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U.S. Banker February 2002 Mark Bruno |
ATMs Learn New Tricks Visually impaired people have learned how to bank at ATMs the hard way, but talking ATMs represent a very real solution to a problem that has plagued automated banking for years...  |
U.S. Banker February 2002 Eby Raj Seshadri & Corey Yulinsky |
Quick-Return CRM There are ways to improve customer relationship management without spending huge amounts of money. McKinsey consultants argue that CRM should be more mining of profits than of data...  |
OCC Bulletin January 31, 2002 |
Risk-Based Capital -- Nonfinancial Equity Investments Similar to the earlier proposal, this final rule requires a series of marginal capital charges on equity investments that increase with the level of those investments relative to the bank's Tier 1 capital...  |
Trusts & Estates January 22, 2002 |
Face-to-face beats online for money advice to wealthy The affluent trust investment professionals, but still research their advice online.  |
Wired January 2002 Julian Dibbell |
In Gold We Trust From gun-wielding libertarians to radical Muslims, an unlikely global cabal is plotting financial revolution. And they're putting their money where the Web is...  |
| Knowledge@Wharton |
New Payment Methods Give Old-fashioned Checks and Credit Cards a Run for Their Money Emerging technologies are currently gaining momentum while paper check usage is in decline, according to a new study by the Federal Reserve...  |
OCC Bulletin January 15, 2002 |
Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act Examiner guidance on the mark-up of settlement services fees by a title company...  |
Bank Technology News January 2002 David Rountree |
The Human Factor Financial technologies are changing business people, not just processes...  |
Bank Technology News January 2002 Daniel Joelson |
Latin America Set For ATM Spike Consumer demand is making Latin banks reassess their ATM strategies...  |
Bank Technology News January 2002 Lynn Koller |
Going After the Rich As more and more banks join the chase for high-net-worth individuals, they had best be aware that business as usual won't cut it...  |
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