Regulations & Policy: Page 99


  • Wells Fargo may want to consider changing name, image adviser says

    Consumers gave the bank a 91% negative rating long after its fake-accounts scandal. Plummeting stocks, a lengthy CEO search and a "mea culpa" campaign aren't helping.

    By Aug. 22, 2019
  • FDIC, OCC approve Volcker Rule rewrite

    The rewritten rule retains the ban on proprietary trading, gives lenders flexibility on hedge-fund investment, and eliminates the presumption that short-term transactions are actually banned trades.

    By Aug. 20, 2019
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    Top 5 stories from Banking Dive

    Since the approval of Capital One’s acquisition of Discover, banks have increasingly waded into new deals. Beyond that, they’ve doubled down on strategy, from organic growth to branch placement to app design.

    By Banking Dive staff
  • Credit union regulator issues guidance for banking hemp

    At least two senators have written letters indicating that hemp businesses are struggling to open bank accounts because many financial institutions still question whether they can service the industry.

    By Aug. 20, 2019
  • FDIC vote on Volcker Rule rewrite may boost banks' investment funds

    The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency approved the overhaul Tuesday ahead of the FDIC vote. The Fed, SEC and CFTC are expected to do the same in the coming weeks.

    By Updated Aug. 20, 2019
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    Trump phoned bank CEOs as stocks dropped Wednesday, sources say

    The meeting was held on a day the Dow dropped 800 points, or 3%, amid warnings of a recession.

    By Aug. 16, 2019
  • Closed Wells Fargo accounts charge customers overdraft fees: NYT

    One employee in the bank's debt-collection department raised concerns after taking in an estimated $100,000 in overdraft fees over eight months.

    By Aug. 16, 2019
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    Bias from AI lending models raises questions of culpability, regulation

    The number of data points used in AI lending models — and a lack of diversity among people creating them — raise red flags.

    By Dan Ennis and Tim Cook • Aug. 16, 2019
  • 5 regulators respond to request for hemp banking clarity

    Although the production and sale of industrial hemp was legalized last year, financial institutions still question whether services can be extended to businesses associated with the product.

    By Aug. 15, 2019
  • Big-bank leadership lacks diversity, House panel says

    The boards of directors of the nation's largest banks are composed of only 29% women and 17% minorities despite a U.S. population that is more than 50% female and 40% nonwhite. 

    By Aug. 14, 2019
  • Schumer asks regulators for clarity on hemp banking

    Senate minority leader's letter highlights how hemp growers are facing some of the same reluctance from financial institutions as pot-related businesses.

    By Aug. 13, 2019
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    Continued stall on payday rule is 'inexcusable,' advocates tell CFPB

    Four groups accused the bureau of "abandoning its consumer-protection mission" when it failed to ask a court to lift its stay on a rule limiting how often payday lenders can access borrowers' accounts.

    By Aug. 13, 2019
  • Federal Reserve considers tool to reduce risk of downturn

    Banks, whose profits are already under strain from low interest rates, may oppose enacting the buffer. 

    By Aug. 12, 2019
  • OCC may curb CRA credit for loans to poorer areas' richer residents

    A second suggestion to revamp the 42-year-old Community Reinvestment Act would give banks credit for investing in Opportunity Zones.

    By Aug. 12, 2019
  • Lenders shift focus as payday loans reach 13-year low in California

    The state is trying to clamp down on a category of slightly larger, less-regulated loans to which lenders are migrating. Meanwhile, government data shows the industry's reliance on repeat and low-income customers.

    By Aug. 9, 2019
  • Banks' use of social media matures, ABA finds

    More than 80% of respondents said they "agree" or "strongly agree" that social media are important, up from 76% according to a parallel study the trade association conducted in 2016.

    By Aug. 9, 2019
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    11 states look into the divide among payroll advance companies

    At issue is the way payroll advance companies offer their services. Although some offer already-earned wages through a user's employer, another goes directly to the user — for a voluntary "tip" that may come with a big catch. 

    By Aug. 8, 2019
  • Alaska credit union ends pot pilot after losing insurance coverage

    Providing banking to MRBs may have been a "more reasonable prospect" if the burden of compliance was not so high, the credit union's CEO said.

    By Aug. 8, 2019
  • Alternative credit data boosts loan approval 27%, Upstart shows in CFPB test

    People with credit scores between 620 and 660 were approved about twice as often in a two-year test of the lender's model, which takes into account a candidate's education and job history.

    By Aug. 7, 2019
  • Wells Fargo boosts legal reserve for the third time in a year

    The bank attributed the increase — to $3.9 billion — to a variety of factors, including the legal fallout related to its retail sales practices.

    By Aug. 7, 2019
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    How a Silicon Valley startup is using open banking to fight false declines

    Incorrectly flagged or canceled transactions cost the market 10 times the amount credit card fraud does, the CEO of Deep Labs said, citing an Aite Group study.

    By Aug. 6, 2019
  • Fed commits to real-time payments system by 2024

    The central bank looks to bring faster transactions to community bank customers and act as a safeguard in a marketplace already served by The Clearing House.

    By Aug. 6, 2019
  • ABA slams non-member deposit proposal for federal credit unions

    The National Credit Union Administration's proposal would allow federal credit unions to have up to half of their deposits come from other credit unions and government entities.

    By Aug. 5, 2019
  • Capital One breach hangs over Fed's Amazon inspection

    News of Federal Reserve officials' visit to Amazon's facility in April — along with lawmakers' requests for clarity on the Capital One breach — call into question who is responsible and for how much.

    By Aug. 2, 2019
  • HUD proposal may make lending discrimination harder to prove

    Plaintiffs would be subject to a five-part "disparate impact" test. The standard in effect now has only three.

    By Aug. 1, 2019
  • Senators seek ex-CFPB official's ouster over alleged use of power

    An investigator general report suggests Eric Blankenstein may have gone too far in asking a subordinate to show her support after racially charged blog posts surfaced last year.

    By July 30, 2019