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On Mar. 31, 2020. Dollars in thousands.
July 20 -
On Mar. 31, 2020. Dollars in thousands.
July 20 -
The streak of strong gains for new members was flagging by the end of 2019 and has only worsened since then.
July 20 -
Trump-appointed regulators gave the industry the green light to offer installment loans during the pandemic. But with concerns that the light could turn red in 2021, bankers remain extra cautious.
July 19 -
Wells Fargo buys $14B of delinquent mortgages tied to pandemic; CFPB launches investigation of Quicken Loans real estate affiliate Rocket Homes Real Estate; Truist accelerates cost-cutting plans; and more from this week’s most-read stories.
July 17 -
Some 60% of Ally’s auto originations in the second quarter were used-vehicle loans, the highest percentage in the company's history.
July 17 -
The coronavirus relief law allows forbearance plans for up to a year on federally backed mortgages, but House Democrats say homeowners have had difficulty getting relief.
July 16 -
The Pittsburgh bank says fewer borrowers are asking for help and that many borrowers who received assistance are making payments again. But with the coronavirus pandemic still raging in much of the country, CEO William Demchak and other bankers are tempering their optimism.
July 15 -
Net charge-offs fell at Citigroup and Wells Fargo, thanks to forbearance and federal stimulus. Leaders of those banks are warning that delinquencies could rise once the benefits of those programs wear off.
July 14 -
Consumers now have more control over their own financial decisions and loan options.
July 14
Community Financial Services Association of America -
The Australian firm, best known for financing online purchases, is rolling out interest-free, point-of-sale loans at cash registers that it says could help U.S. merchants boost flagging sales.
July 14 -
The amount far surpassed that of any other servicer required to purchase Ginnie Mae-backed loans that were 90 days past due.
July 13 -
There will be lasting consequences for financial institutions that choose short-term protections for their bottom line over the economic security of the consumers they serve.
July 13
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A subprime-related settlement between the government and Deutsche Bank provided meaningful benefits to some U.S. consumers in need, according to a new report. But the author acknowledged that those gains could prove illusory for some consumers given the coronavirus crisis.
July 10 -
If it’s approved, the charter is expected to lower the fintech’s cost of funds and allow for more product offerings. It comes nearly three years after SoFi pulled the plug on an earlier effort to open an industrial bank.
July 9 -
Consumers now have more control over their own financial decisions and loan options.
July 8
Community Financial Services Association of America -
The German bank agreed to pay $150 million to New York State for its dealings with Jeffrey Epstein; the new tool will help lenders determine which borrowers are in the best shape to weather a crisis.
July 8 -
The agency sought to provide certainty that most actions from the past eight years remain in effect despite the ruling that the bureau's leadership structure is unconstitutional.
July 7 -
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The agency delivered long-anticipated regulatory relief to the small-dollar loan industry by eliminating ability-to-repay requirements imposed under the bureau’s former director.
July 7






![“Many don't see [normalization] coming until we feel like there's an antivirus vaccine that's available for the mass population," says Citigroup CEO Michael Corbat. "So the economy ... will continue to be hit.”](https://arizent.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/5bd101e/2147483647/strip/true/crop/750x422+0+11/resize/1280x720!/quality/90/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fsource-media-brightspot.s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com%2Fd1%2F9d%2Fbf18d6814feeaf046e79f1b7236d%2Fmichael-corbat.jpg)







