Consumer banking
Consumer banking
-
In Pennsylvania, Montgomery County officials report they have collected more than $1.2 million in just 10 months in delinquent court fees and fines dating to 1986.
July 14 -
More small banks are engaging on social media and are finding ways to highlight their community involvement, promote their personalities and better connect with customers.
July 14 -
Doral Financial (DRL) in San Juan, Puerto Rico, has agreed to sell roughly $825 million of assets to Abbey Finance Holdings PR.
July 14 -
Independence Bancshares (IEBS) in Greenville, S.C., will need to raise more capital to fund its development of new payments platforms.
July 14 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is concerned that some mortgage brokers may be shifting to the "mini-correspondent" lender model under the mistaken belief that identifying themselves as such will automatically exempt them from consumer protection rules affecting broker compensation.
July 14 -
A recent report from the Center for Responsible Lending finds that debt settlement companies frequently fail to settle the bulk of their clients debts, leaving them in even weaker financial positions.
July 14 -
Berkshire Hills Bancorp (BHLB) in Pittsfield, Mass., and its Berkshire Bank have changed charters.
July 14 -
Consumer spending slowed in June, but remained strong in several sectors, according to First Data Corp., a global payment technology and services firm.
July 14 -
The ATM maker and bank technology provider Diebold has named Sal Mahbouba as vice president of global services.
July 14 -
First Bancshares (FBMS) in Hattiesburg, Miss., has redeemed preferred stock BCB Holding in Mobile, Ala., issued to the Treasury Department under the Troubled Asset Relief Program.
July 14 -
Northwest Bank in Boise, Idaho, has agreed to buy Regal Financial Bank in Seattle.
July 14 -
Big banks stand to lose hordes of young and dissatisfied customers to digital banking startups and tech behemoths like Google, Apple and Amazon. Community banks, on the other hand, have a more loyal base.
July 14 -
Citigroup Inc., the third-biggest U.S. bank, said second-quarter profit tumbled 96 percent on $3.7 billion in costs tied to a mortgage-bond settlement with U.S. authorities.
July 14 -
Citigroup Inc., the third-largest U.S. bank by assets, agreed to pay $7 billion in fines and consumer relief to resolve government claims that it misled investors about the quality of mortgage-backed bonds sold before the 2008 financial crisis.
July 14 -
As banks cut cross-border transfer services to emerging markets because of perceived risk, the market for remittance services opens up for digital payments startups.
July 14 -
The Bancorp (TBBK) in Wilmington, Del., is looking to sell up to $50 million in common stock.
July 11 - Florida
Two men who said they ran a payday loan brokerage in Tampa, Fla., have agreed to settle Federal Trade Commission charges that they stole hundreds of thousands of dollars from consumers' bank accounts.
July 11 -
Hanmi Financial (HAFC) in Los Angeles has sold two insurance businesses Chunha Holding in Garden Grove, Calif.
July 11 -
The San Francisco bank abandons a practice that led to more overdraft fees and drew the ire of consumer advocates.
July 11 -
Jane Thompson, former president of Wal-Mart Stores' financial services unit, has joined the board of the Center for Financial Services Innovation, a research group in Chicago that focuses on low-income consumers.
July 11



