Consumer banking
Consumer banking
-
Marlin Business Services (MRLN) in Mount Laurel, N.J., has hired a chief lending officer for its bank.
September 12 -
Umpqua Holdings (UMPQ) in Portland, Ore., has agreed to buy Sterling Financial (STSA) in Spokane, Wash.
September 12 -
Foreclosure filings fell 34 percent in the U.S. last month as first-time defaults dropped to the lowest level in almost eight years and rising home prices made it easier for distressed owners to sell, RealtyTrac said.
September 12 -
If you stop by bar Room77 in Berlin's Kreuzberg neighborhood for a beer, you can leave the euros in your wallet and instead pay with the digital currency Bitcoina growing phenomenon in Germany and other countries that are changing their views on the currency.
September 12 -
JPMorgan Chase & Co. may settle regulators' probes into the bank's credit-card debt collection practices and sales of identity-theft products as early as next week.
September 11 -
The agreement's architects contend that the pact could bring as much as $291 million to affected homeowners, but detractors say that the final tally is likely to be far lower.
September 11 -
BB&T (BBT) in Winston-Salem, N.C., has been closing branches across its network, but is planning to expand its presence in Texas by nearly 50%.
September 11 -
The $5.8 billion-asset Chemical has begun a public offering of its common stock that seeks to raise $50 million, it announced Wednesday after the market closed. All of the shares are being offered by the company.
September 11 -
Financial institutions are required to thoroughly "know" their customers and vet transactions for potential criminal connections in a way that other critical service industries are not. (Imagine an electric company quizzing its customers about what appliances they plug into the wall.) Ellen Zimiles, a former assistant U.S. attorney who now heads the global investigations and compliance practice at Navigant Consulting, explains why banks have been given special responsibilities.
September 11 -
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is urging banks to strengthen their oversight of the home appraisal process and warning them to keep an eye out for a sudden spike in delinquencies on home-equity loans.
September 11 -
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Richard Cordray sought to allay lender fears Wednesday about the agency's new mortgage rules, pledging to be flexible with companies struggling to comply by the January deadline.
September 11 -
Banks need to revamp customer service operations so unhappy consumers complain to them rather than to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, where a complaint could spark added regulatory scrutiny.
September 11 -
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is selling the last of the Citigroup (NYSE:C) stake that the U.S. government acquired during the financial crisis.
September 11 -
UMB Financial (UMBF) seeks to raise up to $242.2 million next week from a common stock offering that priced Tuesday.
September 11 -
The city of Richmond, Calif., is pushing forward with its plan to rescue underwater homeowners by buying their mortgages, and is leaving open the possibility of using eminent-domain to acquire loans that banks will not sell.
September 11 -
A federal court judge in Florida has banned the defendants behind an alleged credit card interest rate reduction scam from selling debt-relief service and telemarketing any services.
September 11 -
Craig Spengeman, the president of Peapack-Gladstone Financial's (PGC) wealth management unit, is retiring.
September 11 -
Fidelity Southern Corp. (LION) in Atlanta has redeemed the entirety of the shares it issued to the Troubled Asset Relief Program along with about a third of trust-preferred securities.
September 11 -
Patriot National Bancorp in Stamford, Conn., has appointed Christina Maier as its new chief financial officer.
September 11 -
American Express (AXP) is selling its high-end glossies to Time Inc. in order to comply with federal regulations.
September 11



