- NEW YORK — JPMorgan Chase is expected to accept the resignation of one of the highest-ranking women on Wall Street after the bank lost $2 billion in a trading blunder, a person familiar with the matter said Sunday. (Huffington Post)
- Ina R. Drew has been a survivor throughout her career, rising in the banking ranks despite fallout around her. Until now. In the wake of JPMorgan Chases disclosure last week of $US2 billion ($1. (The Australian)
- (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase Co is expected this week to accept the resignation of Chief Investment Officer Ina Drew after the bank lost $2 billion or more with a failed hedging strategy using derivatives, sources close to the matter said on Sunday. (Chicago Tribune)
- JPMorgan Chase executive Ina R. Drew earned $15.5 million in 2011. She resigned over the banks $2 billion trading loss announced last week. Heads are starting to roll at JPMorgan Chase in the wake of the bank's staggering $2 billion trading loss. (New York Daily News)
- First JPMorgan Chase Co. (NYSE: JPM) lost an estimated $2 billion in derivatives trading, and now it has lost one of CEO Jamie Dimons top lieutenants and a vaunted figure within the financial industry. Ina R. (International Business Times)
- Meet Ina R. Drew, the Chief Investment Officer at J.P. Morgan whose unit has suddenly found itself in a spotlight most wouldn't envy. The 55-year-old executive has been running the CIO since 2005, and been a long-time sidekick of CEO Jamie Dimon. (Wall Street Journal)
- May 13 (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase Co is expected this week to accept the resignation of Chief Investment Officer Ina Drew after the bank lost $2 billion or more with a failed hedging strategy using derivatives, sources close to the matter said on Sunday. (Reuters UK)
- GET ready to have a whale of a time. JP Morgan Chase holds its annual shareholders meeting tomorrow, only days after news of its $2 billion trading stumble and Fridays loss of about $14 billion in stock-market value. (The Australian)
- It is safe to assume that JP Morgan (NYSE: JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon will keep his job as CEO after the bank's astonishing announcement that it had a trading loss of $2 billion, which could grow. (24/7 Wall St.)
Sunday, May 13, 2012
Ina drew
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