Eight credit union leaders will share winning strategies to "Knock Out Predatory Lenders and Improve Your Bottom Line" at the Summer PALS workshop hosted by NCUA Board Member Debbie Matz on July 7 here. And for baseball fans, the workshop includes an added bonus.To view the agenda and register for the free workshop, visit www.ncua.gov and click "PALS Workshop Registration, July 7, 2005." The workshop will take place from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Hyatt Regency on Baltimore's Inner Harbor, just a few blocks from Oriole Park at Camden Yards, where the Orioles will be hosting the Boston Red Sox. The Red Sox will be staying at the Hyatt while playing the Baltimore Orioles, and a block of tickets to the July 7 Red Sox-Orioles game has been reserved for PALS attendees. The first pitch is at 7:05 PM. PALS registrants can order Orioles tickets through Rick Webb, CEO of Atlantic Financial Federal Credit Union in Baltimore at (410) 584-7474 ext. 223, or webb
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Groups representing community banks and credit unions argue that the Department of Agriculture used a faulty process when it removed 10 lenders from its OneRD loan guarantee program
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The Kansas City bank plans to purchase St. Louis-based Nolan & Associates, adding to its investment banking advisory capabilities.
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Wise grew its net revenue 19% year over year to $2.5 billion in its fiscal 2026, aided by increased deposits, cross-border volume and spending on the Wise card. It's the latest sign that interest in cross-border payments and multicurrency accounts is heating up.
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X Money includes rudimentary functions like deposits and P2P transfers. But it's also laying groundwork for a potential move into agentic commerce and broader financial services — which analysts say is necessary for the app to thrive in a crowded market.
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Taktile's backers now include Goldman, Tiger Global and Index Ventures, lifting its total raised to $184 million since 2020.
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The Bank of International Settlements compared the recent AI investment frenzy to the canal mania of the 1830s, the British railway craze of the 1840s and the dot-com boom of the late 90s.
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