Dear Friends,
I took a major fall today and broke my wrist. As you can imagine, tonight will be hard to report.
Consider how well gold is acting with a negative cyclical influence behind it. What that means is gold is super bullish and waiting for the right time to blast off.
Respectfully yours,
Jim
Jim Sinclair’s Commentary
What OTC derivatives do not do to the international banking firms, litigation will.
JPMorgan Fighting 10,000 Lawsuits
By Lauren Tara LaCapra
NEW YORK (TheStreet) — JPMorgan Chase (JPM_) is a defendant in more than 10,000 legal proceedings and may be $4.5 billion short of reserves needed to cover those costs in a worst-case scenario, the firm said in a regulatory filing on Monday…
The New York-based bank’s legal woes range from individual actions against JPMorgan Chase to class actions with "potentially millions" of litigants to "regulatory/government investigations." The suits include common law tort and contract claims, statutory antitrust claims, securities claims and consumer protection claims, the bank said in its 10-K filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
JPMorgan is the last of the four big U.S. banks to detail some of its exposure to litigation in its annual report. While the banks didn’t say what their overall litigation reserves are, JPMorgan, Citigroup (C), Bank of America (BAC) and Wells Fargo (WFC) outlined a potential $11.2 billion shortfall in litigation reserves altogether.
Last week, Citi said it might fall $4 billion short, while BofA said it might be $1.5 billion behind legal cost reserves and Wells Fargo said it might be $1.2 billion behind.
Banks’ legal woes have gotten much attention ever since the so-called "robosigning" scandal erupted last fall. Banks made a practice of letting employees sign off on thousands of foreclosure affidavits without properly vetting the underlying information. In some cases, homes were seized and in others there is doubt over who rightly owns the property – both in terms of mortgage-bond investors and in terms of occupants.




