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Standard Chartered bank struggles against scandal
by
Aug 7, 2012
Shares of the British bank Standard Chartered are tanking in London this morning -- down some 25 percent.
New York financial regulators say the bank concealed billions of dollars of illegal transactions for Iranian customers.
Standard Chartered shares down following Iran allegations
Interview with
Aug 7, 2012
Standard Chartered could soon have its banking license revoked in the nation's financial center, because of allegations that the bank has been hiding tens of thousands of secret transactions with Iran.
How bank-rate rigging hits the real world
by
Aug 6, 2012
The LIBOR rigging scandal extends beyond Wall Street. Local governments allege fake rates made budget shortfalls worse and hit public services.
Islam and money
Interview by
Aug 3, 2012
The first in our series about money and religion, we look at how Muslims view and deal with money. Learn more about Islamic law regarding debt, investments and tithing.
A saving-and-spending balancing act
by
Aug 6, 2012
Our Marketplace Money Piggy Bank Award goes to 10-year-old Anna Pitman, who is learning the balance between the joy of spending and the pride of saving.
The problems with big banking, from back in the '90s
Interview by
Jul 30, 2012
Last week we spent plenty of breath on Sandy Weill, the former head of Citigroup. Back in the '90s, he fought for his and other banks to grow huge and complex. Then last week Weill goes on TV and says: "It's time to break up the big banks."
The 401(k) system doesn't work
by
Jul 27, 2012
Many Americans are unprepared for retirement -- and an economics professor believes government intervention is necessary to create a viable retirement system.
Are banks benefitting from CARD Act they lobbied against?
by
Jul 26, 2012
A law restricting credit card acess for poor credit risks has resulted in fewer defaults.
Father of big banking Sandy Weill changes tune
by
Jul 26, 2012
Sandy Weill, who engineered Citigroup and the creation of megabanks, says big banks should be split up. Will the debate now gain traction?
LIBOR rigging could be made a crime in Europe
by
Jul 25, 2012
In the ongoing LIBOR interest rate rigging scandal, European lawmakers have proposed making interest rate rigging a crime.







