JPMorgan Chase has set up a war room in response to President Trump’s many executive orders, while other firms are scrambling. Since returning to office, President Donald J. Trump has issued a barrage of executive orders.
DAVOS, Switzerland (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co bankers worked through the night in a "war room" to assess the impact of U.S. President Donald Trump's inauguration-day executive orders, while global markets braced for volatility following his return to the White House.
Big U.S. banks found themselves on the defensive Thursday, with Bank of America saying it doesn’t have a “political litmus test” for clients, after President Trump suggested that leading financial institutions weren’t letting conservatives do business with them.
JPMorgan Chase ( NYSE: JPM) is set to revamp its former headquarters at 383 Madison Avenue, according to a Wednesday media report, with plans to accommodate Manhattan staff in both the renovated building and its new tower.
The director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Rohit Chopra, has been waiting for a phone call, letter, email, text — anything, really — from the Trump administration to say if he’s getting fired.
On his first day back in office, President Donald Trump ordered federal agencies to immediately terminate all remote arrangements.
JPMorgan Chase’s decision to enforce a full-time return-to-office policy has sparked employee backlash, leading the bank to disable comments on an internal webpage where the policy was announced ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has been a political punching bag for years, but on the eve of a new Trump administration, it might survive.
JPMorgan Chase significantly exceeded fourth-quarter expectations with strong earnings, despite challenges like credit costs and regulatory pressures. Overall, the quarter highlighted solid ...
The broad based index finished the trading day up over 0.5%, securing its first all-time closing high of 2025. The Dow Jones Industrial Average ( ^DJI) popped around 0.9%, but was unable to secure its own record, while the Nasdaq Composite ( ^IXIC) recovered from earlier losses to close up about 0.2%.
Donald Trump will talk to Fox News’ Sean Hannity tonight for his first sit-down interview since his inauguration. A clip of their conversation includes a moment when Trump muses that it’s “sad” that former President Joe Biden did not pardon himself.
Several conservative-leaning activist groups have been calling for some major banks to revoke their diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI)-related policies, according to The Wall Street Journal. Some groups have been calling for JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs to revoke or scale back on their DEI initiatives,