Daniel Pinto will retire in 2026 while Jennifer Piepszak takes on the role of COO—and has also taking herself out of the running for CEO.
Jamie Dimon's "hit by the bus" heir, Daniel Pinto, is retiring. The incoming chief operating officer, Jennifer Piepszak, doesn't want the CEO role.
JPMorgan Chase said Tuesday that Chief Operating Officer and President Daniel Pinto will step down from those roles in the coming months, setting off an executive shuffle with implications for succession planning for CEO Jamie Dimon.
Jennifer Piepszak will become chief operating officer of JPMorgan, and said she would not seek the chief executive’s job. The current C.O.O., Daniel Pinto, plans to retire.
Piepszak has signaled that she doesn’t want to take the top job at the bank, people close to her said
The executive shuffle is the latest twist in the long-running question of who will succeed Jamie Dimon, the longest-serving major US bank CEO.
Dimon was benchmarked not only on the performance of the Wall Street giant, but the board's options for his successor.
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has held the top spot at the largest U.S. bank by assets for almost two decades, making him the longest-serving CEO on Wall Street today. And the bank just announced his leading successor’s own retirement.
Jamie Dimon said there's a running list of executives who could replace him as CEO of JPMorgan. The comments followed the latest leadership reshuffle.
Jamie Dimon agreed Wednesday with an analyst's assessment that his "base case" for stepping down as JPMorgan Chase CEO is a few years from now.
The Kirchner Museum in Davos is famed for showcasing expressionist artworks, but on Wednesday night it was best-known for where Jamie Dimon was throwing a big party.
Two senior JPMorgan executives, Daniel Pinto and Jennifer Piepszak, have seemingly withdrawn from the running to take over the top job from Jamie Dimon. Two top contenders for the CEO job at ...