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Crypto pain deepens, credit union merger is official and more in banking news this week.
January 13 -
The New York bank, which recorded an 8% increase in expenses last year, projects that they will rise by 5% in 2023. Other megabanks are also contending with higher costs.
January 13 -
Some Affirm customers reported duplicate charges this week to their bank accounts for Affirm's buy now/pay later loans. The San Francisco-based fintech on Friday said it's resolved the problem.
January 13 -
Steve Kenny, who has been with the institution for more than 35 years and at the helm for roughly 13 years, stepped down from his leadership roles on Jan. 9.
January 13 -
The fintech is also relying more heavily on its bank charter as rising interest rates make selling loans to investors more challenging.
January 13 -
Despite the layoffs across the finance industry, there were no signs of a staffing pullback in JPMorgan Chase or Bank of America's fourth-quarter results. Wells Fargo's headcount dropped to 238,698 from 249,435 a year earlier
January 13 -
JPMorgan Chase Chief Executive Jamie Dimon called the firm's botched acquisition of the college financial-planning website Frank "a huge mistake" and vowed to share takeaways at a later date.
January 13 -
Regulators must not choke off lending at a time when banks are well positioned to help ease the blow of an economic downturn.
January 13
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Net interest income rose 29% in the fourth quarter on higher rates and loan growth, though the increase was smaller than forecast. Trading revenue soared 27%.
January 13 -
Citigroup's fixed-income traders turned in a record-setting finale to 2022 as the bank, under pressure to improve returns, braced itself for a less certain economy.
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