Wall Street Journal
First it was Swiss banks charging clients to
Bank of America started telling some institutional clients last year they must move their deposits or pay to keep them at the bank. Executives at B of A decided to give this warning to clients that did not do other business with the bank. And the U.S. Treasury Department may be next in line. Some Treasuries have recently
The low-rate environment is the prime culprit, worsened by the new liquidity coverage ratio. Hedge funds are the primary target for banks' fee assessment. The liquidity coverage ratio requires banks to hold high-quality liquid assets like government debt to cover projected deposit losses. Banks must hold reserves up of to 40% against some corporate deposits and 100% against some hedge fund deposits.
“At some point you wonder whether there will be a shortage of financial institutions willing to take on these balances,” said Kelli Moll, an Akin Gump attorney who advises hedge funds. As a result, the nationwide loan-to-deposit ratio at banks has taken a tumble, falling to 71% in the second quarter from 92% in mid-2007.
State Street previously warned customers the fees might be coming, specifically on outsized nonoperational balances. State Street doesn't have a minimum deposit size to trigger the fees. The fees vary case by case and are applied to both new and existing clients, the unnamed sources said.
The
Bank of America, which American Banker reported as having received 232 patents last year, the most of any bank,
Deutsche Bank made a number of changes to the
ATM maker Diebold is in talks to acquire German ATM maker Wincor Nixdorf for about $1.9 billion. A combination would help the No. 2 and No. 3 ATM makers focus more on digital payments and
Square doesn't need a Trenta-sized triple-shot macchiato to wake up in the morning. Square's IPO filing garnered some bad press, as it shed light on the hard bargain Starbucks drove, but it
For one, it was a good marketing deal, raising awareness of the Square product. It also showed that Square can handle the load of a large customer. Also, while the Starbucks partnership will end, it turns out Starbucks wasn't such a great partner after all. Square's revenue from Starbucks grew a measly 11% during the six-month period ended June 30. Revenue excluding Starbucks grew 52% in the same period.
Washington Post
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are necessary evils, a WaPo op-ed writer says. Fannie and Freddie are
Elsewhere ...
The Hill: Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., again appears to be taking the side of retailers in a dispute with banks. Durbin wants to know
On Oct. 13, the FBI yanked the PIN recommendation and re-released the consumer notice. Durbin demanded the FBI explain itself and asked if it bowed to pressure from the American Bankers Association. The ABA has said PIN won't be adopted in the U.S., while retailers favor PIN adoption.
Barron's: The weekly magazine praised Fifth Third Bancorp's
“It’s got a combination of improving profitability, better capital management, high-quality management, and earnings potential if interest rates rise, and it is trading at one of the lowest valuations in the group,” said John Toohey, an analyst at USAA Investments, which owns Fifth Third shares.