Full-Time
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Global financial services and investment banking
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Mid, Senior
Bengaluru, Karnataka, India
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JPMorgan Chase & Co. provides a wide range of financial services to individuals, businesses, and governments across more than 100 markets worldwide. Its offerings include investment banking, asset management, financial transaction processing, and consumer banking services such as personal banking, mortgages, and credit cards. The company utilizes its extensive expertise and proprietary data to deliver high-quality financial products and services, generating revenue through interest income, service fees, and commissions. What sets JPMorgan Chase apart from its competitors is its commitment to integrity, service, and community development, including initiatives to support veterans and strengthen local economies. The company's goal is to provide valuable financial solutions while also contributing positively to society through its various community-focused programs and the insights generated by the JPMorgan Chase Institute.
Company Size
10,001+
Company Stage
IPO
Headquarters
New York City, New York
Founded
1959
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Health Insurance
Flexible Work Hours
Paid Sick Leave
Paid Holidays
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) said Wednesday (April 16) that it will combine some of its supervision activities; blend its risk identification, analysis and policy efforts; and elevate its Information Technology and Security (ITS) function.These organizational changes will be effective June 2, the OCC said in a Wednesday press release.In one move, the OCC will combine two functions — Midsize and Community Bank Supervision and Large Bank Supervision — to create a line of business called Bank Supervision and Examination.“Blending the large, midsize and community bank supervision activities will allow for the seamless sharing of expertise and resources to address bank-specific issues or novel needs and provides opportunities for career development and progression for the agency’s entire examination workforce,” the release said.In another change, the OCC will blend two divisions — Bank Supervision Policy and Supervision Risk and Analysis — within a reinstated Chief National Bank Examiner office.“Organizing risk identification, analysis and policy efforts will ensure a seamless approach to knowledge sharing and supervision,” the release said.In a third move, the OCC said it is “elevating its Information Technology and Security (ITS) function to be led by a new Senior Deputy Comptroller for ITS, who will serve as a member of the Executive Committee.”This announcement came about a week after the OCC said it notified Congress of a “major security incident” in which there was unauthorized access to OCC emails and email attachments.“The OCC discovered that the unauthorized access to a number of its executives’ and employees’ emails included highly sensitive information relating to the financial condition of federally regulated financial institutions used in its examinations and supervisory oversight processes,” the agency said in an April 8 press release.It was reported Monday (April 14) that following that breach of the regulator’s email system, JPMorgan Chase and Bank of New York Mellon scaled back their electronic information sharing with the OCC due to concerns about potential security risks to their own computer networks.The announcement of the organizational changes also came on the same day that Acting Comptroller of the Currency Rodney E. Hood said that he is focused on reducing regulatory burden; promoting financial inclusion; embracing bank-FinTech partnerships; and expanding responsible bank activities involving digital assets.In remarks delivered Wednesday at the Exchequer Club Luncheon in Washington, D.C., Hood said: “Our regulatory framework should safeguard the public interest while enabling banks — especially community institutions — to thrive and innovate.”
As earnings season kicked off last week, JPMorgan’s CFO Jeremy Barnum said on the conference call with analysts that consumers had been front-loading their spending ahead of anticipated price increases from tariffs. That scramble to buy goods showed up in the latest data on retails sales for March, capturing a surge that notched the highest [] The post Online Sales Muted as Consumers Rush to Buy Cars and TVs Ahead of Tariffs appeared first on PYMNTS.com.
Big banks are urging the Trump administration to simplify regulations relating to mortgage loan origination, servicing, and securitization in the hope that these reforms may lower costs and boost lending activity in the struggling US housing market. "In terms of mortgages, reducing unnecessary regulations would decrease homeownership costs," JPMorgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon wrote in his annual shareholder letter. "Streamlining loan origination and servicing standards, reducing capital requirements and simplifying securitization rules would reduce the cost of mortgages without making them riskier. These simple reforms could lower the cost of mortgages by 70–80 basis points." This push for reform comes as JPMorgan's mortgage volume fell to $11.2 billion in the first quarter ending March 31, down from $14.2 billion in the fourth quarter of 2024. Meanwhile, home lending from the bank's retail channel fell to $9.4 billion from $12.1 billion in the fourth quarter of 2024. Other banks have also struck a similar tone during recent conference calls following quarterly earnings
While Americans are worried about the economy, it hasn’t kept them from spending. As The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported Tuesday (April 15), Bank of America’s latest earnings report showed consumer spending increasing when tariff worries first appeared. This followed last week’s JPMorgan Chase earnings, which also showed upticks in credit card and debit card spending. Bank executives also noted that spending has remained consistent since the quarter ended, even after President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” brought substantial new tariffs. JPMorgan argues that some of that might have been people making purchases to escape tariff-related price increases
J.P. Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said the President Donald Trump administration should quickly initiate negotiations with China and United States allies to end the uncertainty around tariffs.The uncertainty is making people unsure they can “rely on America,” Dimon said, in an interview with the Financial Times published Tuesday (April 15).Of the U.S.-China trade war, Dimon said, per the report: “I don’t think there’s any engagement right now … it doesn’t have to wait a year. It could start tomorrow.”Of U.S. allies, he said: “I would want to negotiate eventually with Europe, with the U.K., with Japan, Korea, Australia, Philippines, and have a very strong economic relationship.”The announced tariffs — which were “dramatically different” from what people had expected — together with the subsequent changes in trade policies and attacks on independent regulators, have led some investors to question America’s position as the world’s leading market, Dimon said in the report.“We should be careful,” Dimon said, per the report. “I don’t think anyone should assume they have a divine right to success and therefore don’t worry about it.”During a Tuesday press conference, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt shared a statement from Trump in which he said, “The ball is in China’s court.”“China needs to make a deal with us; we don’t have to make a deal with them,” Leavitt said, sharing the statement in a video posted on social platform X by the White House’s Rapid Response 47 account. “There’s no difference between China and any other country except they are much larger, and China wants what we have, what every country wants, what we have, the American consumer