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Journal Article
Current trends at New England banks
Journal Article
Are consumer delinquencies a problem for New England banks?
Journal Article
International activity at New England banks
Journal Article
New England banks: the past ten years
Discussion Paper
International remittances: information for New England financial institutions
Each year, individuals in the United States send billions of dollars abroad. Most of these remittances are sent by immigrants to their home countries, and the majority of them flow through a handful of service providers who dominate this highly profitable business. As the immigrant population in the United States continues to grow, the volume of remittances climbs each year, reaching nearly $35 billion in 2004. Bankers and other financial professionals are taking notice, and financial institutions around the country are investigating ways to enter the market and capture a share of this ...
Journal Article
Terminations of formal regulatory actions at New England banks
Working Paper
The role of real estate in the New England credit crunch
Banks, particularly in New England, have experienced major losses of capital as a result of their exposure to risky real estate loans. These losses, accompanied by strict enforcement of capital regulations, have caused banks to shrink their assets in an attempt to improve their capital/asset ratios. Poorly capitalized banks have contracted their real estate loans much more than their better-capitalized peers. In New England, which experienced widespread shocks to bank capital, credit availability for real estate is being constrained by capital-impaired lenders.
Conference Paper
Bank capital regulation and the New England credit crunch
Journal Article
Current trends at New England banks