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A spire is a tapering conical or pyramidal structure on the top of a building, often a skyscraper or a church tower. Etymologically, the word is derived from the Old English word spir, meaning a sprout, shoot, or stalk of grass.

Currently, the largest spire to be part of the architecture of another building is the one mounted on the recently completed Q1 residential tower on the Gold Coast in Australia.

Symbolically, spires have two functions. Traditionally, one has been to proclaim a martial power of religion. A spire, with its reminiscence of the spear point, gives the impression of strength. The second is to reach up toward the skies. The celestial and hopeful gesture of the spire is one reason for its association with religious buildings. A spire on a church or cathedral is not just a symbol of piety, but is often seen as a symbol of the wealth and prestige of the order, or patron who commissioned the building.

As an architectural ornament, spires are most consistently found on Christian churches, where they replace the steeple. Although any denomination may choose to use a spire instead of a steeple, the lack of a cross on the structure is more common in Roman Catholic and other pre-Reformation churches. The battlements of cathedrals featured multiple spires in the Gothic style (in imitation of the secular military fortress).

Spires also occur commonly and notably as solo structures, in the way that obelisks are used. The Modernist movements of the 20th century began to build office towers in the form of free-standing spires. Some famous buildings, such as the Space Needle in Seattle, Washington, use the spire as a testimony of civic power and hope; this example also references Seattle's participation in aerospace. The 1,776-foot (541-m) One World Trade Center building at Ground Zero in New York City is built with a spire, the height of which (being a permanent structure and not just an antenna) puts the building over the mark for the tallest building in the United States. Without the spire, the Willis Tower would still hold the title for tallest building in the US.

A spire declared the presence of the gothic church at a distance and advertised its connection to heaven. The tall, slender pyramidal twelfth-century spire on the south tower Chartres Catedral is one of the earliest spires. Openwork spires were an astounding architectural innovation, beginning with the early fourteenth-century spire at Freiburg Minster, in which the pierced stonework was held together by iron cramps. The openwork spire, according to Robert Bork, represents a "radical but logical extension of the Gothic tendency towards skeletal structure." The organic skeleton of Antoni Gaudi's phenomenal spires at the Sagrada Família in Barcelona represent an outgrowth of this Gothic tendency. Designed and begun by Gaudi in 1884, they were not completed until the 20th century.

In England, "spire" immediately brings to mind Salisbury Cathedral. Its 403-foot (123-m) spire, built between 1320 and 1380, is one of the tallest of the period anywhere in the world. A similar but slightly smaller spire was built at Leighton Buzzard in Bedfordshire, England, which indicates the popularity of the spire spreading across the country during this period. We will never know the true popularity of the medieval spire, as many more collapsed within a few years of building than ever survived to be recorded. In the United Kingdom spires generally tend to be reserved for ecclesiastical building, with the exception to this rule being the spire at Burghley House, built for Elizabeth I's Lord Chancellor in 1585.

In the early Renaissance the spire was not restricted to the United Kingdom: the fashion spread across Europe. After the destruction of the 135 m tall spire of the St. Lambert's Cathedral, Liège in the 19th century, the 123 m spire of Antwerp is the tallest ecclesiastical structure in the low countries . Between 1221 and 1457 richly decorated open spires were built for the Cathedral of Burgos in Spain while at Ulm Cathedral in Germany the 529-foot (161-m) spire built in the imported French Gothic style between 1377 and 1417 ultimately failed.

The Italians never really embraced the spire as an architectural feature, preferring the classical styles. The gothic style was a feature of Germanic northern Europe and was never to the Italian taste, and the few gothic buildings in Italy always seem incongruous.

The blend of the classical styles with a spire occurred much later. In 1822, in London, John Nash built All Souls' Church, Langham Place, a circular classical temple, with Ionic columns surmounted by a spire supported by Corinthian columns. Whether this is a happy marriage of styles or a rough admixture is a question of individual taste.

During the 19th century the Gothic revival knew no bounds. With advances in technology, steel production, and building techniques the spire enjoyed an unprecedented surge through architecture, Cologne Cathedral's famous spires, designed centuries earlier, were finally completed in this era.

