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HSBC will pay $765 million to settle allegations that it sold defective residential mortgage-backed securities in the run-up to the financial crisis, resolving one of the London-based bank's last significant legal challenges with the U.S. government.
October 9 -
Otting says the bank is not moving fast enough to repay customers who were unfairly sold auto insurance; lack of regulation lets traders use software to move prices.
October 3 -
Laplanche agrees to a three-year securities industry ban and a small fine to settle SEC fraud charges on loan sales; analysts are expecting a "tepid" quarter as some trading activity suffers.
October 1 -
Marianne Lake could be JPM’s eventual choice to succeed Dimon; three agencies investigating money laundering allegations against Danske Bank.
September 17 -
John Gerspach is scheduled to leave next March after 10 years and be succeeded by Mark Mason; ING will pay nearly $900 million for failing to stop money laundering by clients.
September 5 -
The deal lets Google learn more about what people buy based on online ads, but raises privacy concerns; checkbooks favor Congressman Sean Maloney.
September 4 -
OCC proposal would broaden the types of loans that would count toward CRA obligations; new law helps parents freeze accounts of minors.
August 29 -
The bank said the candidate planned to accept money from the medical marijuana industry; the crash in digital currency prices’ long-term consequences.
August 21 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission sanctioned Citigroup because of unauthorized proprietary trading as well as for the failure to detect suspect loans issued by its Banamex unit.
August 16 -
The bank continues to battle a series of negative headlines such as erroneous foreclosures, but public and investor reaction has been muted.
August 13American Banker