JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has held the top spot at the largest U.S. bank by assets for almost two decades, making him the longest-serving CEO on Wall Street today. And the bank just announced his leading successor’s own retirement.
Inflation worries remain despite strong earnings as JPMorgan Chase’s Jamie Dimon and David Solomon of Goldman Sachs weigh risks.
The announcement took Piepszak out of the running in the closely-watched JPMorgan succession race. For a few years, the former firm CFO had served as co-CEO of consumer and commun
Doug Petno, Troy Rohrbaugh and Marianne Lake are the three top contenders to succeed JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, according to a report.
Fresh off a record year for profit and revenue, JPMorgan is facing questions over what CFO Jeremy Barnum admitted was excess capital.
JPMorgan Chase announced a flurry of executive role changes Tuesday that raised new questions about who could succeed CEO Jamie Dimon in the bank's top job.
Jamie Dimon agreed Wednesday with an analyst's assessment that his "base case" for stepping down as JPMorgan Chase CEO is a few years from now.
Jennifer Piepszak will become chief operating officer of JPMorgan, and said she would not seek the chief executive’s job. The current C.O.O., Daniel Pinto, plans to retire.
Jamie Dimon said there's a running list of executives who could replace him as CEO of JPMorgan. The comments followed the latest leadership reshuffle.
Jamie Dimon's "hit by the bus" heir, Daniel Pinto, is retiring. The incoming chief operating officer, Jennifer Piepszak, doesn't want the CEO role.
JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s Chief Executive Jamie Dimon told analysts on Wednesday he plans to stay in the job "for a few more years." That would mean that Dimon, who will be 69 in March, would stay at the helm of the U.
JPMorgan Chase management disabled comments on an internal webpage where the policy was announced, according to the Wall Street Journal.