Spires have never really fallen out of fashion. In the twentieth century reinforced concrete offered new possibilities for openwork spires.

Q reports

Period Date Adjusted Actuals EPS GAAP EPS

Ratings

2016-03-29 Boost Price Target JPMorgan Chase & Co. Underweight $63.00 to $65.00
2016-01-12 Downgrade Morgan Stanley Equal Weight to Underweight $59.00
2016-01-04 Downgrade RBC Capital Outperform to Sector Perform $57.00 to $63.00
2015-10-20 Downgrade Stifel Nicolaus Buy to Hold
2015-06-25 Downgrade JPMorgan Chase & Co. Neutral to Underweight $55.00 to $52.00
2015-02-27 Initiated Coverage RBC Capital Outperform $57.00
2015-02-05 Reiterated Rating Credit Suisse Outperform $59.00
2014-12-17 Initiated Coverage Credit Suisse Outperform $57.00
2014-12-09 Boost Price Target JPMorgan Chase & Co. Neutral $51.00 to $54.00
2014-10-17 Initiated Coverage JPMorgan Chase & Co. Overweight to Neutral $51.00
2014-06-16 Upgrade Hilliard Lyons Neutral to Buy
2014-04-08 Upgrade Stifel Hold to Buy $50
2014-04-08 Upgrade Stifel Nicolaus Hold to Buy $50.00
2013-11-27 Upgrade Hilliard Lyons Underperform to Neutral
2008-08-28 Downgrade Edward Jones Hold to Sell
1970-01-01
2016-03-29 Boost Price Target JPMorgan Chase & Co. Underweight $63.00 to $65.00
2016-01-12 Downgrade Morgan Stanley Equal Weight to Underweight $59.00
2016-01-04 Downgrade RBC Capital Outperform to Sector Perform $57.00 to $63.00
2015-10-20 Downgrade Stifel Nicolaus Buy to Hold
2015-06-25 Downgrade JPMorgan Chase & Co. Neutral to Underweight $55.00 to $52.00

There is presents forecasts of rating agencies and recommendations for investors about this ticker

Funds

Major Shareholders

Name Relationship Total Shares Holding stocks
YAEGER DOUGLAS H Chairman, President & CEO 0.25%  (106674) LG / OGS /
Sitherwood Suzanne President 0.24%  (102787) LG /
Darrell Mark C General Counsel 0.12%  (49998) LG /
Lindsey Steven L Exec Vice President & COO 0.08%  (36183) LG /
SPOTANSKI MICHAEL R Sr. Vice President 0.07%  (31132) LG /
WALTERMIRE MARK D Chief Financial Officer 0.06%  (27032) LG /
VAN LOKEREN MARY ANN 0.06%  (25025) LG / MAS /
Rasche Steven P Vice President 0.06%  (24978) LG /
Geiselhart Michael C Vice President 0.05%  (23522) LG /
GLOTZBACH EDWARD L 0.05%  (23505) LG / PRFT /
MARITZ W STEHPEN 0.05%  (19690) LG /
Leness Anthony V 0.05%  (19650) LG /
SKAU RICHARD A Sr. Vice President 0.04%  (18279) LG /
Newberry Brenda D 0.04%  (17890) EFSC / LG /
Jaskowiak Scott E President, LER 0.04%  (17209) LG /
NASSER WILLIAM E 0.04%  (16600) LG /
STUPP JOHN P JR 0.04%  (15690) ATRI / LG /
KULLMAN MARY C Chief Governance Officer 0.03%  (13568) LG /
DONALD ARNOLD W 0.03%  (13250) BAC / CCK / CCL / CUK / LG / ODC /
Dowdy Larry Craig Senior Vice President 0.03%  (12853) LG /
Mathews Steven F Vice President 0.02%  (9504) LG /
PENDERGAST MICHAEL C Vice President 0.02%  (8704) LG /
FALLERT JAMES A Controller 0.02%  (8404) LG /
Abernathy David P Vice President 0.02%  (7578) LG /
Fogarty Maria V. 0.02%  (7040) LG /
BORER MARK A 0.02%  (7040) DPM / LG /
Jones Rob L. 0.01%  (3240) LG / SHLX / SUSP /