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JPMorgan’s Federally-Insured Bank Is Fined $348 Million for Losing Track of “Billions” of Trades
By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: March 18, 2024
On Thursday of last week, two of JPMorgan Chase Bank’s federal regulators fined the riskiest bank in the United States $348 million dollars for engaging in “unsafe and unsound banking practices” for failing to supervise “billions” of trades on at least 30 global trading venues.
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) fined JPMorgan Chase Bank $250 million while the Federal Reserve fined the bank $98.2 million. The OCC said the misconduct occurred since at least 2019. The Fed said the bank had engaged in the misconduct over the span of nine years, from 2014 to 2023.
The key outrage embedded in these charges – that mainstream media failed to point out in its coverage last week – is that this “trading” activity did not occur at the registered brokerage firm of JPMorgan, which has properly licensed traders and trading supervisors. It occurred at the federally-insured bank, which is not allowed to have licensed traders – because casino banking brings on bank runs, bank panics and giant scandals that undermine Americans’ confidence in federally-insured banks.
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A Six-Step Checklist to Protect Your Portfolio Against Volatility
At PBRG, we’ve developed an investing plan to keep us grounded even in the most volatile markets. If you stick to it, you’ll be able to outperform the average investor and limit your losses.
So run your portfolio through the six-step checklist below, and you’ll be ready for anything the market throws at you…
Is your portfolio diversified? Numerous studies show that asset allocation accounts for more than 90% of your investment returns. Greater diversification also results in lower risk. So a good start is owning a mix of domestic and foreign stocks, bonds, commodities, real estate, and gold.
Do you own true alternatives? Be comfortable with being uncomfortable. In other words, think outside the box. Get some exposure to “true” alternatives like collectibles, cryptos, private placements, and annuities. They’ll generate long-term outperformance while shielding your portfolio in the meantime.
Do you have a rainy-day fund? Cash is often a forgotten asset class, but it gives you optionality. You never know what opportunities life might throw at you. Whatever they are, cash typically meets the need better than anything else, so it’s crucial to hold some. We recommend allocating up to 10% to cash.
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Economy's END?! Here's the UNDENIABLE Proof!!!
The 'Inflation Illusion' Still Haunts the Economy
By Sean Michael Cummings
Cookie Monster says the dollar is losing its buying power...
Last week, the Sesame Street character's official account on X (formerly Twitter) issued the following viral posts...
By "shrinkflation," the Muppet is referring to a dreaded economic trend...
Companies "shrink" the size or weight of a product while keeping the price the same. The cost per unit is then inflated.
This boosts profits... stiffs consumers... and ultimately debases the value of currency.
Obviously, Cookie Monster isn't an economist. But his tweet carries some ominous economic subtext: Inflation still isn't under control.
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Fed Balance Sheet QT: -$1.43 Trillion from Peak, to $7.54 Trillion, Lowest since February 2021
Quantitative Tightening has now removed 35% of Treasury securities and 25% of MBS that pandemic QE had added.
By Wolf Richter for WOLF STREET.
Total assets on the Fed’s balance sheet dropped by $91 billion in February, to $7.54 trillion, the lowest since February 2021, according to the Fed’s weekly balance sheet today.
Since the end of QE in April 2022, the Fed has shed $1.43 trillion, as quantitative tightening continues on track.
During QT #1 between November 2017 and August 2019, the Fed’s total assets dropped by $688 billion, while inflation was below or at the Fed’s target (1.8% core PCE in August 2019), and the Fed was just trying to “normalize” its balance sheet.
Now inflation is hot, though it has come down a lot, driven by price drops in durable goods, and a plunge in energy prices. But services inflation didn’t cool off enough and now “core services” inflation had gone into a nasty acceleration.