Consumer banking
Consumer banking
-
A federal judge's ruling on the Durbin Amendment is likely to cost the banking industry billions of dollars each year.
July 31 -
Center Bancorp (CNBC) in Union, N.J., has named a new chairman for its bank. The $1.6 billion-asset company also announced Wednesday that it had made its interim chief financial officer permanent.
July 31 -
More banks are planning to sell or spin off businesses because of Basel III, shareholder pressure and other forces, according to the Institute of International Finance and EY.
July 31 -
MasterCard reported profit that beat analysts' estimates as spending on credit and debit cards rose. The shares climbed.
July 31 -
The rapidly growing Opus Bank in Irvine, Calif., has split its commercial and retail banking operations.
July 31 -
Bankers must do a lot of homework when a vendor is sold in order to prepare for the transition and potentially take advantage of the change.
July 31 -
RBS Citizens Financial Group in Providence, R.I., has become the latest banking company to use plain language to describe its checking account policies and procedures.
July 31 -
Sovereign Bank will change its name to Santander Bank and spend $200 million to upgrade branches and roll out an advertising campaign.
July 31 -
Research and Markets, a global market research firm, has announced the release of the "UK Consumer Debt Purchase and Debt Collection: Market Insight" report.
July 31 -
Texas Capital Bancshares (TCBI) in Dallas announced several executive moves in advance of its new chief executive taking office.
July 31 -
West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey announced Tuesday that Hampshire Memorial Hospital and Mosaic Finance Solutions, based in North Carolina, will each pay the state $7,500 as part of an agreement, called an assurance of discontinuance, to end illegal collection practices.
July 31 -
Just when banks thought they had adjusted to life under the Durbin cap on debit card interchange fees, a court has deal them a huge and unexpected blow. Bucking the usual judicial practice of deferring to regulators, a federal judge has ruled that the Fed set the cap too high at 21 cents and disregarded the intent of the Dodd-Frank Act. Expect appeals and a protracted fight that could take years to settle the matter.
July 31 -
WSFS Financial in Wilmington, Del., is expanding its consumer lending business to include private student loans.
July 31 -
Hudson City Bancorp (HCBK) in Paramus, N.J., reported a second-quarter profit of $48.7 million, down from $72.3 million in the second quarter of 2012. Earnings per share were 10 cents, in line with the average estimate of analysts polled by Bloomberg.
July 31 -
People tend to remain loyal to bankers and banks they know, like and trust. Whether or not we fit that description is entirely up to us.
July 31 -
MoneyGram has entered an agreement to buy Nexxo Financial's kiosk-based money transfer business. MoneyGram will also be the preferred partner for Nexxo money transfers and bill payments.
July 31 -
The Federal Reserve disregarded Congress's intent when deciding how much banks can charge merchants for debit-card transactions, a judge ruled, rejecting Dodd-Frank-imposed regulations governing "swipe" fees.
July 31 -
The chief executive of BOK Financial (BOKF) has decided to step down after 40 years with the Tulsa, Okla., company.
July 30 -
Sen. David Vitter is vowing to push for "tough" reforms to the Federal Housing Administration when the Senate Banking Committee takes up a bill to implement key changes at the agency on Wednesday.
July 30 -
The Florida bank says that after a string of troubled-bank acquisitions that brought it lots of short-term benefits, it is turning to deals like its agreement for Gulfstream that will juice earnings over the long haul.
July 30






