JPMorgan promotes Pinto and Smith, fueling race to
succeed Dimon
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[January 30, 2018]
By David Henry
NEW YORK (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co on
Monday promoted Daniel Pinto and Gordon Smith to be co-presidents and
co-chief operating officers, a move seen as heightening competition for
the job of CEO held by Jamie Dimon.
However, Dimon said in a statement he plans to continue in his current
role "for approximately five more years".
Pinto and Smith run JPMorgan's most prominent businesses, with Pinto,
55, overseeing the corporate and investment banking unit while Smith,
59, runs consumer and community banking.
While their names have been mentioned before as potential successors to
Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon, their elevation is the clearest
signal that planning is actively under way for when he steps aside.
Dimon, 61, has been running JPMorgan since 2005, making him one of just
two big bank CEOs who have been in the role since before the 2007-2009
financial crisis. The other is Goldman Sachs Group Inc CEO Lloyd
Blankfein, who also has two deputies acting as co-presidents and co-COOs.
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The question of who will be succeed Dimon is one of Wall Street's
favorite parlor games, and his eventual departure is something that
worries investors who credit him with steering JPMorgan through the
financial crisis and turning it into the largest U.S. bank.
"The longer he can stay, the better," said Walter Todd, president and
chief investment officer of Greenwood Capital Associates. "We've been a
long-time holder of JPMorgan and you could argue he's probably the best
bank CEO in the country."
Dimon's plan to stay as CEO for about five more years may provide some
relief for shareholders who were worried he might leave to run for
political office in 2020, said Brian Kleinhanzl, a bank analyst at
Keefe, Bruyette & Woods.
"A small overhang is lifted from shares of JPMorgan," Kleinhanzl wrote
in a note to clients. JPMorgan shares were little changed in after-hours
trading.
Shareholders have worried about Dimon's departure for some time.
When JPMorgan suffered more than $6 billion losses from outsized
positions of a trader known as the "London whale" in 2012, there was
speculation that Dimon might be forced to leave.
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People pass the JP Morgan Chase & Co. Corporate headquarters in the
Manhattan borough of New York City, May 20, 2015. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File
Photo
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Two years later, Dimon was diagnosed with cancer, for which he was successfully
treated.
Just last autumn, there were conflicting reports about whether he would leave to
become U.S. Treasury Secretary under President Donald Trump.
More recently, people in political and business circles have wondered whether
Dimon will run for U.S. president himself in 2020. It is something he has mused
about publicly, though people close to Dimon say he has no intention of hitting
the campaign trail.
While Pinto and Smith are now considered front-runners to succeed Dimon,
Monday's promotions do not guarantee that either of them will become CEO.
In the past, top JPMorgan executives who were said to be favorites in the CEO
race ended up leaving the bank instead.
They include Matt Zames, who had been sole COO until June, as well as Michael
Cavanagh, who left to join private equity firm Carlyle Group LP in 2014, and Jes
Staley who instead became CEO of Barclays PLC.
Other names cited by sources as potential successors include Chief Financial
Officer Marianne Lake, as well as Mary Erdoes, who runs asset management and
Doug Petno, who runs commercial banking. In the statement, Dimon thanked them
for taking on added responsibilities last year and for supporting company-wide
initiatives.
(Reporting by David Henry in New York; Writing by Lauren Tara LaCapra; Editing
by Clive McKeef)
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