jpmorgan chase co
- Southern regional banks BB&T and SunTrust combine in an all-stock deal valued at about $66 billion, creating nation's 6th largest bank and 3rd largest in Baltimore.
- JPMorgan Chase announced Tuesday that it is opening an office of its exclusive Private Bank for high net worth customers in Baltimore’s Harbor East.
- The Malone Children Memorial Playground on Raspe Avenue, across from City Neighbors Charter School in Northeast Baltimore, will honor six children who died when their home caught fire on Jan. 12, 2017.
- Big corporations and Wall Street essentially own the GOP, yet they won't take a stand to save it, says Robert Reich.
- Banking giant JPMorgan Chase plans to open new branches in Baltimore as part of a regional and national effort to expand its network, including in less-served areas.
- Baltimore economist Anirban Basu said he is optimistic about the economy in 2018, but hinted at a breaking point in the years ahead.
- For more than 30 years, giving your money to Bill Miller at Legg Mason was one of the most reliable ways to turn a profit. He beat the returns on the benchmark
- Deutsche Bank has reached a $95 million settlement with Maryland stemming from the housing crisis that will funnel $80 million to provide new mortgages or mortgage relief to eligible consumers as well as help finance affordable housing.
- JPMorgan Chase & Co is donating a home and land for a new playground as a memorial to the Malone family who lost six children after the blaze engulfed their three-story home on Jan. 12.
- To hoteliers pushing Annapolis lawmakers last week to tax and regulate home and room rentals, the target was clear: Airbnb, a multi-billion dollar corporation, whose growth they believe has been unfairly helped by its ability to operate outside the law.
- A group of 17 CEOs from enterprises stretching from Baltimore to Richmond are creating the Greater Washington Partnership to promote the region's strengths and work toward shared interests in infrastructure, jobs and economic development.
- in business and politics, the mantra is "do whatever it takes to win, even if undermines the whole system," says Robert Reich.
- Robert Reich: Why should we expect Wells Fargo or any other big bank to stop commiting fraud when it's so lucrative?
- Some 6,000 Baltimore youth started work Monday as part of the city's YouthWorks summer program.
- Bernie Sanders threatens the Democratic establishment and Wall Street because he will break up the biggest banks.
- Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders has upended the Democratic Party nomination process in many ways, not the least of which is his populist rhetoric regarding Wall Street and the nation's banking system. Unfortunately adoption of his ideas and recommendations would have disastrous consequences for the U.S. economy and the global financial system.
- Suddenly, it's looking lucrative for Maryland cyber firms to seek out businesses willing to spend a lot to protect their and their customers' sensitive data.
- Its time to break up big banks and resurrect the Glass-Steagall Act that once separated investment from commercial banking, says Robert Reich.
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- Democrat Martin O'Malley received some unwanted attention on Thursday for citing a fake story from a satirical news site to underscore a point about the revolving door between Wall Street and Washington.
- Robert Reich: We should all pull our business from banks convicted of fraud, like Santa Cruz County did.
- TurboTax, the country's most popular do-it-yourself tax preparation software, said Friday that it had temporarily stopped processing state tax returns because of an increase in fraudulent filings.
- Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase would pay $35.7 million for participating in a mortgage kickback scheme with a now-defunct Maryland title company under a federal consent order filed Thursday, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and Maryland Attorney General Brian E. Frosh announced Thursday.
- Thieves who steal data are striking with alarming frequency. And more and more, security experts say, cyber-criminals are targeting the places where people shop.
- Outgoing Federal Reserve chairman helped rescue his country from a second economic depression
- Maryland will receive about $86 million for principal reduction, the sixth-highest amount, or 4.3 percent of the relief available, according to Maryland Attorney General Douglas Gansler. There are also 2,461 loans eligible for cash payments, with disbursements expected to be more than $1,000 each.
- JPMorgan Chase has been hiring China's "princelings" in exchange for business deals with their parents -- a serious offense that's all to similar to practices here in America
- The judges of Maryland¿s top court are subject to the second-best financial disclosure rules in the country, according to a national study. But the report found that transparency is so bad nationwide that no state got a letter grade higher than "C."
- Gloom-and-doom economist offers a remarkably inaccurate version of events
- As historic as JPMorgan's $13 billion civil settlement may be, justice in the subprime securities mess won't be served until Wall Street executives face criminal prosecution
- Maryland financial professionals look back on financial crisis and the repercussions still being felt
- Baltimore's Matthew Wyskiel co-founded fundraiser that sells tickets to evening with area stock pickers.
- CFPB orderJPMorgan Chase to return $309 mililon to customers
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