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A recap of the informed opinions (and the discussions they generated) on BankThink this week.
May 17
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Washington Post blog tries giving clarity around who used the analogy in a point about Japanese monetary policy. It was likely not Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke.
May 17 -
Rep. Mel Watt drew a lot of attention Wednesday when he questioned Attorney General Eric Holder at a House Judiciary Committee hearing with his grandson Nico in his lap.
May 17 -
The regulator of federal credit unions is promising to take steps to curtail high-cost, short-term loans, in the wake of tough action by banking regulators.
May 17 -
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency took regulatory action against 11 financial institutions and terminated orders against five others in April, the agency said Friday.
May 17 -
In a sign of renewed pressure on mortgage servicers, a number of big banks have ceased or dramatically slowed the final step in the foreclosure process.
May 17 -
Risks posed by the shadow banking system, the need for regulators to work through disagreements and housing reform were among the key concerns among top financial policymakers gathered at the Federal Reserve's annual conference in Chicago last week.
May 17 -
The return to profitability of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is not a reason to preserve them as part of a future housing finance system.
May 17
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The Federal Reserve announced an enforcement action against the Bank of Montreal and BMO Financial for "deficiencies" in compliance with anti-money laundering and Bank Secrecy Act rules and regulations.
May 17 -
For two years, Democrats and Republicans have been at an impasse over the nomination of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's Director Richard Cordray, and next week Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is once again calling up the long-awaited confirmation vote.
May 17



