While card companies and retailers continue to battle over interchange in the United States, similar events are taking place overseas. MasterCard Europe has "temporarily repealed" its interchange rates that European regulators say violate antitrust rules, the card company said Thursday. The action applies to cross-border interchange merchant acquirers pay card issuers when customers use MasterCards or Maestro debit cards. On Dec. 19, the European Commission ordered MasterCard to lower the rates within six months or face daily fines amounting to 3.5% of global revenues. On 1 March, MasterCard filed an appeal with the European Court of First Instance. The card organization is continuing that appeal, though MasterCard does not expect a judgment until "the second half of 2010," a MasterCard spokesperson tells CardLine sister publication CardLine Global. The interchange rates average 1% of the sale for MasterCard-branded cards and 0.5% for Maestro-branded cards, the spokesperson says. "MasterCard believes its cross-border interchange system has kept the cost of payment cards low for cardholders," Javier Perez, MasterCard Europe president, says in a statement. In March, the European Commission said it was investigating the interchange rates applied to Visa card transactions in Europe and the card organization's rule that merchants must accept all Visa-branded cards regardless of the issuer or type of transaction.
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The customer-sourced investment will continue to support the digital banking provider's AI and digital loan origination initiatives.
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Banks are posting record profits, benefitting from being in the middle of a hot credit cycle. Everything is going their way. The only question is, how long can it last?
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A coalition of 20 state attorneys general, most of them Democrats, is opposing efforts by the high-cost lenders Enova International and Opportunity Finance to acquire banks. The state AGs warn that the companies are trying to dodge state interest-rate caps.
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FINRA's annual snapshot shows how the wealth industry is changing, from key business metrics and marketing trends to shifts in registration and a shrinking branch footprint.
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The regional bank revealed plans Thursday to close most of its supermarket-based branches and replace about half of them with new, nearby standalone branches. The multiyear transition could attract $20 billion to $30 billion in low-cost deposits, executives said.
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The bank regulators say they will limit the sending and storage of highly sensitive supervisory information, including by using alternatives such as on-site reviews and requiring notifying banks of data compromises within 72 hours.
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