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Wall Street JournalIncentives dropped: Wells Fargo said it will stop offering bonuses to its securities brokers for urging customers to take out loans, including mortgages, securities-backed loans and other consumer lines of credit. "Such bonuses usually come in the form of deferred compensation and can add several thousand dollars to a broker's annual pay," the Journal said. Erik Karanik, a managing director at Wells Fargo Advisors, said the move brings the brokerage unit in line with the rest of the bank, which has changed its sales incentives in the wake of the phony accounts scandal.
December 16 -
The chip card migration is drawing more attention to card not present fraud. Account takeover risk is also on the rise.
December 16
LexisNexis -
A startup aims to highlight the social impact that banks have to allow easier vetting by prospective customers; community banks like Jill Castilla's are getting income from being tech vendors; and Amex is making its parental leave policies better next year, in a move that just might be an emerging trend. Plus, Wonder Woman loses her U.N. job because of the way she dresses.
December 15
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It is not a clear-cut statement to say Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac need more capital, and it detracts from the real debate over long-term housing finance reform.
December 15 -
The National Credit Union Administration rule expanding member business lending introduces new risks and lacks legal basis.
December 15
Calvert Advisors LLC -
Receiving Wide Coverage ...Confirmed: As expected, Goldman Sachs named David Solomon and Harvey Schwartz as presidents and co-COOs to replace Gary Cohn, who is leaving to join the Trump administration. The naming of two co-presidents to replace Cohn "raises questions about the structure and strategic direction of the company," the Financial Times says, and suggests "a return to a traditional structure that pits an executive from the trading side of the business against one from investment banking." While the New York Times suggests it's "a new generation."
December 15 -
In response to a series of cyber bank thefts, Swift has developed new guidance. It's a necessary first step, though banks for now are still left to fend for themselves.
December 15
Trusona -
A legislative proposal would expand Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's use of specially-created debt securities to share their risk with private investors, but such risk transfer deals are not a replacement for core capital.
December 14
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Banks should embrace artificial intelligence so that they can more easily navigate policy shifts that will affect their compliance resources and processes.
December 14
The Rudin Group -
Receiving Wide Coverage ...Nixed: U.S. banking regulators rejected Wells Fargo's revised living will as inadequate and imposed new sanctions on the bank: preventing it from setting up overseas entities and buying nonbank companies. Wells was one of five big banks – the others were JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Bank of New York Mellon and State Street – whose living will plans were rejected last April; Wells was the only one whose revision did not pass muster. The bank has until March 31 to submit a third plan; if that one is also rejected, the bank could be hit with more sanctions, including higher capital requirements. "This the first time that regulators have imposed penalties since the country's biggest banks were required to submit 'living wills' starting in 2012," the Wall Street Journal notes. Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, New York Times, Washington Post, American Banker
December 14