https://money.msn.com/investing/dollar42m-ceo-journalists-are-overpaid
Wow, this guys has balls.
Hurry repuliscams, send your donations to the Mitt Robney campaign.
https://money.msn.com/investing/dollar42m-ceo-journalists-are-overpaid
Wow, this guys has balls.
Hurry repuliscams, send your donations to the Mitt Robney campaign.
https://money.msn.com/investing/dollar42m-ceo-journalists-are-overpaid
Wow, this guys has balls.
Hurry repuliscams, send your donations to the Mitt Robney campaign.
Why do you care how much someone is paid?
I love watching you leftists in action. You're all for "privacy" when it comes to "the bedroom" (allegedly) but bank accounts are fair game.
Odd people, you leftists.
Why do you care how much someone is paid?
I love watching you leftists in action. You're all for "privacy" when it comes to "the bedroom" (allegedly) but bank accounts are fair game.
Odd people, you leftists.
Presumably, Dimon was able to make so much in 2010 at least in part because taxpayers handed JPMorgan Chase a $25 billion bailout package during the dark days of the financial crisis. It's likely the money helped the bank survive the meltdown with less damage than it might otherwise have incurred.
In defense of Dimon, his bank has paid back the bailout money, at a $1.7 million profit to the government, according to ProPublica. And many analysts praise Dimon for navigating the crisis better than many CEOs at large banks, by keeping capital levels higher and avoiding excessive exposure to subprime loans and questionable mortgage-backed securities. "Jamie Dimon has a well-deserved reputation as one of the best bankers in the business," says Morningstar analyst Jim Sinegal.
in italics,,, uh, yea, you think?
underlined,,,,,
in red,,,,, is confirmation that the 'journalist' that published this article, isn't worth the 30k they might make this year.
Hurry dumbocrats, send in your money to Bama, he needs it so that he can steal more from us productive folks and gift it to the banksters
Presumably, Dimon was able to make so much in 2010 at least in part because taxpayers handed JPMorgan Chase a $25 billion bailout package during the dark days of the financial crisis. It's likely the money helped the bank survive the meltdown with less damage than it might otherwise have incurred.
In defense of Dimon, his bank has paid back the bailout money, at a $1.7 million profit to the government, according to ProPublica. And many analysts praise Dimon for navigating the crisis better than many CEOs at large banks, by keeping capital levels higher and avoiding excessive exposure to subprime loans and questionable mortgage-backed securities. "Jamie Dimon has a well-deserved reputation as one of the best bankers in the business," says Morningstar analyst Jim Sinegal.
in italics,,, uh, yea, you think?
underlined,,,,,
in red,,,,, is confirmation that the 'journalist' that published this article, isn't worth the 30k they might make this year.
Hurry dumbocrats, send in your money to Bama, he needs it so that he can steal more from us productive folks and gift it to the banksters
Why do you care how much someone is paid?
I love watching you leftists in action. You're all for "privacy" when it comes to "the bedroom" (allegedly) but bank accounts are fair game.
Odd people, you leftists.
Why do you care how much someone is paid?
I love watching you leftists in action. You're all for "privacy" when it comes to "the bedroom" (allegedly) but bank accounts are fair game.
Odd people, you leftists.
Presumably, Dimon was able to make so much in 2010 at least in part because taxpayers handed JPMorgan Chase a $25 billion bailout package during the dark days of the financial crisis. It's likely the money helped the bank survive the meltdown with less damage than it might otherwise have incurred.
In defense of Dimon, his bank has paid back the bailout money, at a $1.7 million profit to the government, according to ProPublica. And many analysts praise Dimon for navigating the crisis better than many CEOs at large banks, by keeping capital levels higher and avoiding excessive exposure to subprime loans and questionable mortgage-backed securities. "Jamie Dimon has a well-deserved reputation as one of the best bankers in the business," says Morningstar analyst Jim Sinegal.
in italics,,, uh, yea, you think?
underlined,,,,,
in red,,,,, is confirmation that the 'journalist' that published this article, isn't worth the 30k they might make this year.
Hurry dumbocrats, send in your money to Bama, he needs it so that he can steal more from us productive folks and gift it to the banksters
Presumably, Dimon was able to make so much in 2010 at least in part because taxpayers handed JPMorgan Chase a $25 billion bailout package during the dark days of the financial crisis. It's likely the money helped the bank survive the meltdown with less damage than it might otherwise have incurred.
In defense of Dimon, his bank has paid back the bailout money, at a $1.7 million profit to the government, according to ProPublica. And many analysts praise Dimon for navigating the crisis better than many CEOs at large banks, by keeping capital levels higher and avoiding excessive exposure to subprime loans and questionable mortgage-backed securities. "Jamie Dimon has a well-deserved reputation as one of the best bankers in the business," says Morningstar analyst Jim Sinegal.
in italics,,, uh, yea, you think?
underlined,,,,,
in red,,,,, is confirmation that the 'journalist' that published this article, isn't worth the 30k they might make this year.
Hurry dumbocrats, send in your money to Bama, he needs it so that he can steal more from us productive folks and gift it to the banksters
Get the full story before you pop a woody at some evil capitalist
During his talk yesterday at the JPM investor day, the bank CEO mocked newspapers' coverage of the compensation-to-revenue ratio at banks. Apparently, he pulled the same statistic—"just for fun"—for newspapers, and found that the newspapers have a 42 percent compensation ratio, which he said was "damned outrageous," according to Bloomberg.To Dimon's credit—JPM does have one of the lowest compensation ratios out of all the banks at around 35 percent, trailing behind Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, where the ratio ranged between 52 percent to 42 percent, so the topic is something he might be able to brag about... to other banks
do I need to post more or do you understand now what he was saying about the left leaning media moguls?
Get the full story before you pop a woody at some evil capitalist
During his talk yesterday at the JPM investor day, the bank CEO mocked newspapers' coverage of the compensation-to-revenue ratio at banks. Apparently, he pulled the same statistic—"just for fun"—for newspapers, and found that the newspapers have a 42 percent compensation ratio, which he said was "damned outrageous," according to Bloomberg.To Dimon's credit—JPM does have one of the lowest compensation ratios out of all the banks at around 35 percent, trailing behind Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, where the ratio ranged between 52 percent to 42 percent, so the topic is something he might be able to brag about... to other banks
do I need to post more or do you understand now what he was saying about the left leaning media moguls?
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