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When faced with the need to conduct an internal investigations, bankers will do themselves a favor by pursuing them with the vigor. Otherwise, neither company directors or outside regulators are likely to buy the line that a bank is serious about addressing its flaws, says Neil Barofsky, an attorney who previously served as a prosecutor and inspector general for the Troubled Asset Relief Program.
November 15 -
How can banks charge their customers more without inviting their outrage? By introducing new services to off-set the fees and by communicating clearly with their customers, according to some small banks. American Banker reporters discuss other tips for companies that are trying to raise their prices but keep their customers happy.
November 14 -
The East Coast oil boom and the rise in hydraulic fracturing are creating headaches for banks that lend to local homeowners, who risk violating government mortgage standards when they sell their property's energy rights to oil and gas companies. American Banker editors discuss the foreclosure and even environmental problems that fracking can create for lenders, and how some banks are coping.
November 13 -
Attorney General Eric Holder has conceded that economic considerations deterred the DOJ from going after big banks. But another reason financial wrongdoers gave gotten off light in recent years is the government's failure to go after them with the aggression it showed during the savings and loan crisis, says Neil Barofsky, a former prosecutor and inspector general of the Troubled Asset Relief Program.
November 12 -
Under Timothy Geithner, the U.S. Treasury dismissed the notion that the biggest banks remained too big to fail. His successor, Jack Lew, initially showed signs of toeing a similar line, but since taking over as Treasury Secretary has displayed a "significant change in attitude," says Neil Barofsky the former inspector general of the Troubled Asset Relief Program and author of Bailout: An Inside Account of How Washington Abandoned Main Street While Rescuing Wall Street.
November 11 -
The smallest community banks are largely exempt from many new regulations, but their CEOs are still facing mounting compliance burdens and heightened concerns over competition with credit unions. American Banker Community Editor Paul Davis reports from his recent meeting with leaders of small banks.
November 8 -
As indirect auto lenders brace for regulatory enforcement actions, a group of Senators are raising concerns over the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's efforts to overhaul the car financing industry. American Banker reporters explain the implications of the clash between Congress and the CFPB.
November 7






