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The Federal Reserve Board said Friday it plans to collect $440 million in fees from 70 companies for increased supervision by the agency.
August 16 -
Tim Pawlenty, the head of the Financial Services Roundtable, has named Eric Hoplin as the trade group's next executive director.
August 16 -
Nowhere has the piecemeal approach to postcrisis regulation been more apparent than with the CFPB's Qualified Mortgage rules and its aggressive stance on the fair-lending doctrine of disparate impact.
August 16
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The Government Accountability Office is poised this fall to unveil the first of two reports on whether big banks benefit from an implicit subsidy due to the perception that they are "too big to fail," adding more fuel to an already contentious debate.
August 16 -
During a hearing Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Richard Leon suggested that the Federal Reserve Board set a cap on swipe fees too high under the Durbin Amendment, a provision in the Dodd-Frank Act, and stated banks might be forced to rebate potentially billions of dollars to merchants in "overcharges."
August 16
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New York banking regulator Benjamin Lawsky has spent the summer expanding his office's already weighty influence. Now he's taking a break from his rapid-fire filing of new actions.
August 16 -
The European Commission says the phone company and banks involved in a mobile commerce joint venture in Spain can move forward because they are not violating anti-competition rules.
August 16 -
Regulators have lifted an enforcement action against Eastern National Bank in Miami, according to a report.
August 15 -
A federal judge raised the possibility that banks will have to repay billions of dollars to merchants, but legal experts say the court lacks the authority to enact such an order.
August 15 -
In preparation of the mortgage rules due to take effect next year, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau released updated exam procedures on Thursday.
August 15
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New York Department of Financial Services Superintendent Benjamin Lawsky discusses what he regards as right and wrong with financial services, the perils of taking on too many regulatory challenges and why so few top executives have faced the long arm of the law.
August 15 -
WASHINGTON The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau issued updated exam procedures on Thursday for a slew of mortgage rules due to take effect next year.
August 15 -
The Federal Reserve Board has terminated enforcement actions with Marquette Financial in Minneapolis and Bank of Virginia in Midlothian.
August 15 -
A court ruling that debit card fee caps be lowered could also enable merchants to play card networks against one another.
August 15 -
The Federal Reserve Board has unanimously approved acquisitions by Hana Financial Group in Seoul, Korea, and Live Oak Bancshares in Wilmington, N.C.
August 15 -
Most policymakers agree that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac should be unwound and replaced with a system more dependent on the private market, but cleaning up the failed government-sponsored enterprises will be a challenge unlike anything attempted before.
August 15 -
A response to Bill Isaac's Aug. 13 post, "Why Payday Loans are Good for Millions of People."
August 15
The Center for Responsible Lending -
JPMorgan Chase (JPM) expects to be fined by authorities in the U.S. and U.K. over last year's $6.2 billion trading loss, which led to criminal charges against two former employees, said a person familiar with the matter.
August 15 -
Athene Holdings has agreed to increase the protections it offers annuity customers in order to secure a New York regulator's approval of its planned acquisition of the British insurer Aviva.
August 14 -
Benjamin Lawsky, who runs the New York Department of Financial Services, has become a top industry cop, taking on money launderers, payday lenders and even Bitcoin. In an interview, he discusses the need to break new ground while playing nice with federal regulators.
August 14







