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All this, the business administration student says, is part of his quest to land a job with a big bank like Goldman Sachs or JPMorgan. Advertisement"I have to grind a lot for academics and then do internships on top of that," Loh said. Many Singapore students have adopted a similar playbook to Loh's, padding their résumés with stacks of internships in the hopes of landing a spot at a top bank. AdvertisementHussain ended up doing five internships throughout his college career, including stints at a hedge fund and a private bank. Tan is slated to join a top European bank as an investment banking analyst this summer.
Persons: , Channon Loh, he's, Loh, Goldman Sachs, Mike Kemp, Eric Sim, Sim, It's, Adnan Hussain, Hussain, Adnan Hussain Adnan Hussain, you'll, Nicholas Tan, Tan, Duo Geng Goh, Goh, it's, Chi Ang, gunning, Ang, Adrian Choo, Choo Organizations: Service, National University of Singapore, NUS, JPMorgan, Business, Getty, Goldman, Harvard, Crazy Rich, UBS Investment Bank, BI, Singapore Management University, SMU, Students, Banking Locations: Singapore, Crazy
The U.S. banking industry won a key victory in its effort to block the implementation of a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule that would've drastically limited the fees that credit card companies can charge for late payment. The CFPB estimates that the rule would've saved American families $10 billion a year in fees paid by those who fall behind on their bills. It would've capped late fees that are typically $32 per incident to $8 each and limited the industry's ability to hike the fees. "Consumers will shoulder $800 million in late fees every month that the rule is delayed — money that pads the profit margins of the largest credit card issuers," a CFPB spokesman told CNBC on Friday. The CBA said it will continue to press its case in the courts on why the CFPB rule should be "thrown out entirely."
Persons: Rohit Chopra, Mark Pittman, would've Organizations: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Banking, Housing, Urban Affairs Committee, Washington , D.C, Financial, Bureau, Northern, Northern District of Texas, U.S . Chamber of Commerce, U.S, CNBC, Consumer Bankers Association, District, CBA Locations: Washington ,, U.S, Northern District
Morgan Stanley — Shares added 3.2% after Morgan Stanley topped first-quarter expectations on wealth management, trading and advisory results. The company reported earnings of $2.02 a share, while analysts polled by LSEG had called for $1.66 a share. Revenue came out at $15.14 billion for the period, surpassing analysts expectations of $14.41 billion. Johnson & Johnson — The stock fell slightly even after the pharmaceutical giant topped quarterly earnings expectations and benefitted from a jump in medical device sales. Revenue came in at $21.38 billion, roughly in line with the $21.4 billion expected by analysts polled by LSEG.
Persons: UnitedHealth, Morgan Stanley —, Morgan Stanley, LSEG, Johnson, Smith, Tesla, Elon Musk, , Samantha Subin, Tanaya Macheel, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: Revenue, Wall Street Journal, Justice Department, Ticketmaster, LSEG, Bank of America, Tesla Locations: The, LSEG
A major U.S. bank and a legacy tech name were the focus of some of Tuesday's biggest analyst calls. The firm upgraded the apparel stock to overweight from neutral, and raised its price target to $31 per share from $26. The firm resumed coverage of the legacy tech company with an overweight rating and a $58 per share price target. He reiterated his $64 price target on the stock, implying upside of 10.7%. Additionally, he sees "greater risk to the achievement of our price target as the Fed rate cutting cycle begin."
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Matthew Boss, — Brian Evans, Goldman Sachs, Molson Coors Goldman Sachs, Molson, Molson Coors, Bonnie Herzog, Bud Light, Brian Evans, Goldman, Mark Delaney, Cisco, Morgan Stanley's, David Rochester, Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, Cisco Systems, JPMorgan, Eagle Outfitters JPMorgan, American Eagle Outfitters, Eagle Outfitters, Molson Coors, Molson, TAP, Tesla, Cisco, Wells Locations: U.S, Wells, Americas, EVs, Wells Fargo, 2H24, Rochester
The strategist highlighted the industrial and energy sectors, which he said should benefit from reports of a robust American economy. The stock is also already outperforming the S & P 500 this year, up nearly 29% year to date. As a group, industrials have gained 10.3% this year, or a little less than 1% above the S & P 500. After a rocky 2023, energy has established itself as one of the S & P 500's top outperformers in 2024. Among energy stocks, Tentarelli favors refiners.
