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Consumers are back to their old spending and saving habits; Trump administration is encouraging financial innovation; how the financial crisis shaped today's politics; and more from this week's most-read stories.
August 3 -
Tekalign Gedamu, who would chair Marathon International Bank, says that Zekarias Tamrat is bad-mouthing the de novo effort following his dismissal and a subsequent payment disagreement. Tamrat was slated to be the bank's president.
August 3 -
Tory Nixon, who became Umpqua's chief banking officer this spring, is trying to drive more customers to use mobile banking (only 15% do so now industrywide) without alienating them in the process.
August 3 -
Readers react to Wells Fargo's latest penalty, weigh in on the Vatican's criticism of credit default swaps and opine on the long tail of the financial crisis.
August 2 -
Zekarias Tamrat blamed the proposed Marathon International Bank's chairman and directors for delays in getting its application approved.
August 2 -
Echoing House members, five Republican senators called on the Federal Reserve Board to rethink its surcharge in order to eliminate “excessive” capital requirements.
August 2 -
Credit union trade groups are lauding the Senate's move to provide $250 million for the Treasury Department's Community Development Financial Institutions fund.
August 2 -
A task force created by the American Bankers Association asserts that applying for a bank charter is too time-consuming and that some de novo rules are too rigid.
August 2 -
The industry group wants the FDIC to reject an ILC request from student lender Nelnet and impose a two-year ban on future applications.
August 1 -
Fintech firms have the federal option they have long sought, but meeting the agency’s application requirements will not be easy.
August 1