One JPM worker, who has been with the bank for several years, said everyone on their team got a 2% raise. (The five employees Fortune spoke with for this story did not want their
Activity on Wall Street helped buoy the bank’s fourth-quarter earnings.
The recommendations of Wall Street analysts are often relied on by investors when deciding whether to buy, sell, or hold a stock. Media reports about these brokerage-firm-employed (or sell-side) analysts changing their ratings often affect a stock's price.
NCPRR and NLPC sent Goldman and JPMorgan the anti-DEI proposals, while Bank of America and Citi received proposals from NLPC and The Heritage Foundation asking them to audit whether they have surveilled customers based on their political and religious beliefs, according to the Journal.
Big bank profits surged in the fourth quarter and Wall Street roared back to life, with net income rising 50% at JPMorgan Chase and more than doubling at Goldman Sachs.
JPMorgan Chase management disabled comments on an internal webpage where the policy was announced, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Kevin Willsey, JPMorgan Chase’s global chair of investment banking, is retiring after over 30 years. He led the bank to become the top equity underwriter in 2008 and 2009 and was appointed global chair in 2013.
How JPMorgan Chase performs in 2025 will largely depend on how economic conditions evolve. A backdrop of a firm labor market and durable credit conditions would support the bank's income growth. Investors comfortable with this baseline scenario have good reason to buy or hold the stock.
US stocks surged higher Wednesday after an encouraging inflation report and blockbuster profits for some of America’s biggest banks.
The state's attorney general warned Goldman, JPMorgan, BlackRock, and other heavyweights of possible legal consequences to their diversity policies.
Do they really matter, though? Let's take a look at what these Wall Street heavyweights have to say about JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) before we discuss the reliability of brokerage recommendations ...
One of the most widely discussed topics on Wall Street over the years has been the question of who will succeed Jamie Dimon as CEO of JPMorgan Chase, a role he has held for nearly two decades. Last week,