Lewis lost his job in September 2009 after a rash of ill-conceived acquisitions that drained cash and later, thanks to buying Countrywide and Merrill Lynch, capital - requiring a double government bailout of $45 billion and landing Lewis in legal battles over whether he lied to shareholders. His legacy has cost BofA $28 billion just to buy back dodgy mortgages before taking into account operational losses and legal costs.
Dimon's tenure has not reached that level of red ink. The bank has set aside $28 billion since 2010 to cover potential litigation costs - almost double BofA's tally - though loan repurchase costs are a fraction of that. Not dissimilar to BofA, much of JPMorgan's legal exposure came from takeovers, of Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual. Granted, the federal government was desperate for a deal in both cases - but the same could be said of Lewis's crisis deals.
Being less bad than another bank, though, is no reason for a CEO to remain in the job. Merrill's Stan O'Neal and Citigroup's Chuck Prince were both forced out of the corner office in late 2007 after announcing mortgage losses around half JPMorgan's tally of litigation costs. And Barclays' Bob Diamond was given the heave-ho after a $450 million regulatory fine related to fixing Libor.
What has made Dimon more Teflon is JPMorgan's performance. The legal reserves set aside between 2010 and 2012 cut the bank's earnings by some 20 per cent - but still left JPMorgan earning 11 percent returns on equity - far better than its big-bank peers except Wells Fargo. Even with last quarter's $340 million net loss after taking into account litigation expenses, its normalised earnings still grew five per cent, better than rivals.
As a consequence, JPMorgan shareholders have been willing to give Dimon a break. This latest settlement, however, will test their tolerance in ways that JPMorgan's board must be ready to face with a proper strategy for succession.
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