Jamie Dimon, the billionaire head of the U.S.’ biggest bank, lauded Tesla CEO Elon Musk, the richest man on the planet and a key part of President Donald Trump’s administration, this week, putting an end to years of head-butting between the billionaires’ companies as Dimon becomes the latest billionaire warming to Musk or Trump.
Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, isn't shy about calling it how he sees it. In a wide-ranging interview on Sunday Morning, he spoke about income inequality, the state of the economy and what's broken – and what's not.
Also, President Trump’s dominance of AI; cryptocurrency in the first week of his second term; his change-of-mind about tax deductions; and other personal-finance coverage.
JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs and Citi kicked off earnings season on Wednesday with their December-quarter results.
The result beat Wall Street profit projections of $4.09 a share, according to the data firm FactSet. Total managed revenue hit ... driven lower by lower interest rates. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said the bank got a boost from investment banking business ...
The largest U.S. bank JPMorgan’s net income surged 50% to over $14 billion in the fourth quarter as its profit and revenue easily beat Wall
The result beat Wall Street profit projections of $4.09 a share, according to the data firm FactSet. Total managed ... JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said the bank got a boost from investment banking ...
The result beat Wall Street profit projections of $4.09 a share, according to the data firm FactSet. Total managed ... downtick in interest rates. CEO Jamie Dimon said the bank got a boost from ...
The P/E ratio measures a company's stock price relative to its earnings per share. A high P/E suggests that a stock has become expensive compared to its earnings - a crucial fundamental for a company - and is potentially overvalued.
The 8.3% boost in compensation – after JPMorgan reported record profit – puts Dimon’s pay on par with that of Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon.
Bonds from Japan and China are moving in opposite directions, and it may soon create an opportunity not seen in two decades. The spread or the gap between the Japanese 10-year government bond yield and China’s 10-year government bond yields is approaching zero,