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Deposit costs lagged short-term interest rates on the way up and the way down during the last cycle. A relatively large representation of long-term certificates of deposits could help as rates rise.
July 18 -
An emphasis on capital to the exclusion of all else is, at best, misleading and, at worst, harmful to the banking business model.
July 18
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The Senate's proposal to reinstate Glass-Steagall is giving new fuel to the debate over breaking up big banks, and illuminating how much companies like JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup have to lose from the mounting pressure to become smaller and to separate their commercial and investment banking activities.
July 18 -
WASHINGTON The U.S. Government Accountability Office has agreed to a congressional request to investigate the massive data collection efforts at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
July 18 -
The Senate Banking Committee, voting along party lines, approved the nomination of Rep. Mel Watt, D-N.C., on Thursday to become director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
July 18 -
After years of government and telco-backed testing of contactless mobile payments in France, a major bank is ready to provide a significant boost to the country's Near Field Communication project.
July 18 -
American Express does not expect the discount rate it charges merchants to fall under the jurisdiction of regulations being considered by the European Union to place caps on interchange fees.
July 17 -
Senate lawmakers held a hearing Wednesday to urge regulators to clamp down on a debt collection industry criticized for poor documentation practices and conflicts of interest.
July 17 -
With mortgage rates climbing in recent weeks homeowners have switched from feverishly pursuing refinancing to buying new homes, a Federal Reserve Board report said Wednesday.
July 17 -
After the Senate's confirmation of Richard Cordray as director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren applauded the decision at an event celebrating the bureau's second anniversary.
July 17
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Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke told lawmakers that a future housing finance reform plan should provide clarity to the private sector about the level of support the government provides to the market.
July 17 -
The new leverage ratio is a relatively modest proposal that can be easily addressed by the affected banks without material capital raises or changes in distribution policy.
July 17
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The Senate's confirmation of Richard Cordray as head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau ends a long period of uncertainty for the new agency and for the banks that it regulates. It also effectively ends efforts by Republicans and the industry to change the structure of the CFPB.
July 17 -
Sens. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., and Mark Warner, D-Va., emphasized the bipartisan compromises the two have made in crafting their proposed overhaul of the mortgage finance system.
July 17 -
The Senate's approval of Richard Cordray's nomination to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is likely to end the Republicans' push for a change to the bureau's structure.
July 17
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Banks and payment card providers would face caps on the transaction fees they can demand from retailers under European Union plans to rein in charges that have been attacked by regulators as anticompetitive.
July 17 -
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, architect and founder of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, says agency is "the law of the land, and here to stay."
July 17 -
The Senate's approval of Richard Cordray's nomination to run the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau likely puts an end to another crucial fight over the bureau's structure and its ability to impose far-reaching regulations on the industry.
July 17 -
For the past two weeks, Visa, MasterCard and Discover have been meeting with each other and with regional debit networks to hammer out the business agreements necessary to route debit transactions on EMV-chip cards in the U.S.
July 17 -
A lawsuit against Credit Management Services, a Grand Island, Neb. collection agency, can continue as a class action that might include as many as 27,000 eligible Nebraskans, U.S. District Judge Joseph F. Bataillon has ruled.
July 16








