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WASHINGTON — As regulators continue to implement the Dodd-Frank Act one year after its passage, a key backer of financial reforms in the Senate warned "the battle is not over."
July 21 -
Banks are moving closer to getting the threshold raised for SEC stock registration.
July 21 -
Maryland's District Courts are putting a halt to an estimated 900 collection lawsuits after Catonsville, Md.-based Sunshine Financial Group, the company that filed them, failed to get a license.
July 21 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau established by the Dodd-Frank Act will open its doors on July 21. The new bureau will have broad responsibility for enforcing a wide range of laws against people and companies that provide financial products and services.
July 20
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WASHINGTON — Despite his past as a state regulator, Thomas Curry signaled intent Wednesday to listen to both sides in the preemption debate if confirmed as comptroller of the currency.
July 20 -
Wells Fargo will pay an $85 million civil penalty for misleading borrowers into taking out costly subprime loans and approving loans they were not eligible to receive, the Federal Reserve Board said Wednesday.
July 20 -
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency admitted Wednesday the Dodd-Frank Act may be a better guide than the agency's own rulemakings on its preemption authority.
July 20 -
Dodd-Frank missed the mark on the two areas most critical to avoiding a future meltdown. The job of identifying systemic risks was left to an unwieldy committee, and financial regulators remain about as balkanized as the intelligence agencies.
July 20 -
Wells Fargo & Co. has been slapped with a cease and desist order and $85 million fine by the Federal Reserve. It is the largest such action ever by the central bank and relates to subprime mortgage lending.
July 20 -
WASHINGTON — The Treasury Department announced a new round of investments Wednesday as part of a program to encourage community banks to make small business loans.
July 20 -
WASHINGTON — A day after the White House nominated former Ohio attorney general Richard Cordray to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Republican senators who hold the key to his confirmation reiterated concerns Tuesday about the bureau's structure.
July 19 -
Regardless of where one comes down on the desirability of any one of the raft of new regulations mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act, there is no question that their cumulative impact will be to constrain banking for the next several years.
July 19
Ludwig Advisors -
Elizabeth Warren has spent much of the past year arguing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is not as scary as banks think. But as she steps aside, will that really be the case?
July 19 -
The Treasury Department has ordered board appointments at two banking companies that have missed dividend payments.
July 19 -
Bank of Hawaii in Honolulu has agreed to pay $9 million to settle a class-action lawsuit in which it was accused of improperly charging overdraft fees on debit card transactions.
July 19 -
Richard Cordray, formerly Ohio's attorney general and most recently enforcement chief at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), will be formally named Monday to lead the new regulatory agency.
July 19 -
WASHINGTON — Under a federal rule approved Monday, regulators will use a "two-stage process" to decide whether certain companies that facilitate clearing transactions are systemically important.
July 18 -
With the administration choosing someone to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau who may draw more GOP opposition than Elizabeth Warren, some insiders speculated the White House may be open to compromise over the bureau's structure to win confirmation for Richard Cordray.
July 18 -
A trio of Colorado congressmen — Ed Perlmutter, Mike Coffman and Scott Tipton — are sponsoring the Capital Access for Main Street Act.
July 18 -
WASHINGTON — Facing an aggressive implementation schedule for the Dodd-Frank Act, regulators made some progress on key issues, but left some of the biggest ticket items lagging behind.
July 18