Persons: Larry Tentarelli, Tentarelli, industrials, refiners, Phillips Organizations: Blue, General Electric, GE Healthcare, Valero, Banking, JPMorgan
It's been a year this week since the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank sent shockwaves through the banking sector. Wells Fargo shares got a big boost after a key win with regulators in mid-February. It would allow Wells Fargo to finally grow its assets again and help rake in more profits. MS YTD mountain Morgan Stanley (MS) year-to-date performance Conversely, the Club's other bank stock, Morgan Stanley , has been lagging in 2024 — down 7% year to date. A combination file photo shows Wells Fargo, Citibank, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Goldman Sachs.
Persons: It's, SVB, NYCB, Steven Mnuchin's, Wells Fargo, Wells, they've, Scott Siefers, Piper Sandler, we're, Charlie Scharf, Morgan Stanley, Morgan Stanley's underperformance, management's, Ted Pick, Jim Cramer, Morgan Stanley's, Morgan, Jim, Reddit, Jim Cramer's, JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs Organizations: Silicon Valley Bank, shockwaves, Bank, , New, , New York Community, Strategic Capital, Wells, Wells Fargo, Currency, Federal Reserve, CNBC, Club, Management, Morgan Stanley's IB, Citibank, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Reuters Locations: Silicon, Wells, ,, , New York, Wells Fargo
Arvind Jain, co-founder and CEO of Glean, makes a selfie with employees of the startup, which is based in Palo Alto, Calif. Artificial intelligence startup Glean attracted tech companies Databricks and Workday into its latest investment round. Glean, whose software sifts through corporate repositories to provide quick answers to workers' questions, said Tuesday that it's raised $200 million at a $2.2 billion valuation. Glean's annualized revenue at the end of January was $39 million, up from $10 million a year earlier. While Glean initially targeted the tech industry, it's now looking to expand in financial services, retail, manufacturing and other sectors, Jain said.
Persons: Arvind Jain, it's, Kleiner Perkins, Arvind Purushotham, OpenAI, Jain, Glean, Purushotham, Citi hasn't, Cathy Gao Organizations: Wall, Banking, Citigroup, Lightspeed, Sequoia, Citi Ventures, CNBC, Microsoft, Google, Sony Electronics, Citigroup's, Citi, Nvidia, Sapphire Locations: Palo Alto, Calif, LLMs, OpenAI, Glean
Capital One 's blockbuster takeover proposal for Discover Financial includes a $1.38 billion breakup fee if Discover decides to go with another buyer, but no such fee if U.S. regulators kill the deal, people with knowledge of the matter told CNBC. Capital One said late Monday it had an agreement to purchase rival credit card player Discover in an all-stock transaction valued at $35.3 billion. Watchers of the Capital One agreement are taking particular interest in whether U.S. banking regulators will allow it to happen. Neither side will owe the other a breakup fee if regulators block the acquisition, which is said to be typical for bank deals. The deal happened after Capital One approached Discover, and didn't include a wide search for all possible bidders, according to one of the people.
Persons: Richard Fairbank, — CNBC's Alex Sherman Organizations: Discover Financial, CNBC, Capital, Discover, Mobile, U.S . Department of Justice, Regulators, Bank, Federal Reserve, Currency, The Justice
Hunter Biden is expected to show for his closed-door interview next week, after intense deliberations that almost collapsed. The first check Republicans revealed went to Joe Biden in 2018 for $200,000 from James Biden and James’ wife Sara Biden. What other Biden family business associates have saidBeyond Fox and Langston, Republicans have recently interviewed a number of key Biden family business associates. Walker also attended a 2017 business meeting with Hunter Biden and Chinese business associates, where Joe Biden made an appearance. Another longtime Biden family business associate, Eric Schwerin, performed administrative and bookkeeping tasks for then-Vice President Joe Biden from 2009 to 2017.
