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Millennials want mobile-first digital advice, and will invest millions on such platforms.
September 26 -
Jia Chen has spent the past two years meeting clients, speaking at industry panels and becoming the face of a resurgent market for synthetic CDOs. Along the way, she's helped establish Citigroup as its dominant player.
September 26 -
The Fearless Girl sculpture represents much to many. For Maria Vullo, superintendent of the New York State Department of Financial Services, it is a reminder of herself as a girl finding her voice and as an adult using her voice to fight for what she believes is right.
September 26
New York State Department of Financial Services -
Richard Smith has resigned from the embattled Atlanta credit reporting company and will be replaced by Paulino do Rego Barros Jr., a seven-year company veteran. Board member Mark Feidler, a former telecom executive, was named nonexecutive chairman.
September 26 -
The Michigan credit union's Passion Project gives employees the opportunity to connect with their community, as well.
September 26 -
The accounting firm says only a "very few" clients were affected by the cyberattack; former CEO Mike Cagney's wife, the lender's chief tech officer, is leaving.
September 26 -
Welcome to the PaymentsSource Morning Briefing, delivered daily. The information you need to start your day, including top headlines from PaymentsSource and around the Web. Today: Swarovski supports Masterpass payments; Fitbit debuts payments app; Pinterest collaborates with Target for photo shopping; Aussie banks drop ATM fees.
September 26 -
Theodora Lau, director of market innovation at AARP, says financial companies and fintechs should consider the over-50 crowd in their app designs.
September 26 -
Until recently, many of the fraud prevention tactics employed by organizations have added to, not reduced, customer friction across the buying cycle, writes Michael Lynch, chief strategy officer at InAuth.
September 26
InAuth -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s final rule on arbitration clauses may be bad news for alleged corporate wrongdoers like Equifax and Wells Fargo, but surely for the victims of such wrongdoing — and for consumers, generally — it is good news indeed.
September 26
Dean Clancy







