Bank Nerd Corner
Bank Nerd Corner

Our perception of money is changing rapidly, and banks are at the center of all of it. From how we access it to how we buy to how we trust that our money will be there when we need it. Here on Bank Nerd Corner, Kiah Haslett brings on a rotating cast of expert bankers, economists, academics and more to sit down and talk about the complex dynamics shaping financial services today. Banks exist at the crossroads between risk and safety, private business and public policy and new technology and some of the oldest laws we have. If we can understand what is changing and what probably won’t, we’ll be in a better position to respond strategically. And, hopefully, we’ll understand the strange creature that is financial services a little bit better.  Subscribe to Bank Nerd Corner to get the latest episode every Thursday!

Bank Nerd Corner welcomes Heather Long, chief economist at Navy Federal Credit Union. Heather focuses on labor data and consumer health — an important topic for healthy of financial institutions and the economy writ large.  She’s seen some concerning things in the last 12 to 24 months: a K-shaped recovery and an emerging jobless boom. One reason why could be how companies are leveraging artificial intelligence to maintain or lower headcounts while maintaining productivity.  Finally, Heather and Kiah think about what financial institutions should be looking at for signs of consumer health or weakness, and how they can stay close to their consumers. Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett Follow Heather: Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hlong/ Twitter: https://x.com/byHeatherLong
Bank Nerd Corner welcomes Brian Peters, a veteran of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and insurance giant AIG.  Brian writes the newsletter Perspectives on Risk, which draws on his experience in bank supervision at the New York Fed and as chief risk officer at AIG. He’s interested in financial stability, bank supervision and how technology, climate and demographics impact the economy.  Brian and Kiah discuss the different mandates of the various federal banking agencies and the unique spot the New York Fed occupies, the three approaches he’s seen when it comes to bank supervision, credit quality trends at banks and his experience trying to convince a large language model to use public data to predict bank failures.  And as promised, Brian did publish his newsletter about credit quality that he mentions during the episode, available here: https://substack.com/home/post/p-183560508. Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett Subscribe to Perspectives on Risk: https://perspectiveonrisk.substack.com/
In their first Bank Nerd Corner Squared episode of 2026, Kiah and Alex try their best to keep it light in the face of a lot of tough news. 2026 has been light on serious bank topics to date, but they talk about the interesting trend of fintechs buying banks, especially compared to the de novo charter applications from similar types of companies. They then hit some of the low points of the news cycle, including President Donald Trump’s proposal to cap interest rates at 10%, the grand jury subpoenas sent to the Federal Reserve Board and the announcement that the Trump family’s cryptocurrency firm, World LIberty Financial, would apply for a national trust charter. To lighten the mood, Kiah closes with a small credit card rant. Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett Follow Alex:  YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJgfH47QEwbQmkQlz1V9rQA/videos LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alexhjohnson
Bank Nerd Corner welcomes Jason Henrichs, CEO at Alloy Labs Alliance. Having appeared on Breaking Banks numerous times over the year, Jason returns the favor to commemorate the New Year by ranting, reflecting and resolving with Kiah. Jason and Kiah catch up about their personal approach to resolutions before moving onto how banks should think about the work ahead of them in 2026. Jason shares the largest challenge facing banks in the Alloy Labs consortium, and they break apart what’s frustrating for us when we hear about banks’ ambitions to launch stablecoins or use artificial intelligence. They also spend some time discussing the difference between strategy and strategic planning and how not being focused and strategic can drag decision-making and due diligence. Jason also talks about what banks still don’t get about fintechs, despite the years of partnership. Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett Follow Jason: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasonhenrichs/ Learn more about the Alloy Labs Alliance: https://alloylabs.com
Bank Nerd Corner welcomes Matthew Goldman, the founder of credit card advisory firm Totavi. Kiah and Matthew are both what Kiah calls “maximizers” and they discuss the dozens of cards they have between them before moving onto the meat of the conversation: The Totavi 2025 recap and 2026 trends report.  Debit and credit cards are important but ubiquitous products in the financial ecosystem and in consumers’ lives. Matthew points out that many consumers interact with a card daily. This makes cards a nexus of development and innovation for both legacy banks and their nonbank competitors. Matthew shares the major themes of 2025, which include the issuance of cryptocurrency cards, the challenges of issuing credit to freelance and gig workers and how technology will alter hyperpersonalization and maybe even create super apps. Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett Follow Dan: https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthewgoldman/ Read the Totavi 2025 Recap and 2026 Trend report: https://www.totavi.com/post/totavi-annual-trends-report-2025
