Consumer banking
Consumer banking
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FORT WAYNE, Ind. – Three Rivers FCU plans to spend $15 million to expand and remodel its headquarters.
February 20 -
Is the right way to hold banks accountable for servicing errors to require them to disgorge funds to borrowers who themselves may have been equally complicit in the process of helping to create mortgage fraud?
February 20 -
There is an iconic photo from the 1930s showing Richard Whitney, the former president of the New York Stock Exchange, being led off towards jail in his elegant suit. (He had stolen from the NYSE pension fund.) Sending him to jail didn't alleviate the Depression, but I suppose it gave many people a nice, warm feeling.
February 20 -
A U.S. District Court in Ohio has given preliminary approval to a class-action settlement for unlawful collection practices against law firm Kaufman & Florence, based in Lebanon, Ohio.
February 20 -
FORT WAYNE, Ind. -- Three Rivers FCU plans to spend $15 million to expand and remodel its headquarters.
February 19 -
Provident New York Bancorp in Montebello said in a shelf registration that it may raise up to $75 million through the sale of various securities.
February 17 -
PNC Financial Services Group Inc. announced a management shuffle Friday, stripping the president title from Joseph Guyaux while making him a senior vice chairman and chief risk officer.
February 17 -
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February 17 -
Never mind the shadow inventory of homes ultimately destined for foreclosure. By some lights, the broader excess stock of housing – both for rent and for sale – is manageable, and grounds for a bull case on construction, and maybe construction lending.
February 17 -
Merchant litigation over credit card interchange seems increasingly likely to end in a settlement, leaving observers at a payments conference this week to speculate about its final impact.
February 17 -
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency has entered into an agreement with American National Bank in Oakland Park, Fla., after finding "unsafe or unsound banking practices relating to credit risk."
February 17 -
American Express is dangling another lure to hook its small-business cardholders on social media as a promotional channel: $100 worth of Twitter advertising.
February 17 -
NetSpend posted solid fourth-quarter results on Thursday, as the prepaid card company bulked up its retail and banking partnerships and weathered increased scrutiny of its industry.
February 17 -
The prospect for principal reductions as a mortgage modification alternative has never looked as promising as it has with a number of important housing announcements over the last few weeks. The Federal Reserve's housing white paper, for instance, highlighted the need for more attention on principal reduction modifications, and it was featured again in the president's housing plan.
February 17 -
First Niagara Financial Group Inc. expects to close 35 branches after it completes its acquisition of HSBC Holdings Plc's branches in mid-May.
February 17 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's plan to begin supervising debt collectors and credit reporting firms could prove troublesome to banks.
February 17 -
Wells Fargo & Co. is reorganizing the structure for its insurance brokerage and consulting division from 15 regional offices to seven regions with roughly 160 local offices.
February 17 -
A bailout-era program that offers unlimited deposit insurance on business transaction accounts is set to expire at the end of this year. Some argue that the Transaction Account Guarantee Program has run its course, but many community bankers fear that if it is eliminated large depositors will move their money to megabanks seen as too big to fail.
February 17 -
Two private equity investors have agreed to buy TransUnion.
February 17



