Posts Tagged ‘Jamie Dimon’

The Week Unpeeled

Headlines dealt us lots of news, events and confessions last week, with much of the recent focus on Martin Luther King Day and the inauguration Monday. President Obama’s official second-term White House photo was unveiled, with him looking a little more relaxed with a big grin, completely unmatched to his rhetoric to Congress and House Republicans all week on fiscal matters.  (The debt ceiling increase was passed for the next three months.)  Elsewhere:

  • Transcripts from Fed meetings during the financial meltdown were released, revealing a central bank that “failed to grasp dangers” (FTWeekend headline) of 2007 crisis;
  • Lance (“One Big Lie”) Armstrong confessed but the bigger story it seemed was not many tuned in to watch it on Oprah (only 3.2 million viewers), suggesting no one cares (my vote) and Oprah and big networks are kinda out of touch of what news counts (my other vote);
  • Likewise in the few-care-but-I-can’t-stop-reading-this-ghost story, Manti Te’o. (WSJ poll found 1 percent “don’t care” about it.) Enuf said;
  • Facebook dived into the search business with a tool called “graph search” (Google it for details);
  • Banks reported mixed results, with Goldman strong and JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon taking a whale of a pay cut (actually reports differed from 30 percent to 50 percent reductions);
  • Dell in talks to go private;
  • The Dow ended at a five-year high at 13,649;
  • Swatch bought Harry Winston (priceless and timeless!);
  • Daniel Edelman, PR giant, and Dear Abby (also priceless and timeless!) died; and
  • The First Lady got bangs.
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The Week Unpeeled

Hold the Phone: Interesting article in Financial Times over the weekend that examined how many times Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner appeared to seek outside counsel by examining phone records.  The highest number of outside-the-Beltway calls went to Larry Fink at Blackrock at 49 for the 18 months from Jan 2011 to June 2012, followed by Jamie Dimon at JP Morgan at 17.

Elsewhere:

  • The US government posted a $1.089 trillion deficit in the fiscal year that ended Sept 30, actually down slightly from a year ago;
  • The Dow ended a down week Friday at 13,328;
  • The EU was named winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, probably surprising many;
  • RBS plans to sell branches to Santandar collapsed with bidders led by Virgin Money rushing in for the large number of potential customers;
  • The proposed merger between BAE Systems and EADS collapsed due to political deadlock among London, Paris and Berlin;
  • Angela Merkel was guarded by 7,000 police officers during her first visit to Athens since eurozone crisis started;
  • Insurance company Direct Line launched on the London stock market, with  shares rising more than 7% on their debut trading session;
  • Figures released by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed UK tourist numbers fell year-on-year by 5pc in August 2012, with 3m people visiting the UK in the month
  • Cost of everyday items are set to rise due to the worst wheat harvest in Britain since the 1980s, a heat wave in Russia and the drought in the United States; and
  • Npower and British Gas fuelled fears of a "cold winter" after they raised gas and electricity prices for households. End of Story
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The Week Unpeeled

Greece and the fate of the euro continued to dominate headlines and the attention of the investment community, with markets rallying through the week, and the Dow ending after back-to-back triple-digit gains Thursday and Friday at 12,767.  A narrow victory by the Greek conservatives on Sunday will likely be somewhat positive but tough times still ahead for the Continent, no doubt.

Elsewhere:

  • Ex-Goldman and P&G director, Rajat Gupta, was found guilty of securities fraud and conspiracy last week and could face up to 20 years in prison;
  • JP Morgan chief, Jamie Dimon, apologized to Congress in his defense of the bank, described in the media as both “proud,” “cool” and “contrite”;
  • Lance Armstrong is facing doping charges from the US Anti-Doping Agency, which could put into question his seven Tour de France titles;
  • President Obama, using existing legal authority, is permitting young migrants to stay in the US, which means as many as 800,000 will avoid deportation;
  • David Cameron appeared at the Leveson inquiry into press standards to refute the idea of any deals with the Murdoch empire;
  • The UK government announced its proposals for banking reforms, which will ring fence retail banking from riskier investment banking activity to prevent taxpayers having to bail out banks again;
  • The majority of Media and advertising firm WPP's shareholders rebelled against the company’s remuneration report;
  • Complimentary copies of Bloomberg Business Week were banned from London City Airport due to their controversial cover on “How to sell drugs”;
  • A seventh-generation member of the Fly Wallendas became the first person to walk across the Niagara Falls on a tightrope CJP
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The Week Unpeeled

Just when the MF Global losses started losing headline dominance, a little $2 billion whale of a loss hit JP Morgan and financial headlines last week, also hitting the bank’s stock and Jamie Dimon’s reputation.  It now appears the derivative trades were “ordered” (WSJ weekend headline) to help save the bank from Euro-market problems.  However, some kudos to Dimon seem to be in order from a recovery issue, who admitted quickly on a conf call the problem (lots of recent examples of what not to do – Walmart, MF Global, etc.).  Still, big problems exist and Washington/Wall Street fight will only intensify.  The incident did not help the Dow, which suffered its worst week this week and lost 1.7 percent to end Friday at 12,820.

JP Morgan was among a few “mighty fall” stories of the week, all hitting the front pages, like Sarkozy in France, the Dewey & LeBoeuf collapse in New York and the Murdoch (you’re not a fit person to lead) unraveling in London (we learned this week that Rupert’s LOL meant “lots of love” when he corresponded with his former executive Rebekah Brooks).

Elsewhere:

  • Facebook execs took their hoodies on the road for its IPO this week, the biggest in history;
  • Obama came out backing same-sex marriage (great New Yorker cover this week, by the way, with rainbow color columns at the White House);
  • Shareholder uprisings over executive pay are forcing companies to rethink pay rises and bonuses as Aviva, Britain’s largest insurance company, drugs giant AstraZeneca and Trinity Mirror, publisher of the Daily Mirror and The People, have all recently lost their executives as part of the revolution
  • The Queen outlined the government's plans for the year ahead;
  • Britain’s rate-setting committee voted to keep interest rates at their record lows of half a percentage point; and
  • Vidal Sasson died (who used to say, “If you don’t look good, we don’t look good.” Certainly a great PR line and one worth remembering in client service. CJP
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