New York Gov. Kathy Hochul signs a law banning medical debt on credit reports; PayPal's former CEO Dan Schulman will exit the board; community banks boost small-business loan approvals; and more in the weekly banking news roundup.
NY Gov. Hochul signs law banning medical debt on credit reports
JPMorgan Chase opens 529 college savings plans to debit card contributions
Community banks boost small-business loan approvals
Wells Fargo, UnidosUS to partner on lowering Latino unbanked rate
PayPal’s former CEO Dan Schulman to exit board at end of year
"With Alex Chriss and his leadership team in place, I leave the board with full confidence that PayPal is in excellent hands for its next chapter of growth and success," Schulman said Thursday in a statement. "It has been a great honor to lead the PayPal community, and I look forward to seeing where Alex will take the company next." —Paige Smith, Bloomberg News
Ex-First Republic engineer gets two years’ prison for cloud hack
Miklos Daniel Brody logged into the bank's network without authorization, using his company-issued laptop, which he had failed to return, the evening he was fired after the company accused him of having pornography on his computer, according to court records.
"Brody deleted the bank's code repositories, ran a malicious script to delete logs, left taunts within the bank's code for former colleagues and impersonated other bank employees by opening sessions in their names," according to a statement Monday by the U.S. attorney's office in San Francisco. U.S. District Judge William Orrick ordered him to pay $529,266.37 in restitution as part of his sentence. — Robert Burnson, Bloomberg News
Wells Fargo hires senior banker Fred Terrell from Centerbridge
Terrell will join Wells Fargo's corporate and investment bank as vice chairman in January, according to a statement reviewed by Bloomberg News. He will be based in Los Angeles.
"With 40 years of experience in banking, private investment and corporate governance, he will bring to our clients an in-depth, enterprise level perspective on the opportunities and issues facing their businesses," Jon Weiss, chief executive officer of the corporate and investment bank, said in a statement.
Terrell has been with Centerbridge since 2020. Prior to that he spent eight years at Credit Suisse and founded and ran the private equity firm Provender Capital Group from 1997 to 2009. He started his investment banking career in the early 1980s at First Boston. — Matthew Monks and Hannah Levitt, Bloomberg News
Mexican fintech Kapital raises financing led by Tribe Capital
Kapital, which combines banking and tech on its platform, raised $40 million in equity and $125 million in debt in a series B financing, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer Rene Saul said in an interview. Investors including Cervin Ventures, Tru Arrow, MS&AD Ventures and Alumni Ventures also participated in the deal, he said.
The company hasn't disclosed its valuation in the financing.
Based in Mexico City, Kapital serves small and midsize businesses that don't usually have access to financial services in Latin America. Its products include loans and credit cards and it's expanding into payroll and benefits services. — By Crystal Tse, Bloomberg News
FDIC sells stake in commercial property loans from failed Signature Bank
The companies are also partnering with funds affiliated with Rialto Capital to acquire a 20% stake in the venture for $1.2 billion, according to a statement Thursday. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is maintaining an 80% stake in the venture and providing financing equal to 50% of the value.
The FDIC has been trying to offload roughly $33 billion of real estate loans from Signature after the bank collapsed earlier this year. That also includes loans backed by rent-stabilized or rent-controlled apartments mostly in New York City, which aren't part of the Blackstone deal. The FDIC said it expects to announce results for those transactions soon. —Natalie Wong, Bloomberg News