Consumer banking
Consumer banking
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Bay Banks of Virginia in Kilmarnock has issued $7 million in subordinated debt.
June 2 -
World Acceptance in Greenville, S.C., one of the largest providers of installment loans, said that its longtime chairman and chief executive will retire in September.
June 2 -
Washington Trust Bancorp in Westerly, R.I., has agreed to buy Halsey Associates, an investment advisory firm in New Haven, Conn.
June 2 -
Deals are still getting done in California, even though water issues continue to plague the state's economy. Still, buyers are finding themselves conducting more extensive due diligence to vet the markets and loan concentrations of targets.
June 2 -
More lenders of all types are taking an interest in factoring, or buying a company's receivables, as they fight for commercial clients. But the business is forbidding for new entrants: it's dominated by a handful of large companies, with intense competition from smaller nonbanks, and is closely tied to the volatile retail-sales market.
June 2 -
After a "landmark" first-quarter driven by mortgage origination gains, Flagstar Bancorp is counting on mortgage servicing and community banking to spur future growth.
June 2 -
JPMorgan Chase is eliminating voice mail for consumer-bank employees as part of a push by the biggest U.S. lender to trim $2 billion in annual expenses.
June 2 -
Pacific Commerce Bank in Los Angeles has promoted Gail Jensen-Bigknife to chief credit officer.
June 2 -
FICO discards incomplete and old credit history information for a good reason. The solution to today's credit-access problems is not to use this unreliable data but to turn to alternative data such as the payment of everyday bills.
June 2 -
Discover Financial Services in Riverwoods, Ill., said it will double cash rewards for certain customers for a limited period, its latest effort to battle with rival issuers for new business.
June 2 -
First Resource Bank in Exton, Pa., plans to raise $6 million through a combination of common stock and subordinated debt to raise funds to redeem most of its Small Business Lending Fund preferred shares.
June 2 -
Access to credit is too tight. But new credit-scoring models could increase the number of eligible borrowers in the U.S. without weakening todays underwriting parameters.
June 2 -
A financing unit of General Electric has formed a partnership with payroll-services provider WEX to sell fuel cards to trucking companies.
June 2 -
The link between debt in collections and local conditions such as access to health insurance and housing markets is strong, according to Signe-Mary McKernan, senior fellow and Co-Director Opportunity and Ownership Initiative at the Urban Institute.
June 2 -
The U.S. Department of Education has ramped up monitoring of ITT Educational Services Inc. after the Securities and Exchange Commission filed civil fraud charges against the Indiana-based for-profit college giant and two executives, the company revealed.
June 2 -
Freedom Bank in Overland Park, Kan., has hired Drew Gibson to be its chief financial officer, the Kansas City Business Journal reported Monday.
June 1 -
City National Bank in Los Angeles will provide $350 million in loans to minority- and women-owned small businesses as part of a community lending initiative, it announced Monday.
June 1 -
New Hampshire Thrift Bancshares in Newport has changed its name to Lake Sunapee Bank Group.
June 1 -
Community banks will be able originate and sell jumbo loans with balances as high as $1.5 million under an expansion of a conduit program the Chicago Home Loan Bank has forged with Redwood Trust.
June 1 -
Banks and mortgage lenders are in the final stretch of preparing to deliver new TILA-Respa Integrated Disclosures to homebuyers starting Aug. 1. But it's not just the change of forms that is causing alarm bells. Fines could be steep, and legal liability could be even higher, for violators, while necessary technological changes are expensive, they say.
June 1



