JPMorgan Offers $1M to Settle Sexual Assault Claims
Written by Emily J. Thompson, Senior Investment Analyst
Updated: 4 days ago
0mins
Should l Buy JPM?
JPMorgan offered $1M to settle sexual assault and discrimination claims brought by a former investment banker before he refiled a lawsuit alleging misconduct within the bank, which JPMorgan disputes and says lacks merit following its internal investigation, The Wall Street Journal's Alexander Saeedy reports. In a statement, a JPMorgan spokesman said "We did try to reach an agreement to avoid the time and expense of litigation and to support an employee who was being threatened with the very reputational harm now unfolding. We continue to believe these allegations have no merit and new information raised as a result of the public filing only reinforces that conclusion."
Trade with 70% Backtested Accuracy
Stop guessing "Should I Buy JPM?" and start using high-conviction signals backed by rigorous historical data.
Sign up today to access powerful investing tools and make smarter, data-driven decisions.
Analyst Views on JPM
Wall Street analysts forecast JPM stock price to rise
19 Analyst Rating
11 Buy
7 Hold
1 Sell
Moderate Buy
Current: 302.100
Low
260.00
Averages
341.38
High
400.00
Current: 302.100
Low
260.00
Averages
341.38
High
400.00
About JPM
JPMorgan Chase & Co. is a financial holding company. The Company is engaged in investment banking, financial services for consumers and small businesses, commercial banking, financial transaction processing and asset management. The Company operates through three segments: Consumer & Community Banking (CCB), Commercial & Investment Bank (CIB), and Asset & Wealth Management (AWM). Its CCB segment offers products and services to consumers and small businesses through bank branches, ATMs, digital and telephone banking. Its CIB segment consists of banking and payments and markets and securities services, and offers a suite of investment banking, lending, payments, market-making, financing, custody and securities products and services to a global base of corporate and institutional clients. AWM segment offers investment and wealth management solutions. It offers multi-asset investment management solutions, retirement products and services, brokerage, custody, estate planning, and others.
About the author

Emily J. Thompson
Emily J. Thompson, a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) with 12 years in investment research, graduated with honors from the Wharton School. Specializing in industrial and technology stocks, she provides in-depth analysis for Intellectia’s earnings and market brief reports.
- Full Exit Transaction: On May 7, 2026, Resolute Wealth Strategies, LLC sold its entire stake in the J.P. Morgan U.S. Tech Leaders ETF (NASDAQ:JTEK), totaling 34,133 shares, with an estimated transaction value of approximately $2.93 million, indicating a strategic shift in the fund's investment approach.
- Position Value Change: This transaction resulted in a net position value decrease of $3.07 million, reflecting the negative impact of trading and stock price fluctuations on the fund's assets under management (AUM), with the transaction size representing 1.26% of the fund's AUM.
- Portfolio Structure Adjustment: Following this trade, Resolute Wealth's stake in JTEK dropped to 0%, whereas it previously accounted for 1.35% of AUM in the prior quarter, suggesting a reevaluation of the composition of the firm's investment portfolio.
- Market Performance Analysis: As of May 6, 2026, JTEK's share price was $101.56, up 42.4% over the past year, outperforming the S&P 500 by 11.04 percentage points, indicating strong performance in the tech sector, yet Resolute's exit may reflect a lack of confidence in the ETF's future prospects.
See More
- Holding Changes Overview: As of March 31, 2026, 42 hedge funds held JPMorgan Chase (JPM), with 12 increasing their positions and 22 decreasing them, indicating a divergence in market sentiment towards the stock.
- Share Count Growth: The total holdings of JPM by hedge funds reached 646,817,558 shares on March 31, 2026, up from 392,077,921 shares on December 31, 2025, reflecting an increase of 254,739,637 shares or approximately 64.97%, suggesting a bullish outlook on the stock.
- New and Exited Positions: In the latest 13F filings, Mark Sheptoff Financial Planning LLC exited its position in JPM common stock, while two new funds initiated positions, highlighting the dynamic nature of market participants.
