JPMorgan Chase and its subsidiary J.P. Morgan Securities face a proposed class-action lawsuit over interest payments on clients’ uninvested cash.
The complaint, filed by Illinois resident Dan Bodea, claims that J.P. Morgan Securities regularly swept clients’ uninvested cash into accounts at JPMorgan Chase that offered "unreasonably low" interest rates, allowing the company to benefit from inexpensive access to those funds.
JPMorgan has chosen not to comment on the lawsuit.
This case adds to a growing list of class actions targeting brokerage firms for their cash-sweep programs. Previously, similar actions have been filed against Ameriprise, LPL Financial, Morgan Stanley, UBS, and Wells Fargo.
Regulators, including the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), have also taken notice. Both Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo have acknowledged responding to SEC inquiries regarding their cash-sweep practices.
The complaint against JPMorgan asserts that the firm misled clients about the nature of its cash-sweep program, alleging that the company used it to “generate substantial revenue from client funds while offering only a minimal share of those earnings to the clients.”
The plaintiff argues that JPMorgan's practices constitute a breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract, and unjust enrichment, among other allegations.
The lawsuit seeks damages, interest, and a court order to halt JPMorgan's current practices.
More Articles
GeoWealth’s UMA Platform Solves Private Markets’ Biggest Infrastructure Problem
GeoWealth is transforming wealth management by seamlessly integrating private and public markets into a single unified platform. Its UMA technology aims to solve the operational complexity of combining illiquid investments with daily portfolio management—to deliver institutional-grade sophistication with boutique-level customization. Backed by BlackRock, Goldman Sachs, and Apollo, GeoWealth enables RIAs to offer clients diversification through custom model portfolios, automated rebalancing, tax optimization, and scalable private markets access without sacrificing brand identity or operational efficiency.
Rethinking High Yield: The John Hancock High Yield ETF (JHHY) for Reclaiming Forfeited Returns
The John Hancock High Yield ETF (JHHY) from Manulife John Hancock Investments breaks traditional active vs. passive trade-offs with a dual approach: expressing sector views through liquid bonds while targeting opportunistic credit plays. Subadvisor Marathon Asset Management’s 20+ years of sector expertise drives monthly rebalancing, aiming for full high yield returns with benchmarked risk characteristics and low tracking error.