Scram News

Tag

#Jamie Dimon

Earnings

Morgan Stanley Q2 earnings: equities revenue jumps 69%

Morgan Stanley Q2 earnings delivered record revenue and a 69 per cent equities-trading surge, extending Wall Street's capital-markets boom.

By Sloane Carrington
Earnings

JPMorgan (JPM) Q2 earnings beat as trading revenue surges

JPMorgan Q2 earnings showed EPS of $7.70 on $57.35 billion of revenue, a higher NII outlook and a 1.9 per cent premarket share drop.

By Naomi Voss
Banking

JPMorgan (JPM) succession narrows after Lake exit, $30m awards

JPMorgan succession narrowed after Marianne Lake's exit as Doug Petno and Troy Rohrbaugh received $30 million retention awards.

By Naomi Voss
Banking

Tokenized deposits: big banks race stablecoins in 2026

Tokenized deposits are becoming Wall Street's stablecoin defense as JPMorgan, Citi and Bank of America build shared rails for 2027.

By Naomi Voss
Banking

JPMorgan $4bn private-equity loans: risk transfer flags repricing

JPMorgan private-equity loans are being reshuffled as the bank tests how much NAV-style exposure investors will absorb in a colder private-credit market.

By Naomi Voss
Economy

Jamie Dimon Warns Interest Rates Could Go 'Much Higher' After Bond Selloff

Jamie Dimon warned interest rates could climb much higher from current levels, hours after FOMC minutes showed a majority of Fed officials open to further rate hikes.

By Helena Brandt
Markets

Junk Bond Spreads at 2007 Lows Spark Credit Market Alarm

Junk bonds lead 2026 fixed-income returns as credit spreads hit pre-crisis lows. Jamie Dimon wouldn't buy — and a growing number of strategists agree.

By Sloane Carrington
Banking

Open banking's real US risk is policy drift, not delay

US open banking rules remain unsettled, but banks, fintechs and aggregators are already locking in API, pricing and data-access strategies.

By Sloane Carrington
Markets

Dimon's bond-crisis warning sharpens focus on debt and yields

Jamie Dimon's warning about a bond crisis matters less as a forecast than as a signal that higher yields, heavy Treasury supply and rising interest costs are again shaping how investors price risk across equities and credit.

By Sloane Carrington