- Investor Behavior Analysis: Although 13F filings only disclose long positions, analyzing the changes across multiple funds provides a more comprehensive understanding of market sentiment and potential investment opportunities, particularly in the ongoing interest in JPM.
See More
- Market Performance Analysis: As of May 11, the financial sector is down 5% year-to-date, making it the second-worst performing industry, primarily dragged down by AI's impact on profits, constrained consumer borrowing capacity, and rising inflation expectations.
- Cboe Global Markets: CBOE reported a 29% year-over-year revenue increase and a 48% rise in EPS in Q1, with its 98% market share allowing for significant profit boosts during trading volume surges, indicating strong market demand and profitability.
- Interactive Brokers: IBKR's commission revenue grew 19% to $613 million in Q1, with client accounts up 31% to 4.75 million, demonstrating sustained profitability in volatile markets, and the active IPO pipeline is expected to further drive growth.
- Goldman's Market Position: Goldman Sachs derives 74% of its revenue from Global Banking & Markets, with a 71% stock price increase over the past year, and anticipated rebounds in IPO and sponsorship activities in 2026 could further enhance its banking and trading segments.
See More
- Credit Line Reduction: The JPMorgan-led banking group slashed its credit line to FS KKR Capital Corp. by $648 million, approximately 14%, reducing the total to $4.05 billion as of May 8, indicating heightened caution towards the fund's risks and potentially prompting other lenders to exit entirely.
- KKR's Capital Injection: KKR announced a $300 million investment into the fund, with $150 million as equity and another $150 million to buy shares from investors wishing to exit, aimed at stabilizing the fund's financial situation through what it termed 'Strategic Value Enhancement Actions'.
- Declining Asset Value: FSK reported a loss of $2 per share in Q1, totaling around $560 million, with a net asset value decline of about 10%, reflecting an increase in non-performing assets, particularly from loans to software and dental service companies that have ceased interest payments.
- Rising Default Risk: The proportion of FSK loans that are no longer generating income rose to 8.1% by the end of Q1 from 5.5% at year-end, indicating a significant loss of market confidence in the fund's assets, while JPMorgan's reduction of the minimum equity floor suggests concerns over further asset depreciation.
See More
- First Yen Bond Issuance: Alphabet plans to issue yen-denominated bonds for the first time to fund artificial intelligence infrastructure, with expected issuance in the hundreds of billions of yen, indicating the company's commitment to AI investments.
- Surging Market Demand: The world's tech giants are projected to spend over $700 billion on AI infrastructure in 2023, a significant increase from $410 billion in 2025, reflecting the urgent need for funding in the industry.
- Underwriter Selection: Alphabet has mandated Mizuho, Bank of America, and Morgan Stanley for the bond issuance, indicating a strategic diversification in its financing approach to adapt to market changes.
- Increased Capital Expenditure: Last week, Alphabet raised its annual capital spending forecast by $5 billion to between $180 billion and $190 billion, demonstrating strong confidence and strategic planning for future technology investments.
See More
- Significant Deal Count: Ripple has closed ten major deals in 2026, partnering with Deutsche Bank ($1.6 trillion in assets) and Société Générale ($1.8 trillion), yet XRP has dropped 41% from its January peak of $2.42 to $1.40, indicating weak market demand for XRP.
- Stablecoin Usage Dominates: Of the ten deals, three did not involve XRPL at all, while seven utilized XRPL but only for XRP transaction fees, failing to create direct demand for XRP, which highlights Ripple's technological strength without translating into price appreciation for XRP.
- Key Partnerships Established: Ripple's collaboration with Mastercard integrates it into a $9 trillion payment network, enhancing Ripple's market credibility despite no direct XRPL integration, potentially paving the way for future transactions and partnerships.
- CLARITY Act Implications: If the CLARITY Act passes on May 14, XRP could become a legitimate settlement asset, potentially altering the current market dynamics, although until then, Ripple's deal growth contrasts sharply with the stagnation of XRP's price.
See More











