JPMorgan Chase will pay more than $300 million to settle US allegations that it didn't disclose its preference for putting clients' money into the bank's own investment products.
America's largest bank by assets failed to disclose numerous conflicts of interest tied to certain wealth management clients, the Securities and Exchange Commission said Friday. That included placing investors in more expensive proprietary mutual funds, and showing a preference for third-party-managed hedge funds that made payments to a JPMorgan affiliate, it said.
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• JPMorgan paying $307M to settle US charges on conflicts
• JP Morgan Chase breach was among the biggest in recent years
The New York-based bank admitted that two of its units that manage money -- its securities subsidiary and its nationally chartered bank -- failed to disclose such conflicts to clients from 2008 to 2013, according to the SEC. JPMorgan said the omissions were unintentional and that it has since enhanced its disclosures.
The SEC announced $267 million in penalties and disgorgements against JPMorgan. The bank agreed to pay an additional $40 million as part of a parallel action by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.