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The majority ($267 million) of that amount is to settle charges brought against Chase by the Securities and Exchange Commission, which accused two of the bank’s wealth management subsidiaries of failing to disclose conflicts of interest to clients.
The SEC found that JPMorgan Securities and JPMorgan Chase Bank preferred to invest clients in the firm’s own proprietary investment products, but didn’t exactly go out of their way to disclose this preference. The regulators say that, without this information, JPMorgan’s were deprived of information they needed to make fully informed investment decisions.
“Firms have an obligation to communicate all conflicts so a client can fairly judge the investment advice they are receiving,” explains Andrew J. Ceresney, Director of the SEC Enforcement Division. “These JPMorgan subsidiaries failed to disclose that they preferred to invest client money in firm-managed mutual funds and hedge funds, and clients were denied all the facts to determine why investment decisions were being made by their investment advisers.”
According to Julie M. Riewe, Co-Chief of the SEC Enforcement Division’s Asset Management Unit, JPMorgan Securities also breached its fiduciary duty to certain clients “when it did not inform them that they were being invested in a more expensive share class of proprietary mutual funds,” while Chase bank failed to disclose that it was steering clients to hedge funds that made payments to a JPMorgan.
“Clients are entitled to know whether their adviser has competing interests that might cause it to render self-interested investment advice,” says Riewe.
In a parallel settlement with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, JPMorgan has agreed to pay a total of $100 million in penalties and disgorgements.
“Investors are entitled to know if a bank managing their money favors placing investments in its own proprietary funds or other vehicles that generate fees for the bank,” says Aitan Goelman, the CFTC’s Director of Enforcement.
As part of the settlement agreements, Chase had admitted to disclosure failures, but maintains they “were not intentional and we regret them… We have always strived for full transparency in client communications, and in the last two years have further enhanced our disclosures in support of that goal.”
When you pay a bank’s investment adviser to help you put your money in a smart place, you would hope that they would steer you to a product that best serves your interest. You’d also hope that if an investment product benefited the bank, this information would be clearly disclosed. But that’s not always the case, which is why JPMorgan Chase has to pay penalties totaling $367 million.
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