NEW YORK (AP) — Shares of JPMorgan Chase & Co. tumbled in premarket trading
Thursday as a published report said that the bank's losses on a bad
trade may reach as much as $9 billion — far higher than the estimated $2
billion loss disclosed last month.
In May, JPMorgan
said the loss came from trading in credit derivatives that was designed
to hedge against financial risk, and not to make a profit for the New
York bank.
The New York Times, citing sources it did not identify
by name, said that the losses have grown recently as JPMorgan has been
unwinding its positions. The newspaper said its sources were current and
former traders and executives at JPMorgan, which is the largest bank in
the U.S. by assets.The New York Times story cites an internal report that JPMorgan made in April that showed the losses could reach $8 billion to $9 billion, in a worst-case scenario. But the newspaper add7d that because JPMorgan has already been unwinding its positions, some expect that the losses will not be more than $6 billion to $7 billion.
A JPMorgan representative declined to comment.
At the time of the loss, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon
apologized to shareholders. And just days after the loss was disclosed,
Chief Investment Officer Ina Drew left the company. Drew oversaw the
trading group responsible for the trade.
JPMorgan has lost about $23 billion in market value since the losses came to light on May 10.
The
loss has heightened concerns that the biggest banks still pose risks to
the U.S. financial system, less than four years after the financial
crisis in the fall of 2008.
In
a hearing before the House Financial Services Committee last week,
Dimon was dismissive when asked if JPMorgan's losses could total half a
trillion or a trillion dollars. He replied bluntly: "Not unless the
Earth is hit by the moon."
While
Dimon avoided putting an exact number on the bank's trading loss, he
did say that JPMorgan will have a solidly profitable quarter. JPMorgan
plans to give more details related to its losses when it reports
second-quarter earnings on July 13.
The
company's stock dropped $1.03, or 2.9 percent, to $35.71 in premarket
trading. Its shares are down 11 percent in regular trading since the
bank disclosed the trading losses.
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