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House Democrats on the Financial Services Committee are not only sending letters to regulators on financial services-related rules in the Dodd-Frank reform law, but they are also focusing on foreign energy extraction.
January 22
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Nearly three years after the implementation of a landmark credit card reform bill, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau faces a monumental challenge: determining whether the law helped or hurt consumers.
January 22 -
Flathead Holding Co. of Bigfork, Mont., has entered into an agreement with regulators to bolster its capital.
January 22 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau faces the task of determining how the 2009 credit card reform law has influenced the cost of credit. Its conclusions will likely offer clues to its future rulemaking and spur further clashes between bankers and consumer advocates.
January 22 -
Deferred prosecution agreements involving HSBC's money laundering scandal and similar cases have practical advantages. But they also raise concerns that big banks are getting off easier than small ones.
January 22 -
The FTC asked a U.S. district court to halt an operation that allegedly placed more than $70 million in bogus charges on consumers’ phone bills.
January 22 -
Federal regulators are partnering up to take a close look at whether banks provide collections agencies with sufficient evidence to back up demands that consumers repay debts. The action could result in a revamping of the multi-billion dollar business.
January 22 -
Federal regulators have hinted they'd like to toughen the rules governing the way banks collect delinquent consumer debt. Making them stick would likely prove challenging.
January 22 -
Regulators and banks should develop a system allowing lenders to go bust without damaging the world economy to help restore public trust in the industry, JPMorgan Chase (JPM) Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon said.
January 22 -
Citigroup's Michael picks a team much like him, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau weighs in on force-placed insurance and banks release good-news, bad-news earnings reports.
January 21 -
The Minnesota Department of Commerce closed the $50.2 million-asset 1st Regents Bank in Andover on Friday.
January 18 -
Defendants in the Federal Trade Commission’s case against Rumson, Bolling & Associates agreed to a settlement that permanently bans them from the debt collection business.
January 18 -
The CFPB issued rules Friday that ban compensation to mortgage originators based on loan terms, such as higher interest rates or a high-cost loan. The rule is meant to prevent lenders from steering borrowers into riskier loans for a higher payouts.
January 18 -
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Comptroller Tom Curry discusses whether Dodd-Frank ended "too big to fail," the blowback from community banks on Basel III, how he views preemption and lessons learned from the foreclosure settlement.
January 18 -
WASHINGTON — The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will require mortgage lenders to release free copies of home appraisals to borrowers as part of several appraisal rules released this week.
January 18 -
U.S. Century Bank in Doral, Fla., sold about $120 million of loans in the fourth quarter of 2012.
January 18 -
Barney Frank is not the only person who thinks he would be a suitable temporary senator. His bid has now drawn the attention of a group that backed the Senate candidacy of Elizabeth Warren, architect of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
January 18 -
As the U.S. continues its conversion to EMV chip-card technology, the Durbin amendment's requirement for supporting multiple debit networks is presenting yet another challenge to overcome.
January 18 -
The Federal Reserve Board has terminated a written agreement with Blue Valley Ban Corp. in Overland Park, Kan.
January 18









