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Jane Fraser, a longtime Citigroup executive, will be the first female CEO of a major Wall Street bank. She succeeds Michael Corbat, who had held the post for eight years.
September 10 -
Jane Fraser, a longtime Citigroup executive, will be the first female CEO of a major Wall Street bank. She succeeds Michael Corbat, who had held the post for eight years.
September 10 -
The stock market has reached record highs despite rampant unemployment, recession and a global pandemic. What gives?
September 9 -
The bank discovered the actions, all of which were tied to the SBA's Economic Injury Disaster Loan program, after noticing that suspicious amounts of money had been deposited into checking accounts owned by bank employees, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
September 9 -
Acting Comptroller of the Currency Brian Brooks and Department of Financial Services Superintendent Linda Lacewell stuck to opposing scripts on whether federal or state regulators are best equipped to protect consumers and supervise new entrants into the banking system.
September 9 -
Citigroup named Hassan to the new role as part of a move to combine its marketing and branding divisions.
September 9 -
The company and its global peers have seen their profitability hurt by half a decade of negative interest rates, which effectively make banks pay for holding clients’ cash.
September 9 -
The Senate Banking Committee met Wednesday to review central bank lending facilities such as the Main Street Lending Program, which provides bank-issued loans to middle-market firms. But some lawmakers on the panel said the focus of pandemic relief has been misplaced.
September 9 -
The bank's innovation group has developed a software tool for law firms. It hopes the project will help it speed products to market and attract top technology talent.
September 9 -
It could take years for the air travel industry to recover from the pandemic, but some of the airlines' responses could fuel other payment streams.
September 9 -
BNY Mellon has launched a system that automates medical and dental insurance claim payments, attaches benefit explanations and enables virtual card support for medical providers.
September 9 -
Walmart is entering the drone delivery wars, its latest move to counter Amazon.com Inc.’s dominance in e-commerce as more Americans choose to shop from home.
September 9 -
A pandemic-driven surge in bank deposits helped drive the agency's insurance reserves below their statutory minimum.
September 9 -
The final version of the amended rule, like the original proposal, makes fair-lending claims tougher to prove. But it does soften language that otherwise might have allowed mortgage companies to use algorithms to prove nondiscrimination.
September 9 -
Bank of Montreal's top executive says it's a "myth" that his company's commercial lending business is taking big risks and argues the bank will come through the recession with fewer loan losses than rivals.
September 9 -
For the dozens of technology companies trying to enable shopping without point of sale terminals, making it work in a full-sized store is the path to disruption. But the coronavirus pandemic flipped the script, bringing disruption well before the technology was ready.
September 9 -
Only one of the 118 loans bought by the Federal Reserve through Aug. 31 was close to the $250,000 minimum in the rescue program, aimed small to midsize businesses hurt by the pandemic.
September 8 -
In congressional testimony, the director of the credit union regulator's Office of Minority and Women Inclusion outlined steps the agency is taking to increase diversity at the agency.
September 8 -
Bank of America announced how it plans to spend a third of its $1 billion commitment to address racial and economic inequities and the effects of the coronavirus pandemic in communities of color.
September 8 -
Fintech lenders that reported a surge in missed payments at the start of the pandemic have seen credit quality rebound substantially since. But credit performance could still deteriorate if high unemployment persists and Congress fails to enact more relief measures.
September 8




![“The parochial interests of individual states … [prevent] people from accessing credit,” said acting Comptroller of the Currency Brian Brooks. New York State Department of Financial Services Superintendent Linda Lacewell argued “there is no federal authority for any kind of chartering for fintech companies … that are not depositories.”](https://arizent.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/c4fde46/2147483647/strip/true/crop/1600x900+0+0/resize/1280x720!/quality/90/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fsource-media-brightspot.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com%2F7b%2Fc0%2F2fa8f8d1414882919a458e895b10%2Fbrooks-lacewell.png)






















