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The Federal Reserve Board, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency released a proposal on Thursday that would institute tougher liquidity requirements on U.S. financial institutions.
October 24
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The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau accused Borders & Borders PLC, a Kentucky law firm, of receiving illegal kickbacks from certain charges on real estate settlements.
October 24
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Edward DeMarco, acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, said Thursday that the agency has no immediate plans to lower the size of the loans the government-sponsored enterprises can buy, though he left the door open for future reductions.
October 24 -
Regulators unveiled a proposal Thursday that would institute tough new liquidity requirements on U.S. financial institutions, acknowledging that their plan is harsher than a global framework suggested by international supervisors.
October 24 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is suing a Kentucky law firm on allegations that it received illegal kickbacks from certain charges on real estate settlements.
October 24 -
Chad Fuller and Victoria Holstein-Childress have joined the Atlanta law firm to help defend banks against lawsuits and government probes.
October 24 -
Two senior House Democrats introduced legislation Thursday designed to give regulators additional authority to go after bank executives at institutions involved in money laundering scandals.
October 24 -
A paper released by the Bipartisan Policy Center suggests that the so-called "push-out" rule for banks' swap business may be unnecessary if regulators effectively implement Dodd-Frank's ban on proprietary trading.
October 24 -
Bloomberg estimates big banks receive an $83 billion taxpayer subsidy a year. But calculating bank funding levels at normal, as opposed to crisis times, and accounting for Dodd-Frank compliance costs yields a very different estimate.
October 24
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The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. has agreed to cooperate with China's central bank to address potential cross-border issues in resolving failing institutions.
October 24 -
Issuers of store-branded credit cards are facing new regulatory scrutiny over big retroactive interest charges that can hit borrowers at the end of a promotional period.
October 24 -
The European Parliament demanded a halt to bank-data transfers to U.S. counter-terrorism investigators because of possible violations of privacy, the latest international outcry over alleged American spying.
October 24 -
Politically connected firms might simply be more willing to participate in government-sponsored programs. Or, perhaps more disturbingly, banks might view their political connections as an insurance policy, which may encourage more reckless or risky behavior.
October 24
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WASHINGTON Financial regulators are seeking to establish new standards to gauge the racial and gender diversity policies at companies including everything from employees, customers and suppliers.
October 23 -
Jeff Plagge, the president and chief executive of Northwest Financial in Arnolds Park, Iowa, and the new chairman of the American Bankers Association believes regulation remains a large industry challenge.
October 23
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Some of the largest U.S. banks said a proposed rule to increase the capital they hold against potential losses is arbitrary and would put them at a disadvantage against non-U.S. banks facing easier requirements.
October 23 -
New York State has slapped Prospect Mortgage with a $3 million fine for misleading homeowners on their interest rates, and has cited the mortgage lender for several other violations of state law.
October 23 -
JPMorgan Chase's acquisitions of Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual during the meltdown were once seen as bargains and more recently second-guessed in light of the bank's $13 billion mortgage settlement. The pain will pay off in the long run, experts say.
October 23 -
As banks improve their fundamentals, they are paying less in risk-based Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. premiums, helping to boost their bottom lines.
October 23 -
Bank of America Corp.'s Countrywide unit fraudulent sold thousands of loans known to be defective to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, according to Assistant U.S. Attorney Jaimie Nawaday in closing arguments in a lawsuit against the lender.
October 23





