Since the Great Depression, bank regulators in the United States have endeavored to separate banking institutions from commercial firms, believing such separation was necessary for stability and growth. The recent collapse of our financial system indicates that this premise may be false, as Industrial Loan Companies ( ILCs ) – the only institutions where commercial firms are permitted to own banks – remain sound. ILCs have persisted throughout U.S. banking history through exceptions and omissions in banking legislation, but the strength and resilience they have exhibited in the current financial collapse are worth investigating and even emulating. This article examines recent controversy surrounding the ILC charter sparked by Wal-Mart\u27\u...
The walls separating commercial banks and thrifts from non-bank financial institutions are beginning...
This Article examines the extent to which financial holding companies formed under the Gramm-Leach-B...
This article (1) analyzes the traditional Glass-Steagall Act restrictions on banks and the leading c...
Since the Great Depression, bank regulators in the United States have endeavored to separate banking...
Industrial Loan Companies (ILCs), are state-chartered and state-regulated depository institutions wh...
During the past three years, a highly-publicized controversy has raged over the question of whether ...
This Article examines the long-held belief that banking and commerce need to be kept separate in ord...
Industrial Loan Companies (ILCs) are state-chartered and state-regulated depository institutions. Th...
During 2005-2006, Wal-Mart, Home Depot, and several other commercial firms applied to the Federal De...
This Article explains why contraction of commercial banking—as defined, organized, and conducted und...
This article traces the history of the growth and regulation of banking services in the United State...
This paper situates Wal-Mart\u27s failed application to form a banking subsidiary in the context of ...
The paper analyses the lessons related to banking regulations to be drawn from two banking failures ...
The banking difficulties of the 1980s prompted Congress to enact the Federal Deposit Insurance Corpo...
On March 17, 2020, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”) published a proposed rule (the...
The walls separating commercial banks and thrifts from non-bank financial institutions are beginning...
This Article examines the extent to which financial holding companies formed under the Gramm-Leach-B...
This article (1) analyzes the traditional Glass-Steagall Act restrictions on banks and the leading c...
Since the Great Depression, bank regulators in the United States have endeavored to separate banking...
Industrial Loan Companies (ILCs), are state-chartered and state-regulated depository institutions wh...
During the past three years, a highly-publicized controversy has raged over the question of whether ...
This Article examines the long-held belief that banking and commerce need to be kept separate in ord...
Industrial Loan Companies (ILCs) are state-chartered and state-regulated depository institutions. Th...
During 2005-2006, Wal-Mart, Home Depot, and several other commercial firms applied to the Federal De...
This Article explains why contraction of commercial banking—as defined, organized, and conducted und...
This article traces the history of the growth and regulation of banking services in the United State...
This paper situates Wal-Mart\u27s failed application to form a banking subsidiary in the context of ...
The paper analyses the lessons related to banking regulations to be drawn from two banking failures ...
The banking difficulties of the 1980s prompted Congress to enact the Federal Deposit Insurance Corpo...
On March 17, 2020, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”) published a proposed rule (the...
The walls separating commercial banks and thrifts from non-bank financial institutions are beginning...
This Article examines the extent to which financial holding companies formed under the Gramm-Leach-B...
This article (1) analyzes the traditional Glass-Steagall Act restrictions on banks and the leading c...