Compensation
Compensation
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Wells may have tried to lure 401(k) customers into more expensive IRAs; Hensarling says he will go along with Senate version of Dodd-Frank rollback.
April 27 -
Bank of America's new policy denying loans and other services to certain gun makers came after dozens of employees lost family members or suffered other trauma related to mass shootings in the past few years, CEO Brian Moynihan said.
April 26 -
No individuals have been named in connection with the bank’s recent misdeeds, which resulted in a $1 billion fine, even as some senior leaders stand to gain from the government’s tax cut.
April 24 -
Citibank finds people need people (at least in a branch). Santander launches a new consumer app, which makes money transfers using blockchain technology. JPMorgan Chase can be an intimidating partner for fintech startups. Plus, Elizabeth Warren’s new mission.
April 20 -
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