Bank Nerd Corner welcomes Michael Ohlrogge, a professor of Law at New York University’s School of Law, to talk about the realities of uninsured deposits, deposit insurance and bank failures.  Professor Ohlrogge’s paper, “Why Have Uninsured Depositors Become De Facto Insured?,” explores how usual, or unusual, it is for uninsured depositors to take losses when a bank fails.  Ohlrogge’s research found that prior to 2008, it was common for uninsured depositors to take a haircut on their uninsured funds when their institution failed. Today, when a bank fails, it’s very normal for most, if not all, of the uninsured deposits to be assumed by the acquirer.  The shift to de facto insurance coverage for all deposits coincides with a dramatic increase in the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.’s costs to resolve failed banks. Professor Ohlrogge and Kiah also discuss the potential implications of his paper in light of Congress considering raising the deposit insurance coverage limit. Read “Why Have Uninsured Depositors Become De Facto Insured?” here: https://nyulawreview.org/issues/volume-100-number-2/why-have-uninsured-depositors-become-de-facto-insured/ Taktile⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ is an AI Decision Platform that helps financial institutions automate and improve their risk management strategies across the entire customer lifecycle. From onboarding and credit underwriting to fraud detection and transaction monitoring, Taktile empowers risk teams to build, test, and optimize their critical decision processes, without relying on engineers. Taktile has been recognized as category leader — for four quarters in a row — in G2’s Quarterly Report for Decision Management Platforms, and is trusted by leading fintechs, banks, and insurers across the globe. The company is headquartered in New York City and has offices in Berlin and London. For more information, visit⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ taktile.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ or ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠follow Taktile on LinkedIn⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett Follow Professor Ohlrogge: Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-ohlrogge-70a6a76/ Twitter: https://x.com/M_Ohlrogge
In this December episode of Bank Nerd Corner Squared, Kiah and Alex bring their “end of the year” energy to recap 2025 and look ahead to 2026. They chat about the present Alex secretly hopes he receives, as well as their gift-giving approaches. For those curious: Many stores on Etsy offer photo-realistic pillows of pets and here are the Japanese bread lamps — both hit presents Kiah has gifted! 2025 has been such a wild ride for both fintechs and banks. Alex and Kiah  discuss two trends or themes that they thought were interesting or significant in 2025, before moving on to two things they think will happen in 2026. Finally, they wrap it up by discussing resolutions for the next year.  Taktile⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ is an AI Decision Platform that helps financial institutions automate and improve their risk management strategies across the entire customer lifecycle. From onboarding and credit underwriting to fraud detection and transaction monitoring, Taktile empowers risk teams to build, test, and optimize their critical decision processes, without relying on engineers. Taktile has been recognized as category leader — for four quarters in a row — in G2’s Quarterly Report for Decision Management Platforms, and is trusted by leading fintechs, banks, and insurers across the globe. The company is headquartered in New York City and has offices in Berlin and London. For more information, visit⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ taktile.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ or ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠follow Taktile on LinkedIn⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett Follow Alex:  YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJgfH47QEwbQmkQlz1V9rQA/videos LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alexhjohnson
Bank Nerd Corner welcomes Andrew Grant, a regulatory attorney at Runway Group, to discuss the 1978 U.S. Supreme Court case Marquette National Bank of Minneapolis v. First of Omaha Service Corp.  This seminal banking case involves national banks, interest rate exportation across states and the important question of where a loan is made. This decision and a subsequent act of Congress made interest rate exportation a mostly settled question for decades and led to an explosion of nation-wide competition for credit products, but will that be true going forward? Andrew shares how a recent court case and potential actions from state legislatures throw a new wrench into the mostly unchanged landscape of where loans are made and what that means for the interest rates they carry.   Taktile⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ is an AI Decision Platform that helps financial institutions automate and improve their risk management strategies across the entire customer lifecycle. From onboarding and credit underwriting to fraud detection and transaction monitoring, Taktile empowers risk teams to build, test, and optimize their critical decision processes, without relying on engineers. Taktile has been recognized as category leader — for four quarters in a row — in G2’s Quarterly Report for Decision Management Platforms, and is trusted by leading fintechs, banks, and insurers across the globe. The company is headquartered in New York City and has offices in Berlin and London. For more information, visit⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ taktile.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ or ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠follow Taktile on LinkedIn⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett Follow Andrew: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrew-w-grant-24667315/
