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Bank accused of overcharging small-business credit card customers; is digital currency an investment vehicle or just a currency?
August 14 -
Stephen Sanger is expected to leave as nonexecutive chairman; Barry Rodrigues, a former Citigroup and American Express executive, will join the British bank in November.
August 11 -
Merger creates a $20 billion payments processor; government seeks to delay fiduciary rule so it can make revisions.
August 10 -
Ten years ago the global financial crisis began with subprime mortgage problems in the U.S.; the more you have, the more you get.
August 9 -
Bank may have failed to refund insurance premiums to customers who repaid their auto loans early; digital coin offerings proceed despite warnings from SEC.
August 8 -
Bank warns investors of bigger fallout from scandals; Senate Republicans may not have votes to overturn rule ending mandatory arbitration.
August 7 -
The Fed wants directors to “focus on the big issues” not minutiae; Softbank to invest $250 million in online small business lender.
August 4 -
The bank agreed to pay $4.6 million to settle charges it didn't tell consumers why their checking account applications were rejected; Winklevoss brothers to supply bitcoin data to Chicago exchange.
August 3 -
The regulatory agency is expected to start asking for public feedback on changing the rule on proprietary trading by banks; bitcoin offshoot is worth about a tenth of the original.
August 2 -
Acting Comptroller Noreika says he will defer to Congress to determine whether the rule requiring mandatory arbitration should be killed; Bitcoin Cash to start trading but is causing confusion in the digital currency market.
August 1 -
Fifth Third's chief legal officer has emerged as a leading contender to get the nod as the FDIC's next chief; credit card profits under pressure at banks.
July 31 -
The bank forced hundreds of thousands of auto loan borrowers to take out insurance they didn't need, putting some into delinquency; a Russian man is arrested and charged in $4 billion money laundering scheme.
July 28 -
Companies planning to raise money by selling electronic tokens for cryptocurrencies said they won't be put off by SEC warning of regulation; soaring costs trigger exodus from traditional coastal financial hubs.
July 27 -
Citigroup hopes to return $60 billion to shareholders by 2020 while earning $20 billion a year; SEC says companies that raise money by selling their own electronic tokens for cryptocurrencies may be subject to federal oversight.
July 26 -
Citi is holding its first investor day since the financial crisis, plugging credit cards and its Mexican business; Morgan Stanley's market cap tops Goldman's for the first time.
July 25 -
Outside counsel for Wells Fargo accidently sends files on wealthy customers to opposing lawyer in defamation case; White House wants agency’s consumer complaint database to be private.
July 24 -
Payments company rises as hot premium cards fly under its banner; despite the improvements, analysts have concerns about growing credit quality issues.
July 21 -
Acting Comptroller Keith Noreika says his agency is prepared to defend its authority to grant banking licenses to fintech firms; lawmakers hopeful they can block anti-arbitration rule before it takes effect.
July 20 -
The bank’s once-vaunted bond trading unit reports its second bad quarterly performance in a row; Cordray tells OCC it’s too late to stop rule prohibiting mandatory arbitration.
July 19 -
Former Visa CEO replaces Gerald Hassell; Acting Comptroller Noreika asks Cordray to delay rule that makes it easier for consumers to sue banks.
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