The front of one of the JPMorgan Chase & Co. buildings is shown during the annual meeting Tuesday, May 21, 2013, in Tampa, Fla. It's a pivotal day for Jamie Dimon, head of the country's biggest bank, his shareholders will vote whether to strip him of his role as bank chairman. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)
The front of one of the JPMorgan Chase & Co. buildings is shown during the annual meeting Tuesday, May 21, 2013, in Tampa, Fla. It's a pivotal day for Jamie Dimon, head of the country's biggest bank, his shareholders will vote whether to strip him of his role as bank chairman. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)
Law enforcement stand guard as stockholders arrive for the JPMorgan annual meeting Tuesday, May 21, 2013, in Tampa, Fla. Jamie Dimon, the chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, said Tuesday that last year's $6 billion trading loss had been expensive and "extremely embarrassing" but he also asked shareholders not to fixate on the issue. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara) (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)
FILE - In this Wednesday, June 13, 2012, file photo, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, head of the largest bank in the United States, testifies before the Senate Banking Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington. Dimon, chairman and CEO of the biggest U.S. bank, faces a key test this week: His shareholders are voting on whether to let him keep both jobs. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) ? Jamie Dimon, the CEO and chairman of JPMorgan Chase, easily survived a vote Tuesday that would have called on him to give up his role as chairman of the nation's largest bank. But shareholders sent a message that the bank needs better oversight by giving only narrow approval to three of the bank's board members.
It was a mixed verdict in a closely watched test of corporate governance at U.S. companies. Dimon emerged in a stronger position after the proposal to split his roles won just 32 percent of the shareholder vote, less than the 40 percent a similar proposal got last year.
But the limited support for the three directors came as a rebuke of the bank following a surprise $6 billion trading loss JPMorgan had suffered last year. Prominent shareholder advisory firms had urged JPMorgan shareholders to withhold their support for those directors, who served on the bank's risk policy committee at the time of the loss.
JPMorgan was an unusually strong company to be targeted by shareholder activists. It has been turning in record profits and its stock price is at a 12-year high. JPMorgan's stock rose 73 cents to $53.02 after Dimon survived the shareholder vote.
Dimon has been widely praised for his astute stewardship of the bank through the 2008 financial crisis, though his reputation has been tarnished since the trading loss, which seems to have caught him flat-footed, came to light.
Dimon, speaking after the vote, said the bank was taking the feedback from the bank's shareholders "very seriously."
The outcome was a disappointment to the shareholder groups that had lobbied to split the chairman and CEO roles. A "yes" vote would have served as a request to the bank to strip Dimon of his role as chairman of the board and have someone from outside the company do the job. Since corporate CEOs answer to their boards of directors, headed by the chairman, some think that having the roles split would result in greater accountability for the CEO.
While the chairman-CEO measure didn't succeed, shareholders expressed their discontent in other ways. Three JPMorgan board members were re-elected with less than 60 percent approval. The directors are David Cote, chairman and CEO of Honeywell; James Crown, who runs a privately owned investment company; and Ellen Futter, president of the American Museum of Natural History. The other eight directors, including Dimon, were re-elected with support of more than 90 percent.
It isn't clear if or how the board will respond to the shareholder vote. Lee Raymond, the No. 2 board member behind Dimon and the retired chairman and CEO of Exxon Mobil, said the board "will continue to review" its makeup.
Bill Patterson, executive director of the CtW Investment Group, which had lobbied both to split the CEO/chairman roles and against Cote, Crown and Futter, said he expected the three directors to step down.
"A split vote .... is a vote of no confidence," Patterson said.
But Lawrence Hamermesh, director of the Widener Institute of Delaware Corporate and Business Law, said it was unclear if JPMorgan would take action, noting that its strong stock performance would have a "remarkably calming effect" on investors. After Tuesday's gain, JPMorgan's stock is up 21 percent this year and is the highest it's been in 12 years.
While Dimon survived the call to split his roles, the shareholder proposals against the bank are another sign that corporate governance activism is gaining traction, said Brad McMillan, chief investment officer at Commonwealth Financial Network.
"Jamie Dimon is one of the best, if not the best, CEO in the world," McMillan said. "But, at the same time there have been failures under his management that suggest maybe it does make sense .... to say that we need some independent board supervision."
The shareholder meeting, held at company offices on the outskirts of Tampa, Fla., had fewer theatrics than last year's meeting, which was held just days after the trading loss was disclosed. Last year, two or three dozen protesters showed up. On Tuesday, there weren't any protesters around shortly before or after the meeting.
The meeting was held off a highway exit populated mostly by gas stations and the Florida state fairgrounds. One shareholder complained at the meeting that it took two hours to find the venue.
The atmosphere in the meeting, which lasted about an hour and 45 minutes, was largely congenial. But Dimon, Raymond and general counsel Stephen Cutler, who shared the stage at the front of a first-floor meeting room, shut down some questioners and made them adhere to three-minute time limits.
CLSA analyst Mike Mayo asked Raymond if shareholders could be assured that the board was doing its job of policing the CEO. "This is the first time that anybody has said to me that I'm not strong enough," replied Raymond, who is 74.
Although JPMorgan has been turning in record earnings, it's also facing regulatory investigations and lawsuits, not only over the trading loss but also other practices including how it handles foreclosures.
Father Seamus Finn, from the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, said Dimon brushed over questions on crucial issues like allegations about manipulating a key interest rate known as Libor.
"We didn't get answers to any questions," Finn said after the meeting. "He always says, 'We have the deepest capital markets in the world.' I don't disagree with him. But Libor and the London whale happened with the deepest capital markets in the world."
Several shareholders also asked why the shareholder groups that backed splitting the chairman and CEO roles stopped getting access to the vote counts as they came in, even though JPMorgan got frequent updates. The New York Times reported that the change followed a request from the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, Wall Street's main lobbying group.
"All of a sudden we were shut down," said Michael Garland, from the New York City Comptroller's Office, which had supported splitting the roles.
Cutler wouldn't comment about access to the vote count. Dimon, asked at the meeting by the AFSCME union group, which made the chairman/CEO proposal, wouldn't comment about how much the bank contributes to SIFMA.
Dimon called the trading loss "extremely embarrassing." He promised that the bank was overhauling priorities and fixing practices that regulators were concerned about.
"I can't tell you we don't make mistakes, I can't tell you there's not a bad apple among them," he said. "But we try to fix our problems and move on."
In the previous six annual meetings where Dimon has been both chairman and CEO, shareholders have been asked about separating the roles four times. Last year marked the highest level of votes in favor . In 2007 and 2008, only about 15 percent of shareholders voted for similar measures.
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AP reporters Steve Rothwell, Tamara Lush and photographer Chris O'Meara contributed.
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