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CtW Investment Group Warned JPMorgan Chase About Risk Committee A Year Ago

Reuters  |  Posted: Updated: 05/15/2012 6:52 pm


By Emmanuel Olaoye

NEW YORK, May 15 (Thomson Reuters Accelus) - CtW Investment Group, a labor-backed shareholder group, last year warned JPMorgan Chase & Co that its risk management committee was not up to the task and sought to remove one of its members, Ellen Futter, who had been a director at American International Group Inc (AIG) before its near-collapse in 2008.

"We are deeply concerned that the current three-person risk policy committee, without a single expert in banking or financial regulation, is simply not up to the task of overseeing risk management at one of the world's largest and most complex financial institutions," an April 1, 2011, letter from CtW said.

A failed hedging strategy by the bank's Chief Investment Office in London could cost the firm more than $3 billion.

CtW urged replacing Futter, one of the three members of the risk committee on JPMorgan's board, and increasing the committee's authority and oversight responsibilities.

"Without an overhaul of the committee's mandate and membership, we are profoundly concerned for the committee's ability to provide effective oversight of the risks being assumed across JPMorgan's larger and more complex post-crisis operations," the group said in a separate letter in March 2011.

A later letter indicated the group met with the head of JPMorgan's risk committee that April, but the meeting did not alleviate all of CtW's concerns.

CtW could not immediately be reached for comment.

JPMorgan did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the letters.

"If we find out that this is yet another example like AIG where information was not trickling up to the risk committee, that is one kind of risk management problem that frankly should have been addressed a long time ago," said Barbara Matthews, regulatory analyst at BCM Regulatory Analytics in Washington.

The Dodd-Frank financial regulatory overhaul requires major financial institutions to ensure boards are involved in the risk process and have a risk management committee that oversees activities within the bank. The Federal Reserve has proposed rules to implement the provision, which includes a requirement that at least one member of the committee be a risk management expert, but they have not been finished.

JPMorgan said in its 2012 proxy statement that Futter, president of the American Museum of Natural History and a former corporate lawyer who was chairman of the New York Federal Reserve Bank from 1992-1993, is well qualified for her role.

"Such work ... have given her experience with regulated industries, in particular the financial services industry, and with risk management, executive compensation, and audit and financial reporting," JPMorgan said.

Futter was unavailable for comment, the museum's press office said.

PROXY STATES POLICY

JPMorgan's proxy statements say the bank's chief executive is responsible for setting the overall risk appetite for the firm, while the heads of individual lines of business are responsible for setting the risk appetite for their respective units, subject to approval by the corporation's chief executive and its chief risk officer.

JPMorgan said its risk management team is headed by a chief risk officer who reports to the board. It also said the risk management function operates independently to provide oversight of firm-wide risk management and controls.

While each business unit is responsible for managing its own inherent risk, overall oversight is provided by corporate-wide functions including the Chief Investment Office, the company said. That office was the source of JPMorgan's trading loss.

GMI Ratings gave its lowest rating - "F" - to JPMorgan's corporate governance policies in general before disclosure of the loss. Fewer than 5 percent of the companies rated by GMI get the bottom ranking, said senior research associate Paul Hodgson.

GMI also ranked JPMorgan's financial statements lower than 92 percent of comparable firms in terms of accounting and governance risk.

JPMorgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon acknowledged that the trading strategy that led to the loss was "flawed, complex, poorly reviewed, poorly executed, and poorly monitored." COLLECTING DATA A CHALLENGE

Effective risk monitoring for institutions like JPMorgan depends both on governance -- with a clear policy and corporate mission statement -- and accurate reporting on trading activity. "You cannot do the level of trading that JPMorgan did -- with all of its layering and volume -- without this type of corporate governance in place to manage the risk effectively," said John Alan James, professor at Pace University's Lubin School of Business.

Many banks face a challenge in collecting data about their business activities, and the situation hasn't improved much since the financial crisis, said Edward Hida, global leader of the risk and capital management team at Deloitte & Touche LLP. Part of the problem is they are using old systems.

"The data issue really hasn't been solved," Hida said. "Its still a significant issue facing the industry overall," Hida said.

The global nature of firms like JPMorgan also makes it hard for government regulators to have an accurate handle on a firm's risks, BCM's Matthews said, and it was unclear what Britain's Financial Services Authority knew or communicated to the U.S. Federal Reserve about the London investment office.