Bank Nerd Corner welcomes Shawn Main, chief business architect at Vantage Bank, for this episode of Banker’s Hours.  Banker’s Hours explores the personalities in banking for some real talk on important, interesting and fun topics.  Many banks in the United States are wondering about the potential implications of digital assets and stablecoins for their institutions. Not Vantage Bank. Shawn shares Vantage Bank’s journey in the digital asset space. Shawn tells Kiah how the $5 billion bank unit of VBT Financial Corp. learned about blockchains, stablecoins and smart contacts, identified partners to work with and brought regulators and customers on board. They also discuss what the future of money could look like and Vantage is forming a consortium in response.  Taktile⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ is an AI Decision Platform that helps financial institutions automate and improve their risk management strategies across the entire customer lifecycle. From onboarding and credit underwriting to fraud detection and transaction monitoring, Taktile empowers risk teams to build, test, and optimize their critical decision processes, without relying on engineers. Taktile has been recognized as category leader — for four quarters in a row — in G2’s Quarterly Report for Decision Management Platforms, and is trusted by leading fintechs, banks, and insurers across the globe. The company is headquartered in New York City and has offices in Berlin and London. For more information, visit⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ taktile.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ or ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠follow Taktile on LinkedIn⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Follow Shawn on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shawnmain/ Read about how Vantage Bank’s worked with DX Xpress to use tokenized U.S. dollars to make cross-border payments: https://www.vantage.bank/insights/tokenized-bank-deposit-issued-by-custodia-bank-and-vantage-bank-used-for-fast-cross-border-business-payments Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett
Bank Nerd Corner welcomes Adam Mustafa, president and CEO of Invictus Analytics.  Adam sets the stage for what’s been going on with the Federal Open Market Committee this year, including how President Donald Trump is changing the board’s dynamics, and how that has played out in two big meetings this fall. Kiah and Adam then talk about the two recent interest rate decisions before spending the bulk of the episode dissecting the news that the FOMC will end quantitative tightening after December.  What does this mean for banks? Adam explains the mechanics of quantitative easing and tightening and highlights some interesting items that happened at the end of October. Finally, they discuss the uncertainty that the Fed’s balance sheet could cause for bank liquidity and deposit competition going forward. Taktile⁠⁠⁠⁠ is an AI Decision Platform that helps financial institutions automate and improve their risk management strategies across the entire customer lifecycle. From onboarding and credit underwriting to fraud detection and transaction monitoring, Taktile empowers risk teams to build, test, and optimize their critical decision processes, without relying on engineers. Taktile has been recognized as category leader — for four quarters in a row — in G2’s Quarterly Report for Decision Management Platforms, and is trusted by leading fintechs, banks, and insurers across the globe. The company is headquartered in New York City and has offices in Berlin and London. For more information, visit⁠⁠⁠⁠ taktile.com⁠⁠⁠⁠ or ⁠⁠⁠⁠follow Taktile on LinkedIn⁠⁠⁠⁠. Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett Follow Dan: https://www.linkedin.com/in/adammustafa/
Kiah and Alex catch up ahead of the inaugural Fintech Takes: Builders Summit to discuss how to dress for an event that cold as well as potentially plan to play a nerdy board game that could be about banking while they’re there. They then break down the news. First up is the public (and Alex’s) confusion around the proposed skinny master account from Fed Gov. Christopher Waller, which could either be a potential national money transmitter license or is a narrow fix for a handful of unusual institutions. Kiah then recaps the sad and strange tale of the 2023 failure of Heartland Tri-State Bank, including the recent twist about who is considered a victim that needs restitution. Finally, Kiah discusses two of her favorite things: banking and travel cards. But this time, it’s not a credit card.  Taktile⁠⁠⁠ is an AI Decision Platform that helps financial institutions automate and improve their risk management strategies across the entire customer lifecycle. From onboarding and credit underwriting to fraud detection and transaction monitoring, Taktile empowers risk teams to build, test, and optimize their critical decision processes, without relying on engineers. Taktile has been recognized as category leader — for four quarters in a row — in G2’s Quarterly Report for Decision Management Platforms, and is trusted by leading fintechs, banks, and insurers across the globe. The company is headquartered in New York City and has offices in Berlin and London. For more information, visit⁠⁠⁠ taktile.com⁠⁠⁠ or ⁠⁠⁠follow Taktile on LinkedIn⁠⁠⁠. Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett Follow Alex:  YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJgfH47QEwbQmkQlz1V9rQA/videos LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alexhjohnson
Bank Nerd Corner welcomes Dan McGonegle, a senior manager at Crowe and the former manager of the novel activities supervision program at the Federal Reserve Board. Kiah and Dan chat about their Money 20/20 game plan before moving into a broad conversation about bank chartering activity and the application process. It can be a lot to keep up with: A number of companies have applied for charters ranging from industrial loan charters, full commercial bank charters and national trust charters. There’s also interest in pairing them with Fed master accounts.  They talk about the competition these companies introduce to the traditional and legacy bank space, how bank regulation is balancing the tension between supervision and policy and his thoughts on the friend/foe dynamic banks have with stablecoins. Taktile⁠⁠ is an AI Decision Platform that helps financial institutions automate and improve their risk management strategies across the entire customer lifecycle. From onboarding and credit underwriting to fraud detection and transaction monitoring, Taktile empowers risk teams to build, test, and optimize their critical decision processes, without relying on engineers. Taktile has been recognized as category leader — for four quarters in a row — in G2’s Quarterly Report for Decision Management Platforms, and is trusted by leading fintechs, banks, and insurers across the globe. The company is headquartered in New York City and has offices in Berlin and London. For more information, visit⁠⁠ taktile