Consumer banking
Consumer banking
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When HSBC sold its branches in upstate New York, it created a big change with dozens of branches changing hands. Once the signs are changed, a number of community banks and regionals will have to work hard to keep business in those branches.
June 21 -
Fees paid to outside auditors appear to have been relatively stable in recent years. So have legal expenses for smaller institutions since mid-2010, when the 2,000-odd pages of the Dodd-Frank Act became law.
June 21 -
A Chinese businessman who founded a rice-trading company made up a story about his $60 million acquisition of a Delaware bank. He has since been arrested.
June 21 -
Homeowners who faced wrongful foreclosure actions due to big banks' mortgage servicing failures are entitled to cash payments of as little as $1,000 to up to $125,000, according to new federal guidelines. But consumer advocates say that disparity is too wide.
June 21 -
The Federal Reserve Board has entered into written agreements with two companies requiring them to serve as sources of strength for their banks.
June 21 -
North Carolina's Our State magazine is launching its own credit card with Greensboro-based NewBridge Bank.
June 21 -
What the investor fights at ECB and First California say about how hard it will be for struggling banks in prized markets to stay independent, and who is vulnerable.
June 21 -
We at the FDIC continue to believe the small-dollar loan model is replicable and that these loans can be cost-effective and responsive to the needs of both consumers and bankers.
June 21 -
Customers Bancorp, the Wyomissing, Pa., banking comany led by veteran banker Jay Sidhu, is giving up nearly 20% of its ownership to venture into the greater Washington, D.C., market.
June 21 -
Six out of 10 homeowners who received a loan modification stopped paying their mortgage again after 18 months, but there may be a modest silver lining buried in the high recidivism rates.
June 21 -
Pinnacle Financial Partners (PNFP) in Nashville has repaid the remaining $71.6 million of the $95 million it received from the Treasury Department's Troubled Asset Relief Program in December 2008.
June 21 -
The State National Bank of Big Spring in Texas is leading a lawsuit against the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, becoming the first known community bank to file a lawsuit against the agency.
June 21 -
Citigroup branch has now received LEED certification on 200 facilities.
June 21 -
Banks are entitled to a profit. Customers are entitled to value for their money. Financial products can be designed, marketed and priced to satisfy both parties' needs.
June 21 -
The operators of an allegedly deceptive mortgage modification business will pay more than $750,000 to settle Federal Trade Commission charges. The settlements also permanently ban the defendants from selling any mortgage-assistance relief products.
June 21 -
Wells Fargo (WFC) will outsource an unspecified number of jobs in its institutional retirement division to India and the Philippines as part of a broader cost savings initiative.
June 21 -
The risky practices at and implicit taxpayer guarantee for systemically dangerous megabanks are driving consumers to community-based banks.
June 21 -
Palmetto Bancshares in Greenville, S.C., is shedding more than $40 million of problem loans as part of its ongoing effort to clean up its balance sheet and return to profitability.
June 21 -
Financial regulators Thursday said they are prepared to take action against banks and other mortgage servicers that don't give the proper help to military homeowners forced to move to a new duty location
June 21 -
PHILADELPHIA – American Heritage FCU opened a new branch inside a ShopRite in Rexborough, which was remodeled recently.
June 20




