Zitat des Tages von James P. Gorman:
We know what we are. Our business is originating, distributing, and managing capital for individuals and institutions.
Bringing world leaders together as human beings rather than political machines is very important.
Regulators around the world have achieved an unprecedented level of collaboration since the financial crisis to create global standards for financial institutions. American regulators have largely viewed these international standards as a floor, and imposed higher standards on U.S. institutions.
Jamie Dimon is doing a great job; J.P. Morgan is a great institution.
I'll be very clear about this: I'm not a fan of getting rid of Dodd-Frank.
Salomon Brothers, E. F. Hutton, Shearson, Lehman, Smith Barney... all these firms disappear, and the Street just rolls on.
Markets shouldn't be moving in a straight line.
If you want to spend weekends with your family, something's got to give.
I'm married to a health-conscious American. I try to eat well, but definitely, as an Australian, you have some of the red meat, lamb, steak, barbecues as part of your culture.
I certainly have no regret living in the U.S. The quality of life in Australia is good, but it is bloody good here as well.
From our perspective, just narrowly from the financial sector and from our institution, there's nothing good about Brexit.
The world is getting better, but not in a straight line.
I'm not that interested in just being around powerful people for the sake of it.
You can't operate a business running at a loss, and particularly if you're doing it by paying yourselves. It just doesn't fly.
To enable large U.S. banks to support their clients better, the Volcker rule should be clarified.
The basic architecture of Dodd-Frank makes sense. At the same time, as a number of regulators and legislators have observed, the act was a complex effort that produced thousands of pages of rules.
The U.S. economy is the global economic driver. And within the U.S. economy, the U.S. consumer is the global driver.
Every now and then, markets behave like schoolchildren. They overreact, they run around like crazy.
Banking's a sexy industry! Creative - it's dynamic, it's global, it's fast-moving, you bring a lot of talented people together!
I am very proud of my Australian roots.
Let's be honest: It wasn't just the banks who messed up. There were a lot of people who tried to buy assets they couldn't afford. That's a reality.