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As retailers, banks and technology companies continue to suffer data breaches, issuers and merchants need to take extra care when selecting payment vendors.
December 19
Forte Payment Systems -
The chip card migration is drawing more attention to card not present fraud. Account takeover risk is also on the rise.
December 16
LexisNexis -
Longtime TSYS executive William A. Pruett will retire early next year, after which the company plans to consolidate its North America and International services operations into a single, new unit called the Issuer Solutions Segment.
December 15 -
A startup aims to highlight the social impact that banks have to allow easier vetting by prospective customers; community banks like Jill Castilla's are getting income from being tech vendors; and Amex is making its parental leave policies better next year, in a move that just might be an emerging trend. Plus, Wonder Woman loses her U.N. job because of the way she dresses.
December 15
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In response to a series of cyber bank thefts, Swift has developed new guidance. It's a necessary first step, though banks for now are still left to fend for themselves.
December 15
Trusona -
Pacific Premier Bancorp in Irvine, Calif., has agreed to buy Heritage Oaks Bancorp in Paso Robles, Calif.
December 13 -
Merchants should check operating systems, since the PC-based operating systems which run most legacy point of sale software have security flaws and are targets for malware.
December 13
Revel Systems -
Crooks are getting more clever when hacking e-commerce sites to hide illegal activity, requiring banks and processors to developer a broader picture of merchants and payment activity.
December 12
EverCompliant -
Merchant cash advances have been controversial because of high premiums. But they can be lucrative for cash advance companies as well as ISOs.
December 9 -
Both major brands are accelerating a move away from traditional checkout, and all retailers need to make adjustments for the future.
December 9
Judo Payments -
The gender equality police namely, the activists Arjuna, Pax, and Trillium, which targeted Silicon Valley earlier this year is making moves on Wall Street now, starting with Citigroup, Bank of America and Goldman Sachs. Fed governor Lael Brainard encourages fintechs to tackle financial access and Cleveland Fed president Loretta Mester talks about the industry's past and future. Citi FinTech's Carey Kolaja celebrates its first product launch. Plus, people moves at Santander Consumer, Deutsche Bank and Bank of New York Mellon.
December 8
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Santander Consumer USA Holdings in Dallas has named a former president of Ally Financial and a former Treasury Department official to its board.
December 6 -
Android Pay just added New Zealand to its growing list of supporting countries.
December 6 -
Transaction records reveal a lot about consumers that can go a long way toward building marketing campaigns that keeps them coming back.
December 6
Intuit -
Apple Pay users will have the option to make payments with gift and loyalty cards through an arrangement with Blackhawk Network's digital stored value system.
December 5 -
Deutsche Bank has hired two executives to fill newly created positions meant to foster development of fintech products.
December 5 -
Mobile could become the one-stop shop that banking companies never quite achieved, blending basic banking, wealth management and other services, if efforts like those underway at Citigroup's fintech unit succeed.
December 5 -
Bank of New York Mellon has named two women executives from the energy and technology sectors to its board.
December 2 -
Gen Z is coming fast on the heels of millennials. For e-commerce, payments and financial services, they have an even shorter attention span.
December 2
Vantiv -
Visa's growth beyond plastic cards relies heavily on tokenization, a strategy that should get a major boost from its planned acquisition of CardinalCommerce.
December 1










