Consumer banking
Consumer banking
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A Maine bill to thwart predatory online lenders is moving to the full state legislature with the unanimous support of the state's Insurance and Financial Services Committee.
February 14 -
Bank of America Corp., the second-largest U.S. lender, is cutting 450 mortgage jobs from West Coast offices after new loans fell short of internal forecasts, two people with direct knowledge of the plans said.
February 14 -
The former bank analyst is striking out on his own after shutting down an investment firm he co-founded with banker Vernon Hill.
February 14 -
GSE regulator says Fannie and Freddie are responsible for monitoring servicers.
February 13 -
There are plenty of reasons why small banks may be reluctant to amp up their social media presence. But this week's bad weather illustrates how these platforms can provide a real value-add.
February 13 -
Douglas Biddle has succeeded Denise Portmann as CFO at Bank of the Pacific, the $705 million-asset company said in a press release Thursday.
February 13 -
First Trust in New Orleans has been freed from a written agreement with the Federal Reserve Board.
February 13 -
North Shore Bank in Peabody, Mass., has agreed to merge with Saugusbank in Saugus, Mass.
February 13 -
Peoples Financial Services in Scranton, Pa., reported a fourth-quarter loss tied to its merger with Penseco Financial Services. The $1.7 billion-asset company lost $2.8 million in the quarter, compared to Penseco's $2.7 million in profit a year earlier.
February 13 - Florida
A Tampa homeowner is suing Bank of America (BAC) and U.S. Bancorp (USB), claiming that the banks delayed processing his mortgage payments in order to earn extra interest for themselves.
February 13 -
United Bancorp in Martins Ferry, Ohio, said its chief executive is stepping aside and that his son will take over day-to-day management.
February 13 -
West Virginia's City Holding is content to have loan officers drive several hours to pursue lending opportunities rather than relying on aggressive M&A. Part of the approach is tied to lessons learned from a risky strategy that blew up on a previous management team in the 1990s.
February 13 -
Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan says its important for investors in mortgage-backed securities to receive a fair price for seized mortgages.
February 13 -
Oregon lawmakers held a public hearing Wednesday on a bill that would prevent the state's Department of Revenue from hiring private collection agencies to help collect unpaid state taxes.
February 13 -
The Credit Union National Association was recognized for its #Don'tTaxTuesday campaign, which asked supporters to tweet messages at lawmakers to protect credit unions' tax-exempt status.
February 13 -
The proposal to let the U.S. Postal Service become a bank is a hard sell, but the idea has legs for political, legal and business reasons. Here are answers to the top questions about the provocative idea.
February 13 -
The mortgage delinquency rate (the rate of borrowers 60 days or more delinquent on their mortgages) dropped below 4 percent for the first time since 2008, ending Q4 2013 at 3.85 percent, according to TransUnion's Industry Insights Report.
February 13 -
New York's banking regulator unleashed a verbal assault on nonbank servicer Ocwen Financial Wednesday, saying the company's use of technology to better handle distressed loans is "too good to be true."
February 13 -
The U.S. Postal Service, well positioned to compete with payday lenders, could redirect the $7.4 billion Americans annually spend on these types of loans back into the U.S. economy. But it would have to become a proper bank to do so.
February 13 -
Retail and financial services trade groups have launched a new partnership aimed at improving cybersecurity across both industries.
February 13



