ESG
ESG
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Bankers trying to get their net-zero CO2 targets certified now face hard deadlines to reduce capital flows to fossil fuels.
April 20 -
The Dallas bank reported an increase in energy loans for the first time in nearly three years, but executives don’t expect fossil-fuel lending to rebound to its previous highs.
April 20 -
JPMorgan Chase said it financed and facilitated $285 billion last year toward its $2.5 trillion, 10-year commitment to initiatives that combat climate change and advance sustainable development.
April 20 -
Mastercard said it’s expanding an earlier push to tie executives’ bonuses to the company’s environmental, social and governance goals.
April 19 -
The Dutch lender said its predecessor, Hope & Co., played a “pivotal role” in the international slave trade of the 18th century and was actively involved in the day-to-day business of plantations.
April 13 -
Progressive groups once again are forcing shareholder votes in connection with hot-button issues such as racial equity and climate change. But now conservative groups are also harnessing the same process in an effort to influence the positions that banks take on politically charged issues.
April 11 -
Citigroup and Bank of America are partnering with four large European banks to create a methodology for assessing how well companies in the air-travel sector are doing in meeting climate-related targets.
April 7 -
Two Republican lawmakers are calling for the cancellation of U.S. government contracts with Citigroup after the banking giant vowed to cover travel costs for employees seeking abortions
April 5 -
New York Fed researchers found that banks operating in areas hit by tornadoes, floods and other calamities weren’t financially hurt by those disasters. That surprising result comes with significant caveats, however.
April 5 -
Bank of America saw its busiest year on record for sustainable finance deals as demand for environmental, social and governance investments accelerates.
April 4 -
Robyn Luhning, the bank’s head of environmental and social risk management, takes the position at a time when financing for the fossil-fuel industry faces scrutiny. Other large banks have created similar roles in recent years.
April 4 -
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is the second U.S. regulator to outline strategic planning and other steps banks with more than $100 billion of assets can take to minimize damage from severe weather events and the transition to a low-carbon economy.
March 30 -
Climate activists have forced votes this spring on whether big banks should move more aggressively to cut off their financing of fossil-fuel companies.
March 29 -
JPMorgan Chase said it will do a third-party audit of its $30 billion racial-equity commitment, following Citigroup and BlackRock in agreeing to such a review.
March 25 -
Deutsche Bank's wealth management business has stopped accepting new Russian clients living abroad, joining other lenders in reducing business with the country’s rich.
March 24 -
American fossil-fuel suppliers are moving to tie their bank credit lines to sustainability goals, including slashing their carbon footprint.
March 23 -
Barclays plans to step up its financing of renewable energy as Russia’s war on Ukraine adds to the urgency of moving away from fossil fuels.
March 23 -
Visa Chief Executive Al Kelly, who’s been helping employees and their families who have fled the war in Ukraine, said he expects a “prolonged battle” because Russian President Vladimir Putin has underestimated the strength of the resistance.
March 22 -
Federal financial agencies’ role in combating climate change has become a politically polarized topic, as the withdrawal of Fed nominee Sarah Bloom Raskin shows. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and other regulators could make changes to exam procedures and take other steps that don’t require congressional cooperation.
March 22 -
Credit Agricole has suspended its activities in Russia, joining a growing list of lenders scaling back their business in the country after the invasion of Ukraine.
March 22





















