But like most outrage on the internet, it was unwarranted.
The screenshot, which was retweeted over 2,000 times, shows JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) was among one of the largest buyers of a bitcoin exchange traded note trading on Nasdaq's Stockholm exchange. Here's the tweet:
Immediately Twitter erupted, lambasting JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, who recently called bitcoin "a fraud" and said it was "worse than tulip bulbs," as a hypocrite. Some questioned whether Dimon, whose comments triggered a sell-off of the coin, purposely bashed the cryptocurrency so JPMorgan could "buy low."
Others wondered if Dimon would follow through on his promise to fire employees of the bank who traded the cryptocurrency. Here's one tweet:
Dimon probably won't be firing anyone, but not because he's behind some sort of bitcoin-related conspiracy. He won't be firing anyone at the bank, because the orders weren't placed by JPMorgan employees.
"They are not JPMorgan orders," a spokesman said in an email to Business Insider."These are clients purchasing third party products directly."
In other words, JPMorgan asset managers weren't buying this product for their clients. Rather, the bank's clients were using JPMorgan's pipes to buy it themselves.