KEY POINTS
  • The SEC announced Friday that JPMorgan Securities admitted to bookkeeping failures and agreed to pay $125 million to settle the charges.
  • Another regulator, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, fined the bank $75 million.
  • The SEC said JPMorgan acknowledged that, from at least January 2018 to November 2020, its employees used personal devices to send texts, WhatsApp messages and emails about company business.
  • Even the managers and senior personnel responsible for compliance used their personal devices to communicate sensitive business matters, the SEC said.

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JPMorgan Chase is paying $200 million in fines to two U.S. banking regulators to settle charges that its Wall Street division allowed employees to use WhatsApp and other platforms to circumvent federal record-keeping laws.

The Securities and Exchange Commission said Friday that JPMorgan Securities agreed to pay $125 million after admitting to "widespread" record-keeping failures in recent years. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission also said Friday that it had fined the bank $75 million for allowing unapproved communications since at least 2015.

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