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The upstate New York company unloaded three loans, joining a short list of lenders that have purged problematic credits during the pandemic.
January 22 -
The Green Bay, Wis., company will consider inside and outside candidates to replace Flynn, who plans to step down by the end of the year.
January 21 -
The bank's nonaccrual loans have been soaring as the pandemic continues to roil the hospitality sector. M&T executives said they've been working with borrowers to keep them out of foreclosure.
January 21 -
The Cleveland company will launch the service in March to broaden relationships its Laurel Road student loan refinancing unit has built with health care professionals.
January 21 -
The investments, part of a post-merger effort to wring out more profits, include new commercial and mortgage lending platforms.
January 21 -
Sandy Spring Bancorp also plans to shrink its network as more customers move to digital channels.
January 21 -
Consumers have largely kept up with their payments during the pandemic, but Discover chief Roger Hochschild says he expects defaults to rise as structural changes in the economy lead to more layoffs of white-collar workers.
January 21 -
Providence, R.I.-based Citizens Financial has largely focused on nonbank deals in recent years, but CEO Bruce Van Saun said the race for scale in the industry is prompting more banks — including his own — to consider mergers.
January 20 -
Hundreds of branches temporarily shuttered during the pandemic are now permanently closed.
January 20 -
Payments activity “snapped back” in the fourth quarter and should lift revenue the next few quarters, CEO Brian Moynihan said.
January 19 -
The Dallas bank says reserves could return to pre-pandemic levels by the end of 2021— a year earlier than analysts were predicting — if vaccines prove effective at slowing the spread of the coronavirus.
January 19 -
The latest round includes two new investors, Eurazeo Growth and Wellington Management, as well as one returning shareholder, Sprints Capital.
January 19 -
During the past year we’ve seen some ingenious, innovative solutions addressing financial inclusion, and that will need to continue, says GPS CFO Richard Hodgson.
January 19
Global Processing Services -
Revenue from sales and trading rose 7% to $3.06 billion in the fourth quarter, missing analysts' $3.15 billion forecast. The division, helmed by Jim DeMare, was hurt by unexpected weakness in fixed-income trading.
January 19 -
Goldman Sachs' dealmakers capped their record year with a fourth-quarter revenue jump that helped profit more than double.
January 19 -
Weeks away from succeeding Michael Corbat, Jane Fraser said she’d consider streamlining some units or divesting others as part of her effort to kick-start return on equity.
January 15 -
CEO Charlie Scharf’s long-awaited expense-reduction plan got a chilly reception from investors.
January 15 -
Federal relief efforts have minimized loan losses so far, but risks remain in credit card, auto and business lending. Many borrowers will need another lifeline to stay afloat until the economy rebounds, CEO Jamie Dimon says.
January 15 -
It is the 18th state to pass a law imposing rate caps on all consumer loans, including payday and car title loans.
January 15 -
However, it beat analysts' estimates thanks to a big reserve release, a smaller-than-expected rise in expenses and other factors.
January 15