"We need to know if the regulators closest to the problem were aware of it. If they were aware of it were they able to share that information with the Fed? What was the relationship between the regulators? To have a global financial system, regulators need to function better together." PROPOSED CHARTER AMENDMENTS

Among the recommendations that CtW made to JPMorgan were charter amendments that would:

-- Require that at least one member of the risk policy committee have an employment record in financial risk management.

-- Authorize the committee to delineate risk limits for management, and require committee approval for transactions that exceed those limits.

-- Authorize the committee to oversee the performance of the chief risk officer and oversee succession planning for the job.

-- Give the risk policy committee the authority to retain outside advisers.

An August 26, 2011 letter from CtW to JPMorgan said that after the April meeting with the risk policy committee's chairman, James Crown, JPMorgan had clarified some of its description of board risk oversight in its proxy statements. It also said it was encouraged that Crown had "endorsed the benefits" of bringing new independent directors to the board.

But CtW said it remained dissatisfied that Futter remained on the committee, and said an outside review of the board's risk governance was essential.

Hida said institutions can improve risk management at the firm level by understanding the organization's ability to bear risk. Firms should also set risk limits in different areas of the business and monitor those limits on a continuous basis for events in the marketplace, he said.

Institutions should also take investors' attitudes into account and compensate managers to take less risk, said Anat Admati, a professor of finance and economics at Stanford's Graduate School of Business.

"The gap between what the bank chooses as its risk-management oversight capacity and what its investors would have chosen would be telling," Admati said.

"As it is, managers are not given sufficient incentives for company-wide risk management. They seem to be compensated on measures that encourage risk in their own part of the company," she said.


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By Emmanuel Olaoye NEW YORK, May 15 (Thomson Reuters Accelus) - CtW Investment Group, a labor-backed shareholder group, last year warned JPMorgan Chase & Co that its risk manageme...
By Emmanuel Olaoye NEW YORK, May 15 (Thomson Reuters Accelus) - CtW Investment Group, a labor-backed shareholder group, last year warned JPMorgan Chase & Co that its risk manageme...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spkninglsh
'Poor' Fridge Owner
08:50 AM on 05/16/2012
They should just put a skull and crossbones on that corporate flag.
08:28 AM on 05/16/2012
Chase should not be allowed to any more Federal dollars! No more bailout for these people who obviously have no regard for thier investors or customers. All those responsible should start paying back the losses with thier multi million dollar paychecks!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
truthfinderddw
08:04 AM on 05/16/2012
Sick to death of the lack of regulation and the continued risk taking and greed in the Financial Sector. I don't care what party affiliation you are, this is just irresponsible.
07:45 AM on 05/16/2012
But they assured Obama his 1 million dollar investment was safe
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Siebenstein
both parties are worthless
06:42 AM on 05/16/2012
I have probably read 80 + articles on the banking issues.

What do you think this one is adding?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Elyriaohio
Stop the Monarchy
05:18 AM on 05/16/2012
How dare they besmirch the integrity of the 1%! You little people don't understand the pressures of being entitled!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OOOOOMY
04:52 AM on 05/16/2012
Now we have investigations starting on JPMorgan for it will play well with President Obama's Class warfare issue crusade.

To show you our president is such a manipulator, look for yourselves and see the Truth...See how He himself and His administration has direct contacts with big banking ties Total hypocrisy....but hey just move along now nothing to see here continues.

Keep in mind the CEO of Morgan, Diamond has close ties to this president with frequent WH visits.....
Look for yourselves all the BS:

List of Obama administration staff ties to big banks - AOL Search Results
11:50 AM on 05/16/2012
I'm sure Romeny's list of administration staff ties to big banks is even longer! Oh wait, Romney keeps him money is Swiss bank accounts so he doesn't have to pay taxes on his earnings.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OOOOOMY
11:58 AM on 05/16/2012
So I guess I'm sure you agree with all I stated...
03:51 AM on 05/16/2012
Dear friends,

Our Economy is so BAD, that under the Volcker Rule
Criminal Chief Executive Officers(CCEO) of
Enterprises can say to their Investors ;

“I do Not Know where your Investment-Money is,
Because under the Volcker Rule
Enterprises Do Not Need To Be AUDIT by
a Certified Public Accountant (CPA)!”

The purpose of a CPA’s audit is
to ENHANCE the Degree of CONFIDENCE of
the Investors of the Enterprises!

