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During the heyday of deregulation, Gerald Corrigan argued that banks' unique functions required a unique level of supervision and protection. The former Fed official's essay remains as relevant as ever.
July 1 -
JPMorgan Chase has stopped selling most of its bad loans to third-party collectors in recent months as it braces for regulatory action over its credit card debt collections practices.
July 1 -
As the Federal Reserve Board gets set to vote on a final package of Basel III capital rules at a meeting Tuesday, it remains unclear just how far regulators will go to placate community bankers outraged by the proposal offered last year.
July 1 -
Mutual thrift defections from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency should decline now that once-nervous bankers have gotten a chance to get familiar with the regulator.
July 1 -
Californias financial regulator has baffled observers by sending a cease-and-desist warning letter to the Bitcoin Foundation. Did the Golden States bureaucrats blindly send out letters to any organization it could find with the word bitcoin in its name?
July 1 -
An explicit guarantee is better than the implicit one Fannie and Freddie had. But a more fundamental approach is to demand that financial actors internalize and capitalize the risks themselves.
July 1
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Goldman Sachs, one of the owners of a newly designated minority bank, has a history of discriminatory behavior.
July 1
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Big banks, including Citi and U.S. Bank, are developing a system to make mobile wallets more secure by walling off customer data from merchants and other third parties.
June 30 -
A recap of the informed opinions (and the discussions they generated) on BankThink this week.
June 28
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A veteran banking regulator has been promoted to become the commissioner of Georgias Department of Banking and Finance.
June 28



