NEW YORK — JPMorgan Chase & Co. may, according to a person familiar with the matter, soon pay about $2 billion to settle investigations into its dealings with Bernard Madoff, the notorious fraudster whose epic Ponzi scheme collapsed five years ago.
The payout would come as the ink is still drying on a landmark $13 billion settlement the New York company struck with state and federal authorities in late November. That settlement — the largest ever paid by a single company to the government — involved shoddy mortgage investments sold by JPMorgan, as well as by two troubled banks it acquired during the housing meltdown in 2008.
JPMorgan’s looming Madoff settlement centers on breakdowns in its compliance systems, and how the bank failed to alert U.S. authorities about suspicious activity in Madoff’s accounts at the bank. Financial institutions are required by law to have sufficient checks in place to detect questionable transactions and report them to the government.
The office of Preet Bharara, the U.S. attorney in Manhattan, and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency have been investigating JPMorgan’s dealings. JPMorgan has said in regulatory filings it is cooperating with the probes.