Banks customers shelled out $400 million more for overdraft fees last year, capping a downward trend.
If Argentina's creditors accept law bonds, they could sidestep U.S. court.
The database, unveiled Thursday, shows Bank of America easily trumping Wells Fargo, which had more than 12,000 complaints against it.
If unemployment data continues to improve, the head of the Atlanta Fed said he may support cutting back on quantitative easing.
Troubled trading firm SAC was hit with insider-trading charges again as one of its managers was arrested Friday.
Investors focused on the orderly reopening of Cypriot banks and a positive revision to the fourth-quarter U.S. GDP statistic.
Madoff is offering information for the "future regulation of the appropriate institutions," including banks. But is he telling the truth?
The Cyprus crisis could be a boost to the real estate markets in upscale parts of Manhattan and Miami.
China's regulators are reining-in wildly popular but opaque investment products that form a key plank in China's shadow-banking system.
The days of guaranteed fat profits are over for China's major state-run banks.
Cypriot bank depositors did not rush to get their money out of banks Thursday as the government feared they might.
For the first time in the history of the euro zone, a member nation, Cyprus, is instituting capital controls.
British banks have about nine months to raise about $38 billion in Tier 1 capital.
The Bitcoin, an emerging digital currency, is thriving in Cyprus despite -- or because of -- its banking woes.
Relations between the nation's largest bank and Washington are deteriorating. Just count the number of investigations.
As the dust from the Cyprus financial rescue settles, an altered landscape is emerging.
Ben Bernanke dismissed worries that the Federal Reserve’s money printing is raising the likelihood of a global currency war.
N.Y. Federal Reserve head William Dudley points to Washington's partisan division as the reason for the Fed's asset purchases.
Global markets breathed a sigh of relief at the last-minute deal to avert the collapse of Cyprus' banks.
Just hours away from financial ruin, one of the tiniest countries in the euro zone agreed to severe terms for a financial rescue.
The world watched Saturday as Cyprus struggled to repair years of financial mismanagement.
After days of talks, Cyprus realized it had no choice but to accept harsh euro-zone bailout terms, including a one-time bank-deposit levy.
The EU gauged Cyprus' latest plan to raise money as Russia decides not to help prevent a Cypriot meltdown.
Cyprus is fast exhausting options to avoid financial ruin as Brussels and Moscow watch it rush to the precipice.
China's president is cracking down on "tigers" -- high-level officials – as well as "flies" – low-level officials. It's not going to be easy.
A confidential government scorecard issued a second markdown for the bank in less than a year.
Cyprus is in intense negotiations with Russian and European Union leaders for help to avoid a financial collapse.
Where the island nation heads now -- seek easier terms from lenders or default on its sovereign debt - is unclear.
The New York-based private equity firm may be mulling whether to make an offer for the Texas-based PC maker.
China's Outbound non-financial investment rose to $18.4 billion in the first two months of 2013.