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By Roger Runningen and Joshua Gallu, Bloomberg |
January 24, 2013
Mary Jo White, who gained prominence prosecuting terrorists as U.S. attorney for Manhattan, will be named by President Barack Obama to be chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, according to a White House statement.
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By Cheyenne Hopkins and Kathleen Hunter, Bloomberg |
December 4, 2012
U.S. Senator-elect Elizabeth Warren, the Harvard University law professor and critic of Wall Street, is poised to join the Senate Banking Committee after she’s sworn into office in January.
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By Peter Rawlings |
October 18, 2012
SLM Corp., the student lender known as Sallie Mae, fell to the lowest in a week after the company said long-term delinquencies rose last quarter.
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By Tom Schoenberg and Carter Dougherty |
September 20, 2012
Oklahoma, South Carolina and Michigan joined a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the Dodd-Frank Act, which overhauled financial regulation in the United States.
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By Press Release |
September 14, 2012
Speaking at the American Banker Regulatory Symposium, Under Secretary for Domestic Finance Mary Miller reflected on what the country experienced as it went through the 2008 financial crisis and how it is emerging from it now.
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By Silla Brush, Bloomberg |
June 12, 2012
Senate Democrats are seeking to increase the budgets of regulators in spending plans that clash with House Republicans’ efforts to rein in the Dodd-Frank Act.
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By Silla Brush, Bloomberg |
June 5, 2012
U.S. House Republicans want to cut the budget of the CFTC and subject a new consumer financial protection agency to additional scrutiny.
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By Laura Litvan and Phil Mattingly, Bloomberg |
May 18, 2012
Republicans in the U.S. Congress were uniting behind a call to repeal all or part of the 2010 financial regulatory overhaul. Since JPMorgan Chase & Co. announced its $2 billion trading loss earlier this month, that front has splintered.
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By Caroline Salas Gage and Craig Torres, Bloomberg |
May 15, 2012
The $2 billion trading loss at JPMorgan Chase & Co. has revived concern that its regulator, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, is too cozy with Wall Street.
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By Phil Mattingly, Bloomberg |
April 18, 2012
U.S. House panel approved a measure to repeal the federal government’s power to seize and liquidate the largest financial firms.