Kate Berry has covered the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau for American Banker since 2016. She joined the publication in 2006 covering mortgage lending and the financial crisis. Berry also has covered big banks including Bank of America, J.P. Morgan Chase and Wells Fargo. She has won five awards from the Society of American Business Writers and Editors, and has worked at several news organizations including the Orange County Register, the Los Angeles Business Journal and the Associated Press. Berry began her career as a clerk at the New York Times.
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Wells Fargo appears to have offered two different reasons for why it failed to inform investors about the investigation into 2 million phony accounts.
By Kate BerryOctober 25 -
Wall Street analysts are divided on how much a changing of the guard will help; lawmakers on Capitol Hill say it's not enough.
By Kate BerryOctober 13 -
A tale of two banks emerges from a hearing on Wells Fargo's phony account scandal; one calls the problem an aberration, the other routine.
By Kate BerryOctober 12 -
Wells has long touted cross-selling as the reason behind its success. But revelations of a cutthroat sales culture and phony accounts have undermined its credibility.
By Kate BerrySeptember 23 -
Wells Fargo Chief Executive John Stumpf arguably faces the challenge of his career on Tuesday as he appears before the Senate Banking Committee to answer criticisms that he and other top bank executives should have detected and stopped millions of phony accounts from being opened.
By Kate BerrySeptember 19 -
The penalty is the largest ever imposed by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
By Kate BerrySeptember 8 -
The proposal, which would allow more consumers to join class-action lawsuits over disputes, could drive up compliance costs. Agency director Richard Cordray wants more accountability.
By Kate BerryMay 5 -
The third quarter ends in two weeks, and top executives at Citigroup, Wells Fargo, and two regional banks are raising concerns about cost pressures, impediments to revenue growth and heightened lending risks.
September 17 -
M&T, PNC, SunTrust and other regionals reported strong fee growth thanks to inroads they have made in investment banking, wealth management and other areas. It couldn't have come at a better time for them.
July 20 -
The Greek debt crisis and China's stock-market crash may put downward pressure on interest rates and delay the Fed's interest rate hike, and they are adding uncertainty at a time when lenders thought recovery would be taking hold.
July 8 -
Since taking over in 2010, Moynihan has been negotiator-in-chief. Now he faces an equally daunting challenge: nudging the nations second-largest bank back to growth.
By Kate BerrySeptember 22 -
But large banks have narrowed the gap as they have made a more concerted effort to better explain their fee structures to disgruntled customers.
By Kate BerryApril 18 -
Though banks have always measured customer satisfaction, there is a greater focus now on understanding exactly what drives the customer experience and how it can help the bottom line.
By Kate BerrySeptember 21 -
An aggressive push by the Justice Department to investigate fair lending claims is prompting a backlash from bankers who claim the government is abusing its authority and contradicting findings by other federal regulators.
By Kate BerryAugust 2 -
David Stevens arrived as a commissioner at the Federal Housing Administration in 2009 vowing to restore financial discipline to a government housing body facing the stresses of a post-crash world. A former mortgage banker himself, Stevens, now 54, bolstered the agency's finances and pursued alleged wrongdoing at nonbank lenders including Berkshire Hathaway and Goldman Sachs & Co. affiliates.
By Kate BerryAugust 2 -
Citing "regulations written for banking institutions," the insurance giant has put its $16 billion-asset depository on the block. MetLife, which ranks among the top 15 home lenders, would continue writing mortgages. But it would do so as part of the so-called shadow banking system.
By Kate BerryJuly 22 -
With the macroeconomic outlook still glum, housing prices still depressed and the FHA's grip on the market for low-down payment loans still intact, the mortgage insurers are stuck in the same rut. New business volume remains down sharply from pre-crisis levels, the insurers continue to pay out hefty claims on soured mortgage loans, and the forecast for when the industry returns to profitability is again murky at best.
By Kate BerryJune 29 -
Bank of America Corp. will pay $20 million and Morgan Stanley $2.35 million for improperly foreclosing on members of the military some of whom were on active duty in Iraq and Afghanistan under a settlement with the Justice Department.
By Kate BerryMay 27 -
MetLife Bank, a unit of the MetLife Inc., has catapulted from relative obscurity in banking to become the seventh-largest depository and a contender in mortgages.
By Kate BerryJanuary 7 -
It remains to be seen whether institutions that are in better financial shape than Bank of America and Ally Financial will accept olive branches from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
By Kate BerryJanuary 4




