JPMorgan
Chase Faces Federal Probe Over Energy Trading 'Schemes'
3
May, 2013
Federal
investigations are nothing new for JPMorgan Chase (JPM), but the
latest government inquiry into the behavior of the country's largest
bank by assets bears uncomfortable similarities to one of the most
notorious chapters in the history of American business.
The
New York Times reports on the contents of a confidential government
memo sent to the bank in March, "warning of a potential
crackdown by the regulator of the nation's energy markets":
Government
investigators have found that JPMorgan Chase devised "manipulative
schemes" that transformed "money-losing power plants into
powerful profit centers," and that one of its most senior
executives gave "false and misleading statements" under
oath.
Connoisseurs
of corporate scandal -- and probably every investor who remembers the
start of this century -- will immediately think of Enron, the energy
market-manipulating giant that went from six-time consecutive winner
of Fortune's "most innovative" award (1996-2001) to what
was at the time the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history.
The
"schemes" in question reportedly originated in Houston,
where JPMorgan traders under pressure to make big returns are alleged
to have swindled California and Michigan out of $83 million by
presenting deceptive energy prices. The bank says everything was on
the up-and-up.
There's
more alleged wrongdoing at the bank, including improper collection of
credit card debt and silence over suspicious trading by Bernie
Madoff, the biggest Ponzi schemer in history. The Times also says
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, who is not personally under government
scrutiny, met with prosecutors and the FBI this week to discuss the
infamous "London Whale" case, a massive trading loss that
prompted accusations of a cover-up and led to a blistering Senate
report.
For
more on this story, as well as other developments moving the market
today, check out the DailyFinance Market Minute video below.

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