http://www.montereyherald.com/business/ci_23739935/jp-morgan-quit-physical-commodity-trade-amid-scrutiny
JP Morgan Chase & Co is
exiting physical commodities trading, the bank said in a surprise
statement on Friday, as Wall Street's role in the trading of raw
materials comes under intense political and regulatory pressure.
Wall Street's biggest bank said an "internal review" had concluded it
should pursue "strategic alternatives" for its physical commodities
operations, which includes assets like its Henry Bath metals warehousing
subsidiary and a vast global team trading everything from African crude
to Canadian natural gas.
The firm will explore "a sale, spinoff or strategic partnership" for
its physical arm, the statement said. It said the bank remained "fully
committed" to its traditional financial commodity business, including
trading derivatives and its activities in precious metals.
The bank's announcement follows a week of unprecedented scrutiny of
Wall Street's commodity operations, after the U.S. Federal Reserve said
last Friday it was reviewing a landmark 2003 decision that allowed
commercial banks to trade in physical markets to "complement" their
financial activity.
The move also comes as Chief Executive Jamie Dimon strives to put the
bank back on course after a series of costly trading moves and
regulatory run-ins, including a potential $410 million settlement over
alleged power market manipulation.
The decision is a sharp reversal for the bank that had pushed
aggressively into the sector since 2008, when it first acquired a host
of physical trading assets and expertise through its acquisition of Bear
Stearns during the financial crisis.
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