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10 votes
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Moody's downgrades regional US banks
8 votes -
Bank failure: Kansas Heartland Tri-State Bank closed by US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
29 votes -
The secret to becoming the world’s biggest digital bank: A user-friendly app
9 votes -
Aspiration vs Amalgamated Bank (ethical banking)
Does anyone here have any experience with Aspiration or Amalgamated bank? I am interested in opening a new credit account and can't seem to decide which one to pick. I've picked these two because...
Does anyone here have any experience with Aspiration or Amalgamated bank? I am interested in opening a new credit account and can't seem to decide which one to pick.
I've picked these two because of their environmental commitments, but I'm leaning towards Amalgamated since it's based in the East Coast.
Edit: Unfortunately, Beneficial is only in the West
6 votes -
Banks in UK and US are closing customer accounts with little to no warning or explanation
15 votes -
US Federal Reserve Board announces a consent order and a $268.5 million fine with UBS Group AG, of Zurich, Switzerland, for misconduct by Credit Suisse, which UBS subsequently acquired in June 2023
11 votes -
US Federal Reserve announces that its new system for instant payments, the FedNow Service, is now live
46 votes -
Term deposits — are they worth it? At what point are they worth it?
Now, rationally, I suspect the answer is "Of course!". But I'm looking for general advice, if my fellow Tildesians would be so kind. This question has arisen while investigating opening a Monzo...
Now, rationally, I suspect the answer is "Of course!". But I'm looking for general advice, if my fellow Tildesians would be so kind.
This question has arisen while investigating opening a Monzo account. Apparently, you can lock away some money for 12 months and get 5.3% AER interest on it - meaning for every, say, £1,000 I put in, I get £50 back, right?
My question: is that really worth it, in the grand scheme of things? Even if I put in £10,000, I'd be locking myself out of that much money for a grand total of £500. I understand that's a lot to some people (even me), but it hardly seems worth it.
Perhaps there's something I'm missing. Perhaps some bad maths on my part or some other type of interest that I don't know about. All advice is welcome and appreciated!
21 votes -
Bank of America has $100B in unrealized losses
9 votes -
How much have record corporate profits contributed to recent US inflation?
41 votes -
The Fed thinks catastrophe is coming for US businesses
15 votes -
Canadian interest rate increases = stave off the housing bubble (or create a spectacular burst?)
Do you guys think they're using rate increases to kill off all the overleveraged homeowners in an effort to create a sell-off and thereby lower housing costs? Could someone smarter than I please...
Do you guys think they're using rate increases to kill off all the overleveraged homeowners in an effort to create a sell-off and thereby lower housing costs?
Could someone smarter than I please explain what is going on... or is our inflation that bad? Seems like some of the inflation might be what I've read as greedflation. I didn't realize we jumped almost 3.75% in less than a year last year...
20 votes -
RICO lawsuit targets Credit Suisse
7 votes -
Swedish core inflation slowed less than expected in May as Beyoncé fans flooding Stockholm may have driven an increase in hotel prices
8 votes -
US Federal Reserve holds off on rate hike, but says two more are coming later this year
24 votes -
Cheques will be phased out in Australia by 2030 as mobile wallet use sky-rockets
18 votes -
Half of America’s banks are potentially insolvent – this is how a credit crunch begins
14 votes -
Norway's $1.4tn wealth fund calls for state regulation of AI – Nicolai Tangen says fund will set guidelines for companies it invests in on ethical use of AI
4 votes -
Social media as a bank run catalyst
8 votes -
After Signature Bank deal, FDIC is left with $11 billion in ‘toxic waste’ loans
6 votes -
Age of Easy Money | PBS Frontline documentary
2 votes -
What's the best way to save/store money?
Lately I've been thinking about withdrawing most if not all my money off the bank and investing in a safe box, but I'm not sure how wise of a decision that is. How does everyone here go about...
Lately I've been thinking about withdrawing most if not all my money off the bank and investing in a safe box, but I'm not sure how wise of a decision that is. How does everyone here go about that? Do you keep your money in the bank? Do you have a safe box at home? Why one over the other? Do you invest some of it, say in things like cryptocurrencies/stocks? What would you recommend or advice someone to do in regards to this if you could?
12 votes -
KPMG gave SVB, Signature Bank clean bill of health weeks before collapse. Accounting firm faces scrutiny for audits of failed banks.
6 votes -
Silicon Valley Bank has failed and been taken over by the FDIC
25 votes -
Signature Bank shut down by US regulators
10 votes -
The incredible tantrum venture capitalists threw over Silicon Valley Bank
5 votes -
Norway's sovereign wealth fund reported a record loss of $164 billion for the whole of 2022, citing 'very unusual' market conditions
7 votes -
Norway's fossil fuel bonanza stokes impassioned debate about how best to spend its 'war profits'
4 votes -
Safe deposit boxes aren’t safe
8 votes -
Danish bank workers celebrate full year without robberies – finance workers' union says number of bank heists has been affected by fall in use of cash in recent years
8 votes -
Battle for the nation's soul – Norway faces debate about gas and oil wealth
8 votes -
Denmark's largest bank Danske Bank has been fined €470 million over an international money laundering scandal
4 votes -
Banks devising ways to ID mass shooters before they strike
6 votes -
Norway's digital currency experiment – what is it and how does it work?
6 votes -
UK in turmoil as government's gamble to solve economic woes fuels crisis, instead
9 votes -
Siting bank branches
3 votes -
The branch banking model
8 votes -
Denmark's decade-long experiment with negative rates seen ending soon – central bank raised its key interest rate
5 votes -
Monetary policy, inflation outlook, and recession probabilities
3 votes -
Rogers CEO says service back online for most Canadian customers, blames outage on 'network system failure'
17 votes -
The alchemy of deposits
9 votes -
The stock market kinda wants a recession
10 votes -
Celsius crypto bank freezes withdrawals; bitcoin, etherium plunge
12 votes -
As the money pours in, Europe's second-biggest natural gas supplier Norway is fending off accusations that it's profiting from the war in Ukraine
6 votes -
The US Federal Reserve is set to pull back economic help rapidly. Is it too late?
8 votes -
How Russia rescued the ruble
18 votes -
(Don't fear) the yield curve, reprise
5 votes -
Boom time in Norway as the West cracks down on Russian oil
7 votes -
Mortgages are a manufactured product
12 votes