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The bank says regulators want information about its possible role in the money laundering scandal; Kristi Mitchem moves to BMO Global Asset Management.
January 24 -
The bloc said the company artificially raised interchange fees in Europe; weather changes that increase flood risks may mean defaults on mortgages.
January 23 -
Many government employees are turning to alternative lenders to bridge the gap between paychecks; the average pay at the biggest U.S. banks rose by just 3% last year, well below the CEO rate.
January 22 -
The units that handle small business payments and the one for larger firms will be combined; survey shows U.K. consumers may shun loans.
January 18 -
Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon sticks to rogue banker defense in scandal; bank misses earnings, revenue estimates.
January 17 -
The deal, valued near $22 billion, will combine two of the financial services industry's largest tech and processing firms; both banks top expectations.
January 16 -
The bank missed expectations although profit rose 67%; with the California Democrat leading the House Financial Services Committee, deregulation could slow.
January 15 -
Trading revenue for banks is expected to be flat; the bank plans high deposit rates to lure corporate customers.
January 14 -
Some big investors think the recent selloff in bank stocks is overdone; despite new ways to pay, credit cards still dominate.
January 11 -
Housing and auto sales are just the first sectors to feel pain from rising rates; BlackRock may have identified its next CEO.
January 10 -
The unit is under investigation by federal agencies for misrepresenting pricing; investment bankers are looking at a possible 15-20% drop in bonus money.
January 9 -
4.5% rates could trigger more homebuying and refinances; Sherborne Investors wants a seat on the bank’s board so it can facilitate change.
January 8 -
Linda Lacewell replaces Maria Vullo as New York’s chief financial regulator; the Swiss bank is reportedly talking to Christian Meissner about a senior role.
January 7 -
The accounts — which eschew paper checks and overdraft protection — appeal beyond the low-income customers they were intended for; lenders are embracing artificial intelligence systems to analyze more data to determine creditworthiness.
January 4 -
Facebook’s WhatsApp unit has been testing its payments app in India since May; investors price in an almost a 90% probability of no Fed hikes this year.
January 3 -
The industry has largely avoided added federal oversight after the Equifax hack; the product has created a “financial albatross” as consumers game the system.
January 2 -
Regulators give OK, but find “shortcomings” that need to be addressed; Labor Department says the bank is laying off U.S. workers while hiring overseas.
December 21 -
The NYSE contract will pay out in cryptocurrency; 10 Estonians who worked at the Danish bank were detained, and prosecutors promise more arrests.
December 20 -
Bank hit, but CEO Jes Staley escapes NYS fine for trying to unmask a whistleblower; Malaysia will pursue criminal complaints against Goldman in other countries.
December 19 -
The bank’s efforts to show its ethical side may be “undone” by Malaysian scandal; airlines co-branded cards helping profits … for now.
December 18


















