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American Banker

American Banker is a Monday to Friday daily trade newspaper owned and published by SourceMedia, Inc. American Banker is headquartered in New York, N.Y. and was first published in 1836. Readers of American Banker are primarily high ranking banking executives and those with billions of dollars in assets. Seventy percent of American Banker readers hold senior management positions and 66 percent come from financial institutions, with 55.8 percent of those working in the commercial and retail banking sectors. Twenty-one percent of the readership control assets totaling $50 billion and above. The newspaper is published across the United States.In the 1960s, then-editor William E. Zimmerman traveled around the United States reporting on the civil rights movement by asking African-Americans what they needed from the banking industry and in turn interviewing local bankers to find out what services they were providing for African-Americans.In 1988, American Banker reported that the Japanese have the 10 largest banks in the world and that the U.S. banks, for the first time in three decades, were knocked out of the top 25 due to the falling dollar. Citibank, the largest bank in the U.S. at the time, fell from the 17th largest bank in the world to 28th, with $101.1 billion in deposits.American Banker was also the first national publication to report extensively on the fall of Penn Square Bank in Oklahoma City. Marc Hochstein is the Executive Editor, John DelMauro is the Vice President and Group Publisher, Richard Melville is the Group Editorial Director, Banking, and John DeCesare is the Group Publisher.

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Articles from Vol. 163, No. 233, December 8

BankAmerica Closes Prefab Home Unit; 200 Lose Jobs
By HEATHER TIMMONS BankAmerica Corp. has shuttered the nation's fourth-largest manufactured housing lender, eliminating hundreds of jobs as it sells the remnants of the business. The shedding of NationsCredit Manufactured Housing Corp., originally...
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Basel Panel Seen as Too Slow in Reacting to Global Crisis
By JARET SEIBERG In promoting global financial stability, the Basel Committee for Banking Supervision appears to have stumbled. Banking systems in Russia, Korea, Thailand, Indonesia, and Brazil have run themselves into the ground during the last...
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BB&T of N.C. Makes 34th Deal to Acquire an Insurance Agency-And It's Still Looking
By MICHAEL O'D. MOORE BB&T Corp. last week announced another deal to buy an insurance agency and said it's hungry for more. The Winston-Salem, N.C., banking company said Blue Ridge Burke Insurance Agency Inc. would become its 34th insurance...
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Chase Manhattan Picks Software from Procard to Help Manage Corporate Card Accounts
By CHARLES KEENAN Procard Inc. has scored a victory in the commercial card business by licensing its software to Chase Manhattan Bank. Procard will provide the software as well as support services for Chase's corporate customers who use purchasing,...
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Electronic Commerce: Bank Group Chases Dream of Paperless Checking
By STEVEN MARJANOVIC Small Value Payments Co., a big-bank electronic check processing consortium that was formed in October, could become the catalyst for widespread adoption of electronic check presentment, industry experts say. A spinoff from...
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Firm Opens World of Insurance M&A to Banks
By MICHAEL O'D. MOORE When banks decide to buy insurance agencies, they often turn to Marsh, Berry & Co. The Concord, Ohio, mergers and acquisitions specialist has helped broker many such deals. This summer, it represented People's Bank of...
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Fla. Probing an Offer of 'Free' Airfare with Huntington Accounts
By BRETT CHASE Florida's attorney general is investigating whether Huntington Bancshares broke a state law against deceptive advertising. To attract customers to its banks in central Florida, Huntington advertised free round-trip airline tickets...
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Insurance: Chase Launches Commercial Title Joint Venture
By MICHAEL O'D. MOORE Chase Manhattan Corp. has added a line of insurance to its growing product menu. Chase, which offers life and property and casualty insurance, now sells commercial title insurance to its customers through a joint venture with...
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KeyCorp Looks to Northwest for Brokerages to Acquire
By OLAF SENERPONT DOMIS KeyCorp wants to bolster its wealth-management and brokerage business in the Pacific Northwest and would consider acquisitions there, a senior bank official said. Having just bought McDonald & Co., a brokerage based...
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Need Seen for Tougher Bargaining with Retailers on ATM Arrangements
By CHARLES KEENAN The market for automated teller machines may seem saturated, but some experts say there are still opportunities for banks that want to pursue deployment plans. Speakers at last week's Retail Delivery Conference, sponsored by the...
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Retailer Planning to Stock Array of Financial Products
By MIRIAM KREININ SOUCCAR Nordstrom Inc. is seeking to blur the line between retail sales and financial services. The upscale department store chain hopes to supplement the credit cards it issues with a suite of financial products, including debit...
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Small Banks Winning Small-Business Market Share
By KAREN TALLEY Mergers slowed the growth of small-business lending among the nation's largest banks in the first half of the year, according to an American Banker survey. The small-business portfolios of the top 50 banking institutions grew by...
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State Farm's Thrift Plans Emerge
By DAVID HARRISON When the nation's largest property and casualty insurer opens State Farm Bank next spring, about 300 insurance agencies will be transformed into de facto bank branches. Agents of State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. will...
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Stocks: Tax Law and Economy Boost Connecticut Thrift Company
By KAREN TALLEY Shares of Mech Financial are gaining favor as analysts focus on a new tax law that is favorable to its mortgage business and on the continued resurgence of the Hartford, Conn., economy. On Monday, Mech-the state's fourth-largest...
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Student Lenders Want Rates Based on the Capital Market
By DAVID HARRISON The drop in yields on government bonds has galvanized the student loan industry to push for an interest rate formula pegged to the capital markets. As the industry gathers this week at the Consumer Bankers Association's student...
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Study Finds Flaws in Banks' PC, Web Investing
By CHRIS COSTANZO Banks' recent forays into PC and Internet banking are bringing out the worst in technology investment decision-making, according to a study unveiled last week at the Bank Administration Institute's Retail Delivery Conference. ...
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Wall Street Watch: Cuts Hit Single-Family Line at Morgan Stanley, Deutsche
By JOSHUA BROCKMAN Wall Street layoffs have hit mortgage trading desks at Morgan Stanley and Deutsche Bank especially hard. Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co. fired 60 traders, salespeople, and researchers from its global bond operations last...
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WEEKLY ADVISER: Student Accounts Are Worth That Old College Try
By Paul Nadler Harold Zarker, a veteran officer of New Jersey's Princeton Bank and Trust, used to brag that the bank had a major advantage over its only competitor-First National Bank of Princeton-when both were local organizations. "They are closer...
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