Consumer banking
Consumer banking
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While lawsuits citing violations of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) fell in August on both a monthly and yearly comparison, Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) lawsuits are rising fast, according to data from U.S. district courts.
September 27 -
Several institutions in one of the nation's hardest-hit banking markets have shed enforcement actions, or have hired new leaders, as they attempt to stage comebacks.
September 27 -
U.S. Bancorp (USB) in Minneapolis has hired Bank of America (BAC) executive Michael Righi for two important West Coast jobs.
September 27 -
A Treasury Department program that supplies credit to small businesses spurred $1.9 billion in loans and created or saved 53,000 jobs in its first 18 months of operation, the department says.
September 27 -
The Federal Housing Administration is asking for a $1.7 billion draw from the U.S. Treasury for the end of the fiscal year, up from an earlier estimate in President Obama's April budget.
September 27 -
Expand by acquisition or through organic market penetration. The most successful banks will include both strategies in their future plans.
September 27 -
Democratic lawmakers including Senator Elizabeth Warren today demanded that eight U.S. banks produce information about agreements they may have with colleges to encourage students to use their products.
September 27 -
Because third-party processors are on the hook for losses from fraudulent transactions, they have as much interest in eliminating bad actors as anyone.
September 27 -
Investors Bancorp (ISBC) in Short Hills, N.J., and Roma Financial (ROMA) in Robbinsville, N.J., have extended the deadline for their merger while they wait for regulatory approval.
September 27 -
Two Ohio tax service store managers have been indicted on federal fraud charges related to tax returns they prepared in 2011. The tax and loan scheme cost the government more than $250,000.
September 27 -
A federal court has halted a scheme involving a non-existent money-lending service that allegedly conned more than $6 million from U.S. and Canadian consumers.
September 27 -
Hampton Roads Bankshares (HMPR) in Virginia Beach, Va., didn't have to look far to find its permanent chief financial officer.
September 26 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on Thursday denied an appeal made by several Native American tribal lenders who were seeking to block a civil investigation into their online payday lending practices.
September 26 -
The Federal Housing Administration is facing a bailout for the first time in its almost 80-year history, raising a host of fresh questions about the potential for standalone legislation to the reform the agency.
September 26 -
One PacificCoast Bancorp (OPCB) in Oakland, Calif., has received regulatory approval to acquire a controlling stake in Albina Community Bancorp (ACBC) in Portland, Ore.
September 26 -
The Federal Reserve Board has ordered SunSouth Bancshares of Dothan, Ala., to strengthen its board.
September 26 -
State and federal officials are tightening the screws on online suppliers of payday and installment loans. The question for many such lenders and the banks that handle their transactions is whether the government is out to eliminate fraud or to wipe out the industry. American Banker staffers discuss.
September 26 -
A host of regulatory issues, including new mortgage rules set to take effect in January, assures that Andy Harmening has a busy year ahead of him as the new chairman of the Consumer Bankers Association.
September 26 -
Eleven defendants, including five licensed loan originators, have been indicted for a mortgage fraud scheme that cost lenders $8 million.
September 26 -
The number of foreclosures and "seriously delinquent" loans fell to their lowest levels since the financial crisis started while 90.6% of mortgage portfolios continued to perform well. Still, the number of loans past due by less than 60 days jumped slightly.
September 26




