Consumer banking
Consumer banking
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We finally have a regulator with no mandate to preserve banks' image. To protect consumers, the CFPB must assure that those who cheat them are punished. New rules won't help if we don't enforce the old ones.
June 18 -
Bankers, regulators and consumer advocates debate the best ways to serve low-income and underbanked consumers.
June 18 -
Center Bancorp (CNBC) of Union, N.J., has taken another step in its plan to bulk up in northern New Jersey.
June 18 -
An estimated 720 different collection agencies and creditors were sued between May 16-31, according to data from U.S. District courts. The number is up from the May 1-15 total of 605.
June 18 -
State regulators closed banks in Georgia, Florida and Tennessee on Friday, making June a busy month for failures.
June 15 -
A lawsuit has been filed against Peoples Bancorp of North Carolina (PEBK) alleging that the Newton company failed to operate its overdraft program in line with its customer account agreement.
June 15 -
Deal for Piraeus' Marathon Banking unit in U.S. satisfies Investors' M&A ambitions in New York for now, CEO Kevin Cummings says.
June 15 -
The six largest credit-card lenders saw further improvements in borrower behavior in May, even as choppy economic data spark concerns over the financial state of U.S. consumers.
June 15 -
Avidbank in Palo Alto, Calif., will open a loan production office in downtown San Jose next week.
June 15 -
With Congress nearing a vote on a new Farm Bill that will set agricultural policy for the next five years, the banking industry is urging lawmakers to resist efforts to weaken the federal crop insurance program.
June 15 -
Cardinal Bankshares in Floyd, Va., is developing a comprehensive plan just weeks after a proxy battle brought in three new directors and led to the ouster of its chief executive.
June 15 -
Maybe George Bailey should've jumped — and made his savings and loan a commercial bank. If he had, he'd have been much better prepared for the Fed's decision to raise certain capital requirements, a move some are calling the death knell for the classic thrift business model: lend to home buyers like crazy.
June 15 -
As with housing, different bank markets across the country have crashed and recovered at different speeds. Measured by institutions with high Texas ratios, stress has tapered quickly in states like Washington and California, but remains elevated in Georgia, Illinois and Florida.
June 15 -
Home Depot told shareholders that interchange price controls would add "$35 million a year" to the bottom line. Why should consumers now believe the company has chosen not to keep these newfound gains for itself?
June 15 -
Private Bank of Buckhead in Atlanta has been given the green light to open its second branch.
June 15 -
American Banker readers share their views on the most pressing banking topics of the week. As excerpted from the Comments sections of AmericanBanker.com articles.
June 15 -
High fees and bad marketing of prepaid cards have made them unattractive to many potential customers, according to Stewart Stockdale, Western Union's head of global consumer services.
June 15 -
Residential Capital LLC rejected an offer from Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK/A), the holding company run by billionaire Warren Buffett, to be the initial bidder in proposed auctions of ResCap’s most valuable assets.
June 15 -
West Virginia Attorney General Darrell McGraw's office is suing a Virginia title lender over its debt collection practices.
June 15 -
After seeing record growth in remittances last year, Wells Fargo (WFC) has doubled its remittance network payout locations in India through an agreement with HDFC Bank.
June 15





