WASHINGTON – Pending home sales in November jumped by 3.3% from the prior month and 2.6% year over year, according to the National Association of REALTORS Pending Home Sales Report.
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NEW YORK—Artificial intelligence is quickly becoming a standard workplace tool as employers see measurable productivity gains, according to new research from PYMNTS Intelligence. Most companies now encourage AI use rather than simply permitting it, even as they race to put governance policies in place to manage growing reliance on the technology.
NEW YORK — Two new lawsuits are putting Bank of America and Bank of New York Mellon (BNY) back under scrutiny for their past ties to Jeffrey Epstein, alleging the banks enabled his sex-trafficking enterprise even as public efforts to release government records about Epstein have stalled, The Guardian reported.
WILLISTON, Vt. — John Dwyer, chief executive officer of the $3-billion EastRise Credit Union, has announced plans to retire effective June 5, 2026, ending a 38-year career with the organization, including 15 years as CEO.
WASHINGTON--Alloya Corporate Federal Credit Union is the newest member of the Defense Credit Union Council, DCUC announced.
WASHINGTON — Rep. Doug LaMalfa, a California Republican who had served in the House since 2013, has died, GOP leaders announced Tuesday. He was 65. A cause of death was not disclosed.
NAPERVILLE, Ill. — Alloya Corporate Federal Credit Union has increased the dividend rate on its Perpetual Contributed Capital to 3.00%, effective Jan. 1, 2026, as it marks its 15th year of operations, the organization said.
WASHINGTON--The housing market is strained entering 2026, due to high prices and high mortgage rates.
WASHINGTON — Credit card use in the U.S. continued to expand in 2024, but the growth has become increasingly concentrated among higher-income, higher-credit-score consumers, according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s latest biennial review of the credit card market.
CHICAGO — America’s Credit Unions is awaiting a decision from U.S. District Judge Virginia Kendall that could determine not only the fate of Illinois’ interchange fee law, but also how aggressively other states pursue similar measures.
