- 1915: Banca d’Italia opens its first dollar account with the Guaranty Trust Company of New York.
- 1915: J.P. Morgan & Co. participates in a US$25 million loan for the Italian government which is co-headed by Guaranty Trust Company of New York.
- 1925: J.P. Morgan leads a syndicate offering for US$100 million for the Kingdom of Italy.
- 1927: Italian government confers on J.P. Morgan, Jr. (“Jack”) the Royal Order of the Crown of Italy for his help in stabilizing the Italian lira.
- 1928: Chase National Bank opens a representative office in Rome. It closes during World War II and reopens in 1947.
- 1955-1961: Manufacturers Trust Company opens a representative office in Rome in 1955, and in 1961 Morgan Guaranty Trust Company opens a representative office in Rome.
- 1967: Morgan Guaranty acquires a majority interest in Banca Vonwiller, a prominent private bank in Milan. The Milan bank is renamed Banca Morgan Vonwiller.
- 1969-1970: Chase Manhattan Bank opens a full-service branch in Milan, and in 1970 The First National Bank of Chicago opens a full-service branch in Milan.
- 1971: Chase Manhattan Bank opens a full-service branch in Rome, located in the Palazzo Italia. Chase then opens a full-service branch in Bari.
- 1977: Morgan Guaranty sells its interest in Banca Morgan Vonwiller in late 1976 and opens a banking office in Milan in mid-1977.
- 1978: Morgan Guaranty opens a branch office in Rome and appoints an Italian management team to lead its operations.
- 1979: Manufacturers Hanover acts as manager for a US$450 million syndicate loan for Ente Nazionale per l’Energia Elettrica, Italy’s government-owned electric utility. This is the largest financing ever arranged for an Italian borrower in the U.S. syndicated market.
- 1990: J.P. Morgan becomes the first foreign primary dealer in Italy’s bond market.
- 1992: J.P. Morgan establishes its private banking business in Milan.
- 2016: The firm is the number one international bookrunner for the highest number of IPOs for Italy in the past five years, including the IPOs for Salvatore Ferragamo, Moncler, Ferrari, and Technogym.