Banco Popular de Puerto Rico
Banco Popular de Puerto Rico is a full-service financial services provider with operations in Puerto Rico, the United States and Virgin Islands. Popular, Inc. is the largest banking institution by both assets and deposits in Puerto Rico, and in the United States Popular, Inc.
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Receiving Wide Coverage ...More lumps: It was another bad for Wells Fargo. Following a quiet period, the bank disclosed Thursday it is in talks with federal and state prosecutors, including the U.S. Justice Department, over potential abuses related to residential mortgages, which would be unrelated to the phony accounts scandal in its retail banking unit.
November 4 -
Breaking News This Morning ...HSBC reports: Shares of HSBC jumped 4% Monday after the bank said its main capital ratio rose to 13.9% at the end of the third quarter from 12.1% at the end of June, raising hopes of a dividend increase. Still, it was hardly a great quarter for the bank, as it reported a $204 million net loss versus a $5.23 billion net profit a year earlier. The results included a $1.7 billion charge for selling its Brazil business. Wall Street Journal, Financial Times
November 7 -
Receiving Wide Coverage ...British bank hacked: Tesco Bank, a unit of U.K. grocery chain Tesco PLC, said Monday that hackers stole money from customer accounts over the weekend, earning the bank "the rare and dubious distinction of losing customer money in a cyber-attack," in the words of the Wall Street Journal. CEO Benny Higgins said about 20,000 accounts had money stolen from them. "Although the numbers are small, the incident is the stuff of nightmares for bank CEOs who are spending billions of dollars to protect their intricate computer systems from cyber-attacks," the Journal said. The paper noted banks have been hacked before, but it is rare for customer funds to be stolen. The Financial Times notes the attack "exposes vulnerabilities," while other articles ponder the implications for the bank and depositors and shareholders. The bank "temporarily stopped online transactions from all current accounts," the FT reported. Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, American Banker
November 8 -
Breaking News This Morning ...Trump triumphs: Global financial markets dropped sharply in the initial reaction to Donald Trump's unexpected victory in the U.S. presidential race. Stocks in Asia and Europe dropped sharply, bond prices fell and the Mexican peso plunged, but gold prices jumped higher. The Republicans held onto their control of both houses of Congress. Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, New York Times
November 9 -
Receiving Wide Coverage ...Winner and losers: Small and medium-size banks are likely to be the biggest winners in a Donald Trump administration. Big banks? Not so much. "One thing investors can likely be confident in is that substantial deregulation is coming for smaller banks," the Wall Street Journal said. There is already a bipartisan consensus that smaller banks are overly burdened by Dodd-Frank regulations, while there are several proposals that would raise the threshold for annual stress-testing by the Federal Reserve to $250 billion of assets from $50 billion.
November 10 -
Receiving Wide Coverage ...Goodbye Dodd-Frank: President-elect Trump's transition team said it would dismantle the Obama administration's signature post-crisis financial reform law. Republicans are "salivating over a wish list of Dodd-Frank changes that until recently stood little chance of avoiding President Barack Obama's veto pen," the Wall Street Journal said. "The lineup includes everything from regulatory exemptions for community banks and regional banks to a new regime for insurers and asset managers to curbs on the federal government's influence over consumer-finance products such as mortgages and payday loans." A note on Trump's transition website said the incoming administration would replace the law "with new policies to encourage economic growth and job creation," without providing specifics.
November 11 -
Wall Street JournalDismantling Dodd-Frank: Rather than fully repealing the Dodd-Frank act, Donald Trump's transition team is instead looking at dismembering the parts of it that "Republicans find most objectionable," according to the Wall Street Journal. One part they want to jettison is the Financial Stability Oversight Council's authority to designate large nonbanks as "systemically important." Another priority is overhauling Title II, which gives regulators the authority to take over a failing bank and liquidate it rather than bailing it out.
November 14 -
Receiving Wide Coverage ...White to leave: Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary Jo White said she plans to step down in January at the end of the Obama administration, "opening the door to a new Republican-appointed leader who could move to loosen rules on Wall Street and curb the aggressive enforcement approach Ms. White prosecuted," in the words of the Wall Street Journal. White is the first major Obama appointee to announce a departure after Donald Trump's victory last week, but White intended to leave regardless of who won the election. Other financial regulators are expected to follow her out the door. Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, New York Times, Washington Post
November 15 -
Receiving Wide Coverage ...Kid gloves: The Government Accountability Office released its review of the Federal Reserve's annual bank stress tests, which the Financial Times said "may pave the way towards gentler treatment" of banks. "The report recommended that the Fed share more information on the models it uses and its reasons for failing big banks, while working more closely with other agencies including the FDIC and the OCC."
November 16 -
Receiving Wide Coverage ...Targets: House Republicans are looking to scrap rules on how brokers sell retirement investments, as well as interest rate limits and disclosures on payday lenders, once President-elect Donald Trump takes office. The push is being led by House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, who is under consideration to become Treasury secretary. He asserts the rules were written by bureaucrats, not Congress. He also called for stripping the Financial Stability Oversight Council of its authority to designate nonbank financial institutions as "systemically important." Wall Street Journal, New York Times, American Banker
November 17




