§A · Dispatch · Landing
JPMorgan Chase's Gulfstream G600 returns to Teterboro after a World Cup remote-work policy and credit-market maneuvering
If aboard, the bank's leadership would land back in New York the same week staff are allowed to work from home during the World Cup, amid fresh SEC approval for a new credit fund.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · JPMorgan Chase
JPMorgan Chase
JPMorgan Chase's Gulfstream G600, tail N601CH, was tracked flying from Buffalo Niagara International Airport to Teterboro Airport on June 23, a 47-minute hop that landed at 6:00 p.m. UTC. The aircraft had spent the previous week shuttling across the Atlantic, touching down at London Stansted, Stockholm Arlanda, and Frankfurt before returning to upstate New York.
If aboard, JPMorgan Chase would return to the New York area the same week Fortune reported that the bank is letting staff work remotely during the World Cup — a rare loosening of the in-office mandate. The timing also follows Bloomberg's June 23 report that JPMorgan Chase won SEC approval for a new interval fund offering monthly redemptions, a move that comes as the private-credit industry faces elevated withdrawal requests. CEO Jamie Dimon earlier this month warned that the next credit cycle "will be worse than people expect" (247wallst.com), making any regulatory or portfolio news material for the bank's leadership.
The Buffalo stop may have been a brief detour — the aircraft's home base is Teterboro, and the recent international itinerary suggests a return from a European business swing. JPMorgan Chase operates three Gulfstream tails for executive transport, with N601CH being the newer G600 variant designed for long-range efficiency.
Aboard the Gulfstream G600


The aircraft
End of article · celebplanes