Consumer banking
Consumer banking
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The Department of Justice and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's joint action against GE Capital Retail Bank, which recently changed its name, stems from alleged discrimination against Hispanics and marketing of add-on products.
June 19 -
The company is suing Basswood Capital, claiming the activist hedge fund unlawfully accumulated a large stake by violating a confidentiality agreement. It also claims that Basswood's meddling resulted in a subpar capital raise last month.
June 19 -
Former CFPB honcho Richard Hackett is leading industry-funded studies that probe the limitations of the bureau's own research.
June 19 -
The Federal Housing Administration has issued guidance to lenders to prevent deceptive marketing of reverse mortgages to seniors.
June 19 -
Chesapeake Bank & Trust in Chestertown, Md., has begun searching for a new chief executive.
June 19 -
PNC first tested one of the small, temporary branches loaded with technology in Atlanta, and Georgia chief Eddie Meyers wants to bring to bring back more as part of a diverse branching strategy that balances personal service and efficiency.
June 19 -
Union Savings Bank in Ridgefield, Conn., kept sponsoring its local symphony even during the recession when a lot of businesses cut back on giving to the arts.
June 19 -
The nonperforming residential mortgage market is hot, and may be getting a little too hot, with bidding extremely competitive, loan sales advisors say.
June 19 -
Hovde Group in Chicago has hired two former Sandler O'Neill research analysts to lead its equity research group.
June 19 -
Women are losing ground in their fight to diversify the industrys C-suites. Its easy to see why, and a hard trend to reverse.
June 19 -
Higher-education collection agency ConServe, regularly named a top performing company by the U.S. Department of Education, is expanding in Western New York.
June 19 -
OmniAmerican (OABC) had a good problem earlier this year: competing offers from eager buyers. The Texas bank, which accepted a slightly smaller price from Southside Bancshares (SBSI), explained its reasoning in a regulatory filing. Here are the highlights.
June 19 -
Just because mortgage lenders are reducing credit score cutoffs doesn't mean they are recklessly increasing their risk exposure. The relationship between credit scores and borrowers' probability of default changes over time.
June 19 -
Potential bidders for one of the largest blocks of bitcoins ever sold said they are irked after the U.S. government accidentally outed their names in an e-mail.
June 19 - Illinois
Melissa Bean, a former three-term member of Congress, has been named chair of JPMorgan Chase's (JPM) Midwest business.
June 19 -
Popular Inc. (BPOP) in San Juan, Puerto Rico, has received regulatory approval to exit the Troubled Asset Relief Program.
June 19 -
The Texas-based company, owned and operated by a husband and wife, agreed to a $2.35 million penalty to settle charges it lied to consumer reporting agencies and charged consumers fees before providing any services.
June 19 -
Financial Services Roundtable CEO Tim Pawlenty discusses how banks can better sell themselves to new, young professionals, and how financial services firms are going to increasingly resemble technology companies.
June 19 -
Chemical Financial (CHFC) in Midland, Mich., expects to raise $70 million through the sale of common stock.
June 18 -
The Federal Housing Administration is on better financial footing thanks to an expected $418 million payment from SunTrust in a settlement resolving claims that the bank originated defective loans.
June 18




