Consumer banking
Consumer banking
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Union Bankshares in Virginia is among the ranks of banks nearing $10 billion in assets. Unlike many banks of its size, Union feels no pressure to pursue a transformational deal to offset increased regulatory costs.
June 20 -
Changing the rules in the middle of the game. Rescuing the investors who took big risks at the expense of those who behaved prudently. Undermining the credibility of the system.
June 20 -
Pacific Continental in Eugene, Ore., is planning to issue $35 million in subordinated debt that could help it fund future acquisitions.
June 20 -
Real regulatory relief for community banks and stricter oversight of the biggest financial firms are steps that can increase investor interest in new banks.
June 20 -
The bank is rolling out a new digital advice offering that pairs robo technology with financial advisers, most of whom have the CFP designation.
June 17 -
Citizens Community Bancorp in Eau Claire, Wis., has hired an investment bank to help it explore strategic options.
June 17 -
Private-equity firm GTCR is set to acquire Optimal Blue, a Texas-based mortgage tech firm, and it is planning more deals that would offer the industry ways to strip out further costs.
June 17 -
U.S. prosecutors have abandoned their case against Angelo Mozilo, a leader in selling the risky subprime mortgages that fueled the financial crisis, after a two-year quest to bring a civil suit against him.
June 17 -
Robard Williams, senior vice president with Moody's, discusses how the explosion of fintech companies 4,000 by his firm's count will help banks adapt to a digital world.
June 17 -
With the 7(a) program headed for another record year, small banks around the country, including Access National in Reston, Va., are scrambling to add capacity.
June 17 -
By teaming up, community banks are hoping they'll be able to get some leverage in hammering out tech agreements with megavendors such as FIS, Fiserv and Jack Henry.
June 17 -
Lenders grudgingly embraced some changes in FASB's new loan-loss accounting requirements, and they get more than three years to comply, but a number of implementation pitfalls still lie ahead.
June 17 -
The fintech lab backed by JPMorgan Chase and the Center for Financial Services Innovation has revealed nine winners of a recent startup competition focused on helping consumers plan for financial shocks.
June 17 -
As JPMorgan Chase gears up for the launch of the merchant-friendly Chase Pay wallet, it's taking the opportunity to freshen its approach to P-to-P mobile payments.
June 17 -
South State in South Carolina has agreed to buy Southeastern Bank Financial in Georgia, which is run by Daniel Blanton, the chairman of the American Bankers Association.
June 17 -
Lawsuit filings for all key statutes impacting debt collectors dropped in May, according to the latest numbers pulled from U.S. district courts.
June 17 -
Even though innovative underwriting criteria can help more people get credit, the risks and potential harms of mining social media data to make loan decisions might just be too great.
June 17 -
HSBC agreed to pay $1.58 billion to settle a 14-year-old shareholder lawsuit over allegations that executives of a U.S. subprime-lending business acquired by the bank misled investors.
June 17 -
Business activity for the banking sector retained its momentum in May, according to the latest reading of the Index of Banking Activity. The overall index held essentially level with a reading of 57.0 versus the 57.1 reading in April. Among the biggest differences month-over-month was a narrowing of the divergence between consumer-sensitive indicators, which retreated from exceptionally high readings, and indicators that track commercial-lending activity, which recovered from depressed levels in April.
Many respondents to the survey pointed to consumer lending as an area of opportunity and some concern. Several bankers said that they expect consumer demand for credit, which has been robust in recent months, to intensify further amid expectations of higher rates. In response, some bankers noted that they are taking steps to buttress their loan review processes. The component of the IBA that tracks consumer loan approvals registered the largest pullback of any component in May, although it did maintain an expansionary level (scores above 50 indicate expansion within a business line).
Bankers in the Western states were the most likely to report weakness in consumer lending, although this was limited mainly to energy sensitive sections of the region. Respondents in the Midwest, in contrast, reported increased momentum, with commercial lending emerging as an area of particular strength.
June 17 -
Richard Cordray, the director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, is the target of a new TV ad campaign that alleges he is courting potential funders for a run as governor of Ohio by enacting a plan that would benefit trial lawyers. The campaign appears to be the work of Lincoln Strategy Group, a political strategy firm in Phoenix with ties to Republicans.
June 16




