-
Hypur, a startup seeking to help banks serve businesses deemed high compliance risks (e.g. marijuana), has recruited a former Department of Justice lawyer to help build credibility. Its signature product: a payments platform to replace cash transactions.
April 25 -
Recent prosecutions against lenders accused of usury violations will test the government's use of a law more commonly known in organized crime cases.
April 25
-
The National Credit Union Administration quietly announced Thursday a meeting to discuss a reproposed executive compensation rule one of the last and most important unfinished regulations in Dodd-Frank.
April 15 -
Banks should prepare for renewed scrutiny of their anti-money-laundering efforts in the wake of the headline-grabbing leak of the Panama Papers.
April 8
-
Sens. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., sent a letter to the Treasury Department on Thursday urging an investigation into whether any U.S. or U.S.-linked entities are associated with the Panama-based law firm Mossack Fonseca & Co. and its schemes to help wealthy individuals and businesses evade taxes and launder money.
April 7 -
As actions such as Operation Choke Point continue, the government should acknowledge the tension institutions face between serving a community and facing increased regulatory scrutiny.
April 7
-
If you're ever wondered about the scope of risks facing your financial institution from "insiders" potentially involved in shell company dealings, the Panama Papers provide some insight.
April 6
-
Banking industry representatives immediately raised significant questions about Donald Trump's plan to block remittances to Mexico, including the appropriateness of using financial institutions as a tool to carry out immigration policy, as well as how the policy would be executed.
April 5 -
Model legislation in the works would give state legislatures a template for regulating virtual currency businesses. The Treasury is lobbying against clear exemptions for firms that don't control customer funds.
March 30 -
Treasury Secretary Jack Lew warned Wednesday that over using economic sanctions could saturate their potency, driving commerce away from the U.S. and threatening the U.S. dollar's status as the worlds reserve currency.
March 30 -
WASHINGTON After being forced by a court to withdraw its enforcement action against Tanzanian bank FBME, the Treasury Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network has once again finalized a rule requiring U.S. institutions to cut off ties with the bank.
March 29 -
Banks have to know a lot about their customers, who generally trust them to keep personal information secure. Who better to serve as digital identity providers in a post-password world?
March 27 -
WASHINGTON Four Democratic senators sent a letter on Thursday to federal financial regulators asking for clear guidance on how banks can serve the marijuana industry.
March 24 -
Experts see the British bank's decision to downsize its African stake as another example of money-laundering concerns and other risks prompting institutions to get out of emerging markets.
March 24 -
Comptroller of the Currency Thomas Curry's unexpected announcement this week that his agency may craft new guidelines to deal with de-risking is generating concerns from bankers instead of putting them at ease.
March 11 -
The Senate Banking Committee approved the nomination of a top Treasury official in charge of stopping terrorism financing and financial crime during an executive session on Thursday.
March 10 -
There is an urgent need for the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network to bring its process for issuing civil money penalties and cease-and-desist orders in line with the other bank regulators.
March 9
-
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is collecting data on the decision-making process of banks that detach themselves from certain business sectors or geographical regions to limit potential heightened scrutiny from regulators, a process often called "de-risking."
March 7 -
Despite billions in revenue annually, legal marijuana businesses have yet to find a solution to the industrys lack of reliable payments, banking and other financial services.
March 4
-
The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network's revocation of orders finding certain foreign banks to pose substantial money laundering risk shows the agency is trying to evade scrutiny as it pushes the banks out of business, according to observers.
March 1
