Consumer banking
Consumer banking
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American Express, which announced 5,400 layoffs last week, said that earnings declined in the fourth quarter in all but one of its business segments.
January 17 -
A rise in fees and loans propelled People's United Financial in the fourth quarter. The $30.3 billion-asset company said Thursday that earnings rose 44% from a year earlier, to $61.2 million.
January 17 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's new mortgage servicing rules may force some servicers to exit the business altogether or simply outsource servicing of defaulted loans to third-parties, experts said Thursday.
January 17 -
Capital One blames lower revenue, higher costs and margin trends for earnings that fell short of analysts' expectations in the fourth quarter.
January 17 -
Tighter margins. Anxious commercial customers. Fresh memories of bad risks taken. These are a few of the limitations acting on Fifth Third, BB&T, PNC and other regional banks as they try to improve on progress made last year.
January 17 -
A group's plan to open a de novo bank in southeastern Pennsylvania could open the door for more bank charters.
January 17 -
Southcoast Financial Corp. (SOCB) in Mt. Pleasant, S.C., swung to a profit in the fourth quarter thanks to improvements to its loan portfolio and a lower cost of funds.
January 17 -
Piggyback litigation often follows regulatory actions, and the laws under the CFPB's jurisdiction all but invite follow-on private lawsuits. A huge number of companies may be exposed.
January 17 -
Citigroup's disappointing fourth-quarter report included an unexpected $500 million legal reserve related to its U.S. consumer businesses, as the CFPB reviews the bank's card products.
January 17 -
The fast-growing Berkshire Bank in Pittsfield, Mass., hopes that features like community rooms with video-game systems will attract customers as it enters new markets.
January 17 -
Westamerica Bancorp. (WABC) in San Rafael, Calif., reported lower quarterly earnings as low interest rates and competition took a bite out of its bottom line.
January 17 -
Bank of America laid more of its mortgage demons to rest, and reported strong earnings from global banking and wealth management.
January 17 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was set to unleash an additional series of rules Thursday dictating how mortgage servicers interact with homeowners. The mandates are likely to come as highly unwelcome news to the industry.
January 17 -
A dissident investor has swapped out its candidate to join the board of First Financial Northwest (FFNW) in Renton, Wash.
January 17 -
More than six years after the onset of the worst U.S. real estate slump, Florida had the biggest increase in home seizures last year and the highest foreclosure rate, RealtyTrac said.
January 17 -
Bank of the Ozarks (OZRK) of Little Rock, Ark., posted a fourth-quarter profit gain despite sliding interest income, thanks in part to an acquisition that closed late in the year.
January 17 -
Suffolk Bancorp of Riverhead, N.Y., continues to reinvent its management team, this time hiring James Gay as its chief credit officer.
January 17 -
Scottrade Bank has hired a former executive at TCF Financial (TCB) to launch an equipment finance unit.
January 17 -
Commercial customers will remain hesitant to spend, and thus borrow, until lawmakers resolve the uncertainties over the budget and economy, Huntington CEO Stephen Steinour says in an outlook that juggles optimism and caution.
January 17 -
Citizens First in Bowling Green, Ky., reported higher quarterly results as improved lending offset higher expenses.
January 17




