Resources

  • Banks are continuing to try to game capital ratios and regulatory standards that are intended to make the financial industry safer and simpler, according to Anat Admati. The Stanford finance professor and co-author of "The Bankers' New Clothes" discusses the successes and failures of regulation and banks' risk-management in recent months.

    April 11
    Thumbnail for Video: Why Banking Is Still Too Complex
  • Ties between presidents and top bankers have loosened over time as armies of handlers have intervened. The result is a system in which the bankers' sense of civic duty has weakened, even as the concentration of assets in their hands has come to pose mounting systemic risk. That's according to Nomi Prins, author of All the Presidents' Bankers.

    April 10
    Thumbnail for Video: Banker-Presidential Relations: How They've Changed Over Time
  • More than a century ago, the nation's leading bankers applied their considerable political leverage to creating a central bank that would act as their backstop in times of crisis. In so doing, they institutionalized "too big to fail," created a "reckless co-dependency" and a Fed-first mantra within the banks that gives ordinary borrowers short shrift in times of financial stress. So says Nomi Prins, author of All the Presidents' Bankers.

    April 9
    Thumbnail for Video: How Big Banks' Fed-First Ethos Can Hurt the Economy
  • For big banks, good first-quarter earnings news is likely to be in short supply. In addition to struggling with the usual suspects — weak loan demand, more regulation — they have a number of institution-specific issues to contend with. American Banker editors discuss.

    April 9
    Thumbnail for Video: What to Watch in Banks' Q1 Earnings
  • Cozy relations between bankers and presidents have faced plenty of criticism over the decades. But they've also proven to be a vital asset during crises and enabled the U.S. to emerge as-and remain-a financial superpower. So says Nomi Prins, author of All the Presidents' Bankers.

    April 8
    Thumbnail for Video: The Upside of Close Ties Between Bankers and Presidents
  • The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is facing mounting problems over racial disparities in its hiring and performance evaluation practices, which have drawn criticism and Congressional scrutiny. American Banker reporters discuss what's next for the CFPB and its critics, and what Director Richard Cordray could do to improve his agency's situation.

    April 7
    Thumbnail for Video: What's Behind the Growing CFPB Firestorm
  • Leading bankers and presidents have been tied together over the decades by more than money and power. From the days of Theodore Roosevelt and J.P. Morgan on, blood ties have played a role, too. So says Nomi Prins, whose new book, All the Presidents' Bankers, profiles the close and complex relations at the top of American finance and politics.

    April 7
    Thumbnail for Video: How Blood Ties Have Bonded Bankers and Presidents
  • Bank tech experts can be forgiven for focusing heavily on cyber-security threats these days. But to stand among the leaders in the fast-evolving world of electronic money, bankers will have to find ways to become more innovative. American Banker editors discuss.

    April 3
    Thumbnail for Video: Why Bankers Are Struggling to Innovate