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WASHINGTON Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., renewed his push Thursday to allow bankruptcy judges to cram down private student loan debt, introducing a bill on the issue with 12 other Democrats.
March 12 -
American Banker readers share their views on the most pressing banking topics of the week. Comments are excerpted from reader response sections of AmericanBanker.com articles and from our social media platforms.
March 12 -
Hencorp Becstone Capital in Miami has agreed to pay $3.8 million to settle allegations that it provided inaccurate statements and claims to the Export-Import Bank.
March 12 -
The Justice Department handed down its third bank settlement under Operation Choke Point Thursday, bringing a civil complaint against Plaza Bank of Irvine, Calif., for failing to report a payment processor's relationship with fraudulent merchants.
March 12 -
Commerzbank has been ordered to pay a total of $1.45 billion in penalties, fire employees and install an independent monitor after it cleared transactions for entities in Iran and Sudan and facilitated payments for a Japanese company accused of accounting fraud.
March 12 -
The Justice Department has come under fire in recent months for its efforts to root out consumer fraud through banks, but Operation Choke Point appears to be gaining new momentum.
March 12 -
There is a leadership void in payments innovation. The Fed has the ability and the historic precedent to take up the mantle.
March 12
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Two foreign-owned banks Santander and Deutsche Bank failed the Fed's stress test. Two other foreign banks that failed last year, HSBC and RBS Citizens, passed this year.
March 11 -
Citigroup Chief Executive Michael Corbat will still have a job tomorrow (and probably several days after that). The bank's capital distribution plan was approved by the Federal Reserve on Wednesday, undoubtedly to the delight of shareholders who were surprised by last year's rejection.
March 11 -
JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs were each forced to resubmit their capital plans in order to pass the Fed's CCAR stress test, while Bank of America was publicly faulted for weaknesses in its capital planning process. While some saw that as a bad sign, others contended the banks appear more comfortable in pushing the limits of the stress testing process.
March 11






