

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My Point Of View

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MY POINT OF VIEW

It is no wonder tourists as well as locals hesitate to visit - and regret and avoid visiting - downtown Las Vegas. Sure many tourists come to Las Vegas, or to what they know as Las Vegas - that is, the area south of Sahara Avenue that we call The Strip - where the most marvelous hotels and casinos in the world exist and are still free of those “persona non grata pimps” called parking meters that attack those of us locals who are forced to visit our beloved downtown on business. Those tourists that erroneously visit the world famous Fremont Street and Casino Center Boulevard soon discover what we mean. The city is not run by elected officials or even by a decent city manager appointed by those same elected officials; it is run by a bunch of frustrated people who love and enjoy making the...

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My Point of View

I hate to criticize the local media -oh, that's right; they call themselves the mainstream media - even if they deserve all the criticism, which on most occasions they do. And I'm not just saying that to sidestep giving the impression that I'm envious of them, because I am not. I am very happy being the little guy because I can do whatever I want and I can express my point of view (no pun intended) to the best of my ability and in any way I choose. However, lately I have been getting lots of calls about the way the local newscast is being presented and handled - mainly, by the morning news folks. One caller asked if the morning news is turning into a news magazine or a television talk show, leaving the local segment for filler instead of presenting it as news. Another caller wanted to know...

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