Top JPMorgan Executive In China Expected To Leave

International Business Times

Published Mar 24, 2014 01:56AM ET

Updated Mar 24, 2014 02:15AM ET

By Sneha Shankar - A top executive at the Chinese arm of JPMorgan Chase & Co. NYSE:JPM is expected to resign while a probe continues into the bank’s hiring practices in Asia, the Wall Street Journal reported Sunday, citing sources.

Fang Fang, CEO of New York-based JPMorgan's investment-banking arm in China, and the vice chairman of its investment-banking operations in Asia, has been associated with the company for almost a decade, and the bank is expected to make an internal announcement as early as Monday about Fang’s retirement, the Journal reported.

Fang, who reportedly told the bank he wanted to retire, has come under scrutiny from U.S. investigators examining whether the company or its employees violated the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which prohibits American companies from giving money or other valuable items to foreign officials in return for business.

The investigators are also looking into JPMorgan's hiring practices after it hired the son of China Everbright Group Chairman Tang Shuangning, and to examine whether the hire won the bank any assignments from the Everbright group. Fang, Tang and his son have so far not been accused of any wrongdoing, but the American bank has provided investigators with Fang's emails discussing the hiring of Tang’s son.