Compensation
Compensation
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United FCU names new chief financial officer, two credit unions appoint new operations heads and more upwardly mobile executives.
April 17 -
Sen. Elizabeth Warren is struggling to get data that shows how bad sexual harassment might be on Wall Street.
April 17 -
Lawmakers should not toss out an agency rule aimed at curbing auto dealer markups that adversely impact borrowers of color.
April 17 -
Gary Shook, who led Middleburg Financial before its sale to Access National, has become president of Blue Ridge's bank.
April 16 -
Amber Baldet is exiting JPMorgan Chase to start her own venture, and another female executive is taking charge of the blockchain effort. BofA makes major progress on digital mortgages and gets gun-shy after Parkland. Plus, GM’s one-sentence dress code.
April 13 -
An employee at Jeanne D'Arc Credit Union who recently completed the CU's "Infant at Work" program looks back on the process and shares insights on how other credit unions can help working mothers.
April 13 -
The company will add a representative of Stilwell Group to its board. The investment firm, which has long criticized HopFed's leadership and strategy, agreed to support the company's recommendations at future annual meetings.
April 12 -
Evelyn Canterbury is retiring from the Ohio-based CU after having been appointed CEO in 1982. The credit union's CFO, Paula Heitger, took the helm April 1.
April 12 -
It's not enough to say you provide excellent service. You have to define what it is in a concrete, measurable way to live up to that promise. Take these steps to do just that.
April 10 -
From awards to promotions, appointments and special honors, here's how credit union professionals are making an impact.
April 10 -
The deal for Retirement Plan Services, which provides recordkeeping for employers nationally, is NBT's fourth acquisition of a retirement services firm since 2015.
April 6 -
Millennium Bank in Tennessee has quickened approval times on loan applications by using software that frees lenders from repetitive, manual tasks. The result: Loan balances have increased by more than 50% in less than two years.
April 5 -
In addition to his highly publicized comments on trade and other political issues, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase used his annual letter to underscore the importance of job training for low-wage workers and call attention to an FDIC proposal that encourages banks to hire workers who have been convicted of minor crimes.
April 5 -
Traditional financial institutions would gain from adopting the innovative, consumer-focused mindset Amazon promotes. Hiring executives away from the e-commerce giant could help.
April 5 -
The San Francisco Fed chief, an economist, is seen as a complement to Fed chair Powell; the proposal would make it easier for banks to comply with the law.
April 4 -
A trio of operations executives move up the ladder at Golden 1, new inductees to Hall of Leaders and more new hires, promotions and special recognition.
April 3 -
The agency would be subject to congressional and White House oversight; American customers will be able to send money to 200 countries.
April 3 -
U.S. banks lag the technology, telecommunications and energy sectors in what they pay employees, according to new data. The gap suggests that the industry may not be the acting aggressively enough to remake itself for the digital age.
March 30 -
Talk about a #MaleFail: how shining a light on harassment could have unintended consequences for women in financial services. The New York Fed is dealing with a backlash of its own. Chief marketing officers like Citi’s Jennifer Breithaupt are playing an important role in product development. Also, new initiatives target bias on Slack and in Shakespeare.
March 30 -
Several credit unions make key hires at the "chief" level in finance, marketing, business development and more.
March 29