Consumer banking
Consumer banking
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First Financial Bancorp of Cincinnati has pushed back the expected closing date for its acquisitions of First Bexley Bank and Insight Bank, pending a review by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.
June 17 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has ordered a New Jersey company, Stonebridge Title Services Inc., to pay $30,000 for paying illegal kickbacks for referrals.
June 17 -
Television financial advisor Suze Orman's prepaid debit card will be discontinued, according to a report in the New York Times.
June 17 -
Regions Financial (RF) in Birmingham, Ala., has split itself into two operating units a general bank and a corporate bank.
June 17 -
The city of Miami claims in a new lawsuit that JPMorgan Chase & Co. engaged in discriminatory lending practices for years that worsened the foreclosure crisis in minority neighborhoods during the last decade's housing crisis.
June 17 -
SunTrust is expanding its auto-dealer financing business beyond the U.S. Southeast and will offer wholesale and other banking services to dealers in Chicago, Boston and Dallas.
June 17 -
Identifying which borrowers are likely to repay short-term, small-dollar loans could help lower costs for both consumers and the financial services industry.
June 17 -
The Federal Trade Commission has issued a new challenge to help expand the technological arsenal that can be used in the battle against illegal phone spammers.
June 17 -
New York officials have created a database of blacklisted lenders, and Bank of America has agreed to use it. Authorities hope that other banks will follow suit.
June 16 - WIB PH
Irene Dorner did a lot to turn around HSBC's troubled U.S. operations following violations of U.S. anti-money-laundering regulations that led to a record penalty, but successor Patrick Burke and a new U.S. compliance chief will have to pick up the recovery at its midpoint and finish the job.
June 16 -
Six directors at Solera National Bancorp (SLRK) have resigned as the Lakewood, Colo., company remains embroiled in a messy public struggle with its biggest investor.
June 16 -
Smaller banks face a tricky choice with jumbo loans: hold them and face rate risk, or sell them to a bigger bank and risk losing a customer. An unusual arrangement between the FHLB and a REIT could offer community banks a better route.
June 16 -
Discover Financial Services agreed with regulators to bolster its payment systems against money launderers. No financial penalty was imposed.
June 16 -
The United States Court of Appeals has confirmed BancorpSouth's lack of liability in an online banking fraud case, and even granted that the bank may seek to recover attorneys' fees from the victim.
June 16 -
WASHINGTON A financial education partnership between public libraries and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has skyrocketed to more than 98 library systems in the two months since the pilot program launched.
June 16 -
Wells Fargo lost its chance to appeal to the Supreme Court to approve its use of a complicated tax shelter. But clarity provided by that case and those being fought by BB&T and others is likely to provide the basis for future tax loopholes for banks.
June 16 -
A federal district court in Washington upheld another ruling disallowing three hedge funds controlling portions of a defaulted loan from voting on a reorganization plan. The ruling could impact banks as they make more concessions to win business.
June 16 -
The lawsuit stands out as the first major legal action by a state against a credit bureau in recent years, but it may pressure other states and federal agencies to take public action.
June 16 -
Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan is alerting residents about an email scam that uses her offices name and falsely threatens prosecution to collect on supposed debts.
June 16 -
HSBC Holdings (HSBC) said Irene Dorner will retire as chief executive of its U.S. banking unit and will be succeeded by HSBC executive Patrick Burke.
June 16




