By Kirstin Ridley
LONDON, Jan 16 (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co has reached
an out-of-court settlement over its lawsuit against the former
boss of Bruno Iksil, the trader known as the "London Whale" for
huge bets he took that cost the bank $6.2 billion, a person
familiar with the matter said.
Javier Martin-Artajo, who was Iksil's immediate supervisor,
had been named as a defendant in a lawsuit filed at London's
High Court on Oct. 22.
JPMorgan said last July it was seeking to claw back pay from
those people it held responsible for the losses. Details of the
action against Martin-Artajo were not released.
A source familiar with the lawsuit said on Wednesday the
case against Martin-Artajo had now been settled.
Further details were not available. JPMorgan declined to
comment. Martin-Artajo's lawyer, Greg Campbell of Mishcon de
Reya, declined to comment.
Campbell said last year he was confident his client would be
cleared of wrongdoing, noting he had never attempted to conceal
the losses either directly or indirectly.
JPMorgan said in July all managers in the chief investment
office (CIO) with responsibility for the losses had left the
bank. Martin-Artajo and the former CIO head in Europe, Achilles
Macris, were among those who left, along with Iksil himself.
JPMorgan on Wednesday released a detailed report on the loss
from trading positions taken from London for the CIO. The
trades, made with credit derivatives, became too big for the
company to exit easily.
(Additional reporting by Steve Slater)
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