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Consultant and former California regulator Walter Mix quantifies the damage from Dodd-Frank and explains why 2,700 banks could disappear over the next three to five years.
October 17 -
Community Bank in southwest Florida is taking advantage of the recent PR nightmare large banks like Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Wells Fargo & Co. created for themselves by instigating debit card fees. The $750 million-asset bank is offering to pay people $5 per month to open a checking account instead of charging for debit transactions. Within just a couple of days, it became the most successful promotion in the bank's two-year history, and the institution partly has the bad mood of consumers to thank.
October 17 -
Why banks are leaning right and the president may receive an awkward reception in Bank of America's hometown.
October 17 -
An estimated 697 collection agencies and creditors were sued in the second half of September, up from 616 in the first half the month and 469 in the second half of August, according to WebRecon LLC, a Grand Rapids, Mich.-based company that pulls the data from the U.S. District Courts.
October 17 -
State regulators closed three banks along the East Coast late Friday afternoon: Blue Ridge Savings Bank in Asheville, N.C.; Piedmont Community Bank in Gray, Ga.; and First State Bank in Cranford, N.J.
October 14 -
The chairman of the House Financial Services Committee recommends a hike in the guarantee fees charged by Fannie and Freddie that would raise more money than what the administration has proposed.
October 14 -
L.A. team produces hilarious parody of Warren's populist candidacy, and the portrayal of the creator of the CFPB may help the Massachusetts Senate candidate.
October 14 -
Republicans are pushing for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to be run by a board of Senate-confirmed appointees instead of a single director, but some question if it would have much impact.
October 14 -
WASHINGTON — One day after introduction of a bipartisan bill to repeal the new debit interchange cap, supporters of that cap struck back Oct. 13 by calling for an antitrust investigation into whether banks and trade groups are colluding on prices.
October 14 -
The operators of a credit repair company have been charged by the Federal Trade Commission with making false statements to credit bureaus about information in consumers’ credit reports, and illegally collecting fees from consumers before performing services.
October 14 -
In less than a year, the insurance giant has gone from aiming for the top five in home lending to putting its origination business on the block.
October 13 -
Independent ATM operators are launching a new legal strike against Visa Inc. and MasterCard Inc., seeking to toss out standardized access fees imposed by the companies.
October 13 -
The economic pain inflicted on millions of citizens and businesses by the collapse and eventual bailouts of some of Wall Street’s largest financial firms reveals why community banks should continue to distinguish themselves from systemically risky financial firms.
October 13
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Proponents of national servicing standards aren't gaining much traction in their efforts to eliminate conflicts of interest.
October 13
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A new examination manual from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau highlights a chapter on procedures for evaluating mortgage servicers.
October 13 -
The Federal Reserve on Thursday announced a prompt corrective action against Anchor Commercial Bank in Juno Beach, Fla., after the bank failed to provide the Fed with an acceptable capital restoration plan.
October 13 -
Independent ATM operators and a trade association have filed a new suit charging that Visa Inc. and MasterCard Worldwide network rules unlawfully prohibit ATM operators from offering lower prices for transactions over PIN-debit networks that are not affiliated with the two companies.
October 13 -
"Face It, Bankers: You're Not Apple" by Andy Sobel [BankThink, Oct. 11, p. 21] contends banking shouldn't focus on innovation and instead should act like the utility sector. It conjures a Prius-driving straw man who only wants his bank to deliver cash from the ATM – "a human right," as utilities deliver water from the faucet.
October 13
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With millions of American homeowners living under a Sword of Damocles otherwise known as foreclosure, expect to see more protestors turning out to block evictions and sheriffs sales.
October 13
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In the 2008 elections, the largest U.S. banks gave far more money to Barack Obama than John McCain, and more generally, favored Democratic candidates over Republicans.But after passage of the Dodd-Frank Act, the same banks are favoring Mitt Romney over President Obama. And they've tilted their contributions more toward Republican candidates.This slideshow looks at changes in campaign-finance trends at the largest banks over the last four years.
October 13









