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The J.P. Morgan Reserve Card was one of the first U.S. credit cards to adopt EMV smart chip technology. With its brass construction and palladium plating, the card weighs 1 ounce or 28.35 grams, five times the weight of a conventional plastic credit card and twice the weight of the titanium constructed American Express Centurion Card.
JPMorgan Chase is the fifth largest bank in the world, with $3.9 trillion in total assets. [8] The firm operates the largest investment bank in the world by revenue. [9] [10] It occupies the 24th spot on the Fortune 500 list of the largest U.S. corporations by revenue. In 2023, JPMorgan Chase was ranked #1 in the Forbes Global 2000 ranking. [11]
From 2017 to 2019, Piepszak was the CEO of Chase Card Services, [7] covering small business, consumer and commercial card businesses. In 2019, Piepszak was named CFO of JPMorgan Chase & Co., succeeding Marianne Lake. [8] In 2021, Piepszak and Lake were both named heads of the consumer and community bank. [9]
The logo of JP Morgan bank is pictured at the new French headquarters of the bank on June 29, 2021 in Paris. The CEO of JPMorgan Chase's consumer & community banking division sounded optimistic in ...
Beer took over the reins from Marianne Lake, who is currently co-head of the consumer and community banking division with Jennifer Piepszak, also a former CEO of the cards business at Chase. Beer ...
JPMorgan Chase: 1959 Chase Manhattan Bank: Clinton Trust Company Chase Manhattan Bank: JPMorgan Chase: 1959 Chemical Corn Exchange Bank: New York Trust Co. Chemical Bank New York Trust Co. JPMorgan Chase: 1961 J. P. Morgan & Co. Guaranty Trust Co. of NY Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. of NY: JPMorgan Chase: 1960 American Commercial Bank: North ...
In 2023 JPMorgan Chase confirmed it had raked in the highest revenue figure–$49.6 billion—in U.S. banking history. JPMorgan remains comfortably America's biggest bank, with $3.7 trillion in ...
De Long, Bradford. "Did JP Morgan's Men Add Value?: An Economist's Perspective on Financial Capitalism," in Peter Temin, ed., Inside the Business Enterprise: Historical Perspectives on the Use of Information (1991) pp. 205–36; shows firms with a Morgan partner on their board had higher stock prices (relative to book value) than their competitors