PayThink is focused on the rapidly changing, inter-connected markets of debit, credit, mobile, prepaid and digital payments. As the payments industry strives for faster innovation to launch new products ahead of competitors, PayThink provides insight from market participants and innovators leading the way. PayThink is designed for executives looking to stay relevant in the ever-changing payments ecosystem by finding and honing their competitive edge.

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The company will also slow investments in new products this year as it copes with economic uncertainty.
January 26 -
The Oklahoma bank grew fourth-quarter loans at a steady rate and said its regional economy is solid. But it is closely watching the impact of rising senior-care costs.
January 26 -
The Boston bank reported broad-based increases in loans during the fourth quarter, and said it's upbeat about its forecast for 2023. "I think the reason why we're comfortable is because we haven't changed our credit box at all," said CEO Nitin Mhatre.
January 26 -
Érica Carnevalli is a spring reporting associate at Financial Planning. She is a graduate student in the business and economic reporting program at New York University. A native of Brazil, she has also worked at Brazilian publications and interned at CNBC Investigations in New York.
January 26 -
The nonprofit is entering phase two of its project with JPMorgan Chase intended to understand how conversational AI and emerging technologies can help low- to moderate-income consumers.
January 26 -
The card network sees digital payment opportunities and upside from China's reopening, but inflation and the slower pace of travel spending could slow growth.
January 26 -
Moody's is working on a scoring system for stablecoins, the crypto sector's most traded tokens, as the asset class grows and faces increased scrutiny from regulators and investors.
January 26 -
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State-chartered credit unions say their fields of membership are too narrowly defined. Rather than convert to federal charters, they are backing a bill that would provide greater reach.
January 26 -
A former Deutsche Bank trader cleared of charges that he rigged the Libor benchmark rate is suing for malicious prosecution, becoming the second employee cleared in court to pursue the bank for damages.
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