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The central bank finalized a host of regulatory-relief changes mostly benefiting midsize and regional banks that hew closely to proposals issued in April and last fall.
October 10 -
The central bank will consider rules to create a tiered structure for supervising banks with over $100 billion of assets and to ease resolution plan requirements.
October 3 -
The regulators have yet to complete rules on regional bank supervision, community bank capital and other provisions meant to ease institutions' burden.
August 1 -
In what's being called "one of the largest-ever data breaches of a large bank," Capital One said a Seattle hacker gained access to the personal information of more than 100 million customers; Citigroup plans to cut hundreds of jobs in its global markets division and combine its equity trading and prime brokerage units.
July 30 -
The eight "systemically important" banks currently file resolution plans annually, but a pending proposal would require them every two years.
July 23 -
The FDIC's new complex institution supervision and resolution division will be operational July 21.
June 27 -
Over a dozen progressive lawmakers urged the central bank to reverse its course and protect bank regulations enacted after the financial crisis.
May 15 -
Fitch Ratings issued a negative warning for global banks after federal regulators proposed some relief from resolution plan requirements.
May 6 -
As the central bank board proceeds with reforms easing the post-crisis regulatory regime, the Obama-appointed governor has not shied from opposing the agency’s course.
May 5 -
Following the Federal Reserve Board, the FDIC signed off on proposed measures to ease resolution planning requirements and tailor supervisory standards for foreign banking companies operating in the U.S.
April 16