Persons: Joe Biden, Hunter, James, Wednesday, Biden, Hunter Biden, Mike Johnson, , David Weiss, Hunter Biden’s, Alexander Smirnov, Robert Hur’s, Biden’s, James Biden, James ’, Sara Biden, , James Comer, Comer, Carol Fox, ‘ Biden, , Fox, James Biden’s, Joseph Langston, Langston, , “ Jimmy Biden, ” Langston, Rob Walker, Walker, Biden —, ” Walker, , ’ ”, Eric Schwerin, ” Schwerin, Mervyn Yan, Kevin Morris, Tony Bobulinski, Georges Bergès, White, Bergès, ” Bergès Organizations: Republicans, GOP, CNN, FBI, Burisma Holdings, undercutting, White, Democratic, Banking, Republican, Biden, Kentucky Republican, Fox, Langston, , White House Locations: South Korea, Washington ,, China, Kentucky, Americore, Romania, American
The bank's Tokyo-listed shares fell for a second day, tracking losses in U.S. regional lenders overnight. Aozora Bank shares hit near three-year lows Friday, as investors continued to hammer the Japanese commercial lender after it downgraded its annual outlook to a loss on bad U.S. commercial real estate loans. "U.S. real estate lending for around 10% of (its) total lending with a CET1 ratio of below 7% due to unrealized losses on securities has no precedent." Aozora's update came shortly after U.S. regional bank New York Community Bancorp announced a surprise net loss of $252 million for the fourth quarter. "However, higher losses tied to commercial real estate office exposure, increase in criticized loans tied to multi-family CRE [commercial real estate] are a reminder of ongoing credit normalization that we are likely to witness across the industry," Bank of America U.S. banking analysts wrote.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Aozora, Masahiko Sato, Sato, NYCB, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Aozora Bank, Japan's Aozora Bank, Nikkei, Equity, SMBC Nikko Securities, New, New York Community Bancorp, Signature Bank, Bank of America, Bank of America U.S Locations: Tokyo Japan, Tokyo, U.S, New York
Samuel Corum/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesWASHINGTON — The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on Wednesday unveiled long-awaited changes to how the nation's biggest banks structure overdraft protection plans. Since 2000, American consumers have paid an estimated $280 billion in bank overdraft fees, according to CFPB data. During that time, the annual revenue big banks derived from overdraft fees soared, helped along by the boom in consumer debit cards tied directly to checking accounts. Taken together, these banks typically account for more than 80% of the overdraft fees charged in any given year. Banking trade groups deeply opposed to any changes in the overdraft rules have already begun to mobilize opposition, which is only expected to grow.
Persons: Washington . Samuel Corum, Joe Biden, Parks, Lael Brainard, Andrew Caballero, Reynolds, CFPB, Biden Organizations: Consumer Financial, Bloomberg, Getty Images WASHINGTON, National Economic, White, AFP, Getty, Banking, Consumer Bankers Association Locations: Washington ., Washington ,
Credit Karma Money is launching a feature that will allow members to access government benefits up to five days early. Credit Karma Money members may qualify for this perk if they live in the United States and are eligible for government benefits. Credit Karma will provide early access to government benefits like Social Security, VA benefits, and Supplemental Security Income. How to enroll in the new Credit Karma Money government benefits featureIf you do not have a Credit Karma Money Spend Account, you can open an account online or through the mobile app. What is Credit Karma Money?
Persons: Karma Organizations: Intuit Credit Karma, Karma, Social Security, Discover, Karma Money, Banking, MVB Bank, FDIC Locations: United States
Big bank CEOs will likely convey deposits and earnings are stable to lawmakers on Wednesday, according to a major financial services executive. Thomas Michaud, CEO of Stifel company Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, thinks the hearing before the Senate Banking Committee will successfully provide assurance to Washington and Wall Street. "The targeted approach to change deposit insurance to reduce the 'too big to fail' thinking, so depositors don't run like that. He thinks action is needed to keep mid-sized banks competitive with the big banks — starting with lifting Federal Deposit Insurance Corp coverage limits for small businesses. "If deposit insurance reform in my opinion doesn't happen, there's going to be tremendous pressure on those [mid-size] banks to consolidate," Michaud said.
Persons: Thomas Michaud, Keefe, Jamie Dimon, Goldman Sachs, David Solomon, " Michaud, He's, Michaud Organizations: Wall, . Banking, Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank, First, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp Locations: Washington, Silicon, First Republic
Charlie Scharf, CEO, Wells Fargo, speaks at the 2023 Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, U.S., May 2, 2023. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsNEW YORK, Dec 5 (Reuters) - Wells Fargo (WFC.N) CEO Charlie Scharf told investors on Tuesday he expects to book higher-than-anticipated severance expenses between $750 million to a little less than $1 billion in the fourth quarter. The bank has reduced its workforce since the third quarter of 2020 and it stood at 227,363 at the end of third quarter of this year. Wells Fargo set aside $359 million for potential credit losses on office real estate in the third quarter, bringing total allowances to $2.6 billion for the first nine months of 2023. Wells Fargo has reduced its origination in auto loans and has also been reducing the size of its mortgage servicing portfolio.
Persons: Charlie Scharf, Wells, Mike Blake, Scharf, Goldman Sachs, " Scharf, Wells Fargo, Nupur Anand, Lananh Nguyen, Chizu Organizations: Milken, Global Conference, REUTERS, San, . Financial Services Conference, U.S, Thomson Locations: Wells Fargo, Beverly Hills , California, U.S, San Francisco, Wells
REUTERS/Sarah Silbiger/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsNEW YORK, Dec 4 (Reuters) - U.S. home buyers are becoming more willing to purchase properties even as interest rates stay high, according to a study by Bank of America (BAC.N) published on Monday. That compares with average 30-year fixed mortgage rates that surged to 8% in October, the highest in more than two decades, which deterred buyers. They also sold their homes for career or family reasons or to seek a lower cost of living. New-home sales dropped 5.6% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 679,000 units last month as mortgage rates squeezed out buyers. Reporting by Nupur Anand in New York; Editing by Lananh Nguyen and Leslie AdlerOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Sarah Silbiger, Matt Vernon, , , Vernon, Nupur Anand, Lananh Nguyen, Leslie Adler Organizations: REUTERS, Bank of America, Reuters, Federal Reserve, Homeowners, U.S, Wall, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, U.S, Vernon, New York
Daniel Pinto, President and chief operating officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co, speaks during the Global Financial Leaders' Investment Summit in Hong Kong, China November 2, 2022. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu Acquire Licensing RightsNEW YORK, Nov 28 (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N) President and Chief Operating Officer Daniel Pinto said he expects its Chase UK consumer bank to break even in the next 12 to 18 months. The largest U.S. lender opened the digital bank in the UK in 2021, its first foray into international retail business. Chase UK is doing better than expected, Pinto said, and the company plans to grow in other global consumer markets over time. Brazilian digital bank C6, in which JPMorgan has 46% stake, is expected to break even "very soon," Pinto said.
Persons: Daniel Pinto, Tyrone Siu, JPMorgan Chase, Pinto, Jamie Dimon, Nupur Anand, Lananh Nguyen, Sharon Singleton Organizations: JPMorgan Chase &, Global Financial, Investment, REUTERS, Tyrone, JPMorgan, Chase, Financial, Thomson Locations: Hong Kong, China, United Kingdom, U.S, Basel, New York
A Citi sign is seen at the Citigroup stall on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, October 16, 2012. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsCompanies Citigroup Inc FollowNEW YORK, Nov 22 (Reuters) - A top Citigroup (C.N) executive asked employees to speak up if they see inappropriate behavior after a managing director sued the company this week, alleging she was sexually harassed by a manager in equities. "No colleague should ever be discriminated against or harassed," Andy Morton, Citigroup's global head of markets, wrote in the memo sent on Tuesday, which referenced a recently filed lawsuit. "Part of everyone's role in creating a culture of the highest standards involves stepping in at the moment we see something wrong," Morton wrote. "If you experience or witness inappropriate behavior, you can raise your concerns through official channels without fear of retaliation," including with managers, human resources or the company's ethics hotline.
Persons: Brendan McDermid, Andy Morton, Citigroup's, Ardith Lindsey, Mani Singh, Lindsey, Singh, Lindsey's, Morton, Tatiana Bautzer, Lananh Nguyen, Daniel Wallis Organizations: Citi, Citigroup, New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, Bloomberg, North America Markets, Thomson Locations: New York
Citi announced plans to cut management layers from 13 to eight as part of its biggest overhaul in decades. Citigroup declined to comment on all the personnel moves, and none of the leaders named responded to requests for comment. The full reorganization could involve thousands of layoffs, according to a source familiar with the situation who was not authorized to speak publicly. Preparations for Monday's announcements were communicated verbally in meetings last week, according to another source familiar with the situation. Final announcements related to the overhaul will be made early next year, Fraser said in a memo to employees.
Persons: Jane Fraser, Eduardo Martinez Campos, Andy Sieg, Andrew Kelly, Valentin Valderrabano, Patricia Dorosz, Nacho Gutiérrez, Carmen Haddad, Fahad Aldeweesh, Haddad, Jose Miguel Salvador Nasur, Peter Babej, Ernesto Torres Cantú, Brad Wayman, Chris McCullough, Wayman, Patrick Gallagher, Lucy Baldwin, Sandeep Arora, Fraser, Mark Mason, Tatiana Bautzer, Lananh Nguyen, Andres Gonzalez, Saeed Azhar, Bayliss, Echo Wang, Isla Binnie, Nick Zieminski, Stephen Coates, Marguerita Choy Organizations: Citigroup, Citi, Citi Wealth Services, Citibank, New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, Svea Herbst, Thomson Locations: Manhattan , New York City, U.S, Europe, Saudi Arabia, Chile, New York, London, Svea
REUTERS/Andrew Kelly Acquire Licensing RightsNEW YORK, Nov 20 (Reuters) - Citigroup (C.N) employees expect the bank to announce layoffs and senior management changes on Monday as part of its biggest reorganization in decades, according to five sources with knowledge of the matter. The job cuts could affect thousands of staff, according to a source familiar with the situation who was not authorized to speak publicly. Executives are also likely to announce senior management changes by email, the source said. Last month, Citi announced plans to cut management layers from 13 to eight as part of its biggest overhaul in decades. Support staff in compliance and risk management, and technology staff working on overlapping functions are at risk of being laid off, Reuters reported in September.
Persons: Andrew Kelly, Saeed Azhar, Isla Binnie, Tatiana Bautzer, Svea Herbst, Bayliss, Echo Wang, Lananh Nguyen, Lisa Shumaker Organizations: Citibank, New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, Citigroup, Citi, Reuters, Svea, Thomson Locations: Manhattan , New York City, U.S, New York
Nov 20 (Reuters) - A look at the day ahead in Asian markets from Jamie McGeever, financial markets columnist. China's latest interest rate decision will be the main focus for Asian markets on Monday, with investors also eyeing third-quarter GDP from Thailand, and trade figures from Malaysia and Taiwan. On Monday, the People's Bank of China is widely expected to leave lending benchmark rates unchanged. All 26 market watchers in a Reuters poll expect the one-year and five-year loan prime rates to be held steady at 3.45% and 4.20%, respectively. It is why Beijing's policy decisions are so important: as long as the interest rate spread remains heavily against the Chinese yuan, these outflows will likely persist.
Persons: Jamie McGeever, Goldman Sachs, Diane Craft Organizations: U.S, Treasury, Japan's Nikkei, Equity, People's Bank of, Reserve Bank of Australia, Bank Indonesia, Bank of, Thomson, Reuters Locations: Thailand, Malaysia, Taiwan, Asia, Japan, People's Bank of China, Bangkok, Bank of Japan, China
REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsNEW YORK, Nov 17 (Reuters) - Citigroup (C.N) employees expect announcements about management changes and layoffs on Monday in the next phase of the bank’s sweeping reorganization, according to four people familiar with the situation. Employees are awaiting more details about the scale of layoffs at the bank, which employs 240,000 people worldwide. Last month, Citi announced plans to cut management layers from 13 to eight as part of its biggest overhaul in decades. The third-largest U.S. lender will also eliminate co-heads of divisions and regional roles, cut 50% of internal financial management reporting and centralize decision making, it said in October. Support staff in compliance and risk management, and technology staff working on overlapping functions are at risk of being laid off, Reuters reported in September.
Persons: Andrew Kelly, Saeed Azhar, Bayliss, Tatiana Bautzer, Lananh Nguyen, Echo Wang, Isla Binnie, Chizu Organizations: Citibank, New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, Citigroup, Financial Times, Citi, U.S, Reuters, Svea Herbst, Thomson Locations: Manhattan , New York City, U.S, New York
James Gorman, chairman and chief executive of Morgan Stanley, speaks during the Global Financial Leader's Investment Summit in Hong Kong, China, on Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2023. The de-facto central bank of the Chinese territory is this week holding its global finance summit for a second year in a row. Photographer: Lam Yik/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesSINGAPORE — Morgan Stanley Chairman and CEO James Gorman said his firm will be able to cope with "any form" that new banking regulations end up taking, but added he expects some watering down before the final rules are confirmed. U.S. regulators on Tuesday defended their plans for a sweeping set of proposed changes to banks' capital requirements, speaking in front of the U.S. Senate Banking Committee. These proposed changes in the U.S. seek to incorporate parts of international banking regulations known as Basel III, which was agreed to after the 2008 crisis and has taken years to roll out.
Persons: James Gorman, Morgan Stanley, Lam Yik, Getty Images SINGAPORE — Morgan Stanley, it's, Gorman, Morgan, I've Organizations: Financial, Investment, Bloomberg, Getty Images SINGAPORE, U.S . Senate Banking Committee, Basel III, CNBC, Pacific, Federal Reserve, Fed Locations: Hong Kong, China, U.S, Basel, , Morgan Stanley's, Asia, Singapore, New York
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (FDIC) logo is seen at the FDIC headquarters as Chairman Sheila Bair announces the bank and thrift industry earnings for the fourth quarter 2010, in Washington, February 23, 2011. In a statement, FDIC Vice Chairman Travis Hill and board member Jonathan McKernan said that "at a minimum" Gruenberg and FDIC General Counsel Harrel Pettway should recuse themselves from the internal review of workplace conduct at the agency. "It is clear Mr. Gruenberg never should have been reappointed or confirmed in the first place," McHenry said. McHenry also said Gruenberg had "initially misled" the committee during testimony on Wednesday, at first claiming he had not been the subject of an investigation to his workplace conduct before acknowledging that he had. Reporting by Douglas Gillison; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Nick ZieminskiOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Sheila Bair, Jason Reed, Martin Gruenberg, Gruenberg, Travis Hill, Jonathan McKernan, Harrel Pettway, Patrick McHenry, McHenry, Douglas Gillison, Chizu Nomiyama, Nick Zieminski Organizations: Federal Deposit Insurance Corp, REUTERS, Republican, U.S, U.S . Federal Desposit Insurance Corporation, Financial Services, Thomson Locations: Washington, U.S .
The Wall Street sign is pictured at the New York Stock exchange (NYSE) in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S., March 9, 2020. Commercial and retail bankers at regional banks will receive bonuses that are 10% to 20% lower than the previous year, the report showed. Retail or commercial bankers working in large institutions could see year-end bonuses stay flat or rise about 10%. Bonuses for debt underwriters are expected to stay flat or drop as much 10%, while payouts for equity trading could fall 5% to 10%. Finance professionals working in fixed income trading, hedge funds, private equity firms and asset managers can expect flat bonuses or small gains or losses, according to the estimates.
Persons: Carlo Allegri, , Alan Johnson, Tatiana Bautzer, Lananh Nguyen Organizations: New York Stock, REUTERS, Johnson Associates, Thomson Locations: Manhattan, New York City , New York, U.S, New York, Lincoln
Companies United States Senate FollowWASHINGTON, Nov 13 (Reuters) - A group of 39 Senate Republicans in a letter on Monday called on major U.S. banking regulators to withdraw a contentious proposal to significantly raise bank capital requirements, warning it could hinder lending and harm the economy. Regulators said stronger cushions will guard against future unforeseen risks, and cited the failures earlier this year of three large U.S. lenders as a warning. * Regulators have said they are continuing to gather data for the proposal, and have given firms more time to provide feedback. * Senator Tim Scott, the top Republican on the Senate Banking Committee and a former presidential candidate, and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell were among the senior Republicans in the chamber to sign Monday's letter. WHAT'S NEXTU.S. banking regulators are due to testify before the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday, when they are expected to be pressed on the proposal by Republicans.
Persons: Banks, Tim Scott, Mitch McConnell, Pete Schroeder, Paul Simao, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: United States, WASHINGTON, Republicans, Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Currency, Regulators, Republican, Senate Banking Committee, Fed, OCC, NEXT, Thomson Locations: Basel
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