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JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM)

NYSE - Nasdaq Real-time price. Currency in USD
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183.06+1.81 (+1.00%)
As of 11:36AM EDT. Market open.
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Trade prices are not sourced from all markets
Previous close181.25
Open182.40
Bid181.01 x 1100
Ask181.55 x 1000
Day's range181.41 - 183.24
52-week range131.81 - 200.94
Volume2,953,246
Avg. volume8,898,320
Market cap525.765B
Beta (5Y monthly)1.12
PE ratio (TTM)11.05
EPS (TTM)16.57
Earnings date12 Jul 2024
Forward dividend & yield4.60 (2.54%)
Ex-dividend date04 Apr 2024
1y target est204.73
  • Reuters

    UPDATE 1-JPMorgan Chase sues Russia's VTB Bank over effort to unfreeze assets

    JPMorgan Chase sued Russia's state-owned VTB Bank on Thursday to halt its efforts to recover $439.5 million from an account that was blocked after Russia invaded Ukraine and VTB was hit with sanctions. In a complaint filed in federal court in Manhattan, JPMorgan said VTB filed a lawsuit on Wednesday in Russia to recover the money in "blatant breach" of its agreement to have disputes addressed in New York.

  • Reuters

    JPMorgan Chase sues Russia's VTB Bank over effort to unfreeze assets

    NEW YORK (Reuters) -JPMorgan Chase sued Russia's state-owned VTB Bank on Thursday to halt its efforts to recover $439.5 million from an account that was blocked after Russia invaded Ukraine and VTB was hit with sanctions. In a complaint filed in federal court in Manhattan, JPMorgan said VTB filed a lawsuit on Wednesday in Russia to recover the money in "blatant breach" of its agreement to have disputes addressed in New York. The largest U.S. bank said American law prohibits it from releasing the $439.5 million, and VTB, Russia's second-largest bank, will try to seize its assets abroad if it prevails in the Russia lawsuit.

  • Benzinga

    Jamie Dimon Knew Subprime 'Could Go Up In Smoke'; Now He's Worried About An Artificial Economy 'Fueled by Government Deficit Spending'

    In the chaos of the 2008 recession, perhaps no bank stood more prepared than Jamie Dimon's J.P Morgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM). In advance of the crisis, Jamie Dimon realized that "underwriting standards were deteriorating across the industry," with late payments on subprime loans rising. In late 2006, the bank led his firm to exit Wall Street's hot subprime business, starting with a frantic call made to J.P. Morgan's vacationing Chief of Securitized Products where he said, "I really want you to w