Consumer banking
Consumer banking
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Iberiabank Corp. in Lafayette, La., was initially willing to pay up to $24 million more than what it eventually agreed to pay for Florida Bank Group in Tampa.
November 13 -
WASHINGTON The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau slapped Franklin Loan Corporation with a $730,000 fine on Thursday for allegedly incentivizing loan officers to guide customers into mortgages with higher interest rates.
November 13 -
For the fifth year in a row, Quicken Loans is rated No. 1 by consumers in terms of customer satisfaction, according to a J.D. Power survey.
November 13 -
Trade groups press federal banking regulators to make the Basel III capital rule less onerous.
November 13 - Delaware
Wells Fargo plans to sell an $8.5 billion portfolio of federal student loans to Navient, the educational loan servicer that recently split off from Sallie Mae.
November 13 -
Transparency about the diversity of companies workforces can promote the hiring and advancement of women, while role models like Janet Yellen help pave the way for more female leaders.
November 13 -
First Artesia Bancshares in Artesia, N.M., has merged two of its banks.
November 13 -
Community banks, on average, increased the size of their loan portfolios by 15% in the third quarter from a year earlier, though the numbers reveal a slowdown from prior periods.
November 13 -
A suburban Chicago collection agency was the subject of a television news report after a former employee spoke out about alleged collection tactics the agency uses to target unsuspecting consumers.
November 13 -
J. Thomas Wiley will become chief executive of the company's banking unit. The move could free up Joe Evans, the company's CEO, to focus on deploying capital, which could include more acquisitions.
November 13 -
Markind Law Group, a Cherry Hill, N.J. debt collection law firm, has won a court ruling in a case brought by a consumer who argued an arbitration provision included in his sales contract for a Ford Fiesta couldn't be enforced by the firm.
November 13 -
Texas Capital Bancshares in Dallas plans to raise about $150 million by selling common stock.
November 13 -
BB&T successfully bought a number of thrifts in the aftermath of the S&L crisis. Retired BB&T CEO John Allison explains his companys success while discussing how he sold deals to leaders of target institutions. Part 3 of 5.
November 13 -
A doctor and nurse in New York were arrested and charged with illegally billing Medicare and Medicaid, according to the state's attorney general.
November 13 -
BB&T's retired CEO has a new book, "The Leadership Crisis and the Free Market Cure." Allison, who now heads the Cato Institute, still has thoughts on banking to share and criticism to sling. Here are some highlights.
November 13 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is set to go beyond industry expectations when it unveils a long-awaited proposal Thursday that would establish new requirements for prepaid cards.
November 13 -
Sturgis Bancorp in Sturgis, Mich., has agreed to buy West Michigan Savings Bank in Bangor.
November 12 -
BOK Financial in Tulsa, Okla., will close or relocate all of its branches inside grocery stores in New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas in a move it says will reduce overhead by $7 million to $8 million a year.
November 12 -
Kelly King of BB&T is an M&A trailblazer, but he isn't doing so intentionally. In announcing plans to buy Susquehanna Bancshares, King said he believes more bankers are becoming more confident maneuvering the choppy regulatory environment.
November 12 -
Richard Davis, asked during a conference about BB&T's $2.5 billion purchase of Susquehanna Bancshares, made it clear that his company has no interest in large, out-of-market acquisitions.
November 12