According to the Agency Theory or
the Theory of Principal(Investors) and Agent(CCEO);
The CPA is Monitoring the Agent and is Giving
a Fair and True Statement to the Principal about:
1.) The Principal investmentmoney
2.) The Agent Provision(Agent Safety Contingency Net)!
Otherwise the Agent will be Bankrupt or seize to exist,
when it cannot CONTINUE to pay the Principle back
when sudden Investment losses occur!
(EVERY MINUTE SUDDEN INVESTMENT LOSSES CAN OCCUR! )

WATCH THE VOLCKER RULE DANGER TODAY:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WpJSE8ZsgkA
http://www.nbc.com/the-tonight-show/video/Predicting-Crime-4512/1395062

WATCH HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL &
YALE SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT on Agency Theory;
http://qn.som.yale.edu/content/do-markets-need-integrity
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uzS3F8MgbK0

That 's how Bad the Economy is!

Advice:
The USA President must create an USA Committee on INVESTMENT Supervision!
Otherwise the European Union Capital Investors,
where the oversea families of the USA Founding Fathers came from, will own the USA!

Greetings
Jurgen R. Brul
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Siebenstein
both parties are worthless
06:46 AM on 05/16/2012
The US President is part of this very problem, bought and paid for by JP Morgan Chase !!
He thinks Dimon is a great banker.

Well, of course he has to say that, because he receives niceties from Jamie.

Imagine the Mafia running this country, then you have an idea.
07:46 AM on 05/16/2012
Of course he does he has 1 million invested in them,
03:20 AM on 05/16/2012
Wall Street rewards failure. And as long as the money flows to our congress to protect them nothing will change.
07:46 AM on 05/16/2012
Libs want to reward failure by reelecting Obama
11:51 AM on 05/16/2012
The President had nothing whatsoever to do with the current mess at JP Morgan, England so exactly why are you trying to blame him? I'm sure if this happened under Bush you would say Bush wasn't to blame.
01:44 AM on 05/17/2012
Get a life.
02:08 AM on 05/16/2012
How many chances do these guys get? How many times do they get to ignore warnings about the consequences of risky investments?

If we worked for them, you can bet your bottom dollar we'd be out the door first time we made a $20 error at the teller's window.

No mercy. No free-reign anymore.

I"m betting it'll come out that $2B isn't the extent of the loss. Betcha.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Siebenstein
both parties are worthless
06:48 AM on 05/16/2012
"How many chances do these guys get?"

They roam free until WE stop them.
Nobody else will.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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dadw5boys
Disabled Vietnam Vet
01:55 AM on 05/16/2012
The British told us years ago that if Rupport Murdoush was allowed to own any Major Media in the U.S. he would destory Democracy in the USA.
Well he is here and look around you.
He ever started off here breaking the laws and bribing Congressmen when he paid Newt Geteich to hand carry his citizenship application thru the red tape in One Day to keep Murdoush out of jail for breaking U.S. Laws !!!!
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withonor
Progressive Liberal Independent
01:30 AM on 05/16/2012
In 2006, Peter Schiff predicted exactly what was going to and did happen to the banking industry. Meanwhile everyone pretending to be an economist said he was wrong. For some reason, like conservatives, banking executives don't work with facts, they work with beliefs. And it doesn't matter anyway because they know they know they'll get bailed out because their failures would be worse if we let them go under than the trillions of dollars it costs to push them to the next crash.

If you still bank or do business with these conglomerates you are part of the problem. Politicians won't do their jobs because people vote for incompetent people, so we've got to do something.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank1946
Tell the Truth
12:44 AM on 05/16/2012
What did CtW say to Obama about squandering $ 34 Billion on Solar Valley ?

Must have missed it !
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OOOOOMY
04:59 AM on 05/16/2012
frank...laughable isn't?

Naturally the media or zelots would never tell us what about our president's spending billions of our tax dollars ...How many (to date) bankrupt/failed green companies...20?
Obama: Go after those evil big banks for it plays out well to the masses.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
byoungusa
yes, a proud working american and a socialist
12:16 AM on 05/16/2012
I am surely no banker but I thought this was a hedge play? I thought they got involved in this whole thing as a hedge? Since when is a hedge supposed to make money? I thought a hedge was a way to protect you from losing money? A Bank shouldn't be making these kind of bets. They are a deposit bank, they are not a hedge fund, they are not a commercial bank, they are FDIC insured Bank! And a federally insured bank should not be out there play hedge fund and using they're foreign offices to make big deals in derivatives. I thought we had decided a few years ago that this was a very bad thing. But nobody told Jamie?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BocaMom
12:07 AM on 05/16/2012
Congress needs to investigate $2 billion JP Morgan loss as well as the half-billion dollar Solyndra loss, which was paid with taxpayer's money.