NYT > Financial Regulatory Reform
Letters: Adam Smith’s Way
A reader responds to “At JPMorgan, the Ghost of Dinner Parties Past” (Fair Game, May 13).
Is Insider Trading Part of the Fabric on Wall Street?
The Securities and Exchange Commission has been getting tougher on insider trading on Wall Street, but its potential target may be too wide.
Discord at JPMorgan Investment Office Blamed in Huge Loss
Trans-Atlantic tension in JPMorgan Chase’s chief investment office in 2010 and 2011 contributed to the unit’s giant losing trades in 2012, current and former bankers said.
C.F.T.C. Said to Open Inquiry Into JPMorgan Loss
The federal investigation into JPMorgan Chase's multibillion-dollar trading loss widened Friday as regulators pursued a new line of inquiry.
When Hedging Goes Awry - High & Low Finance
A multibillion-dollar trading loss at JPMorgan may remind some of the disaster at the Long Term Capital Management hedge fund in 1998.
Spain Tries to Calm Fears About Ailing Lender
A week after Spain seized control of Bankia, the government was forced to deny that clients were scrambling to withdraw funds from the lender.
What JPMorgan Didn't Learn From Previous Bad Trades
A multibillion-dollar trading loss at JPMorgan may remind some of the disaster at the Long-Term Capital Management hedge fund in 1998, Floyd Norris writes in The New York Times. If regulators take the lessons from JPMorgan's debacle to heart, they could close a gaping loophole in the Volcker Rule, he says.
Fitch Warns Banks Must Raise $566 Billion in New Capital
The world's largest banks must raise a combined $566 billion to satisfy new capital requirements, Fitch Ratings says, as the authorities press firms to hold more cash in reserve to protect against future financial shocks.

