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JPMorgan Loses $4.4 Billion on Trades; Traders May Have Hidden Losses

JPMorgan Chase & Co, the biggest U.S. bank, said it had lost $5.8 billion in 2012 from disastrous credit bets and that traders might have tried to conceal the extent of the losses earlier this year.

JPMorgan Chase & Co, the biggest U.S. bank, said it had lost $5.8 billion in 2012 from disastrous credit bets and that traders might have tried to conceal the extent of the losses earlier this year.

Of the trading losses, $4.4 billion came in the second quarter. But the bank still generated nearly $5 billion of overall profit for the period.

JPMorgan's disclosure about traders misstating the value of their positions was the first indication that the problems with the company's bad trades may have extended beyond bad judgment about markets.

JPMorgan said it had cleaned up its Chief Investment Office, which made the bad trades, and that any problems were isolated to the group. The trades may lose another $700 million to $1.7 billion, Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon said on a conference call with investors.

The CIO became infamous in May when JPMorgan said bad derivatives bets on portfolios of corporate bonds had triggered about $2 billion of paper losses, a figure that turned into $4.4 billion of actual losses in the second quarter.

One trader in the CIO, Bruno Iksil, took big enough positions in the credit derivatives markets to earn the nickname "The London Whale." Iksil has left the bank, a source said on Friday.

Ina Drew, who headed the CIO, has also left, and offered to give back her pay for two years, said Dimon, whose pay is subject to being taken back as well.

The bank said it had moved the bad trades from the CIO, which invests some of the company's excess funds, to its investment bank. JPMorgan was one of the key inventors of credit derivatives, and its investment bank is one of the biggest traders of the product on Wall Street.

The CIO will now focus on conservative investments, JPMorgan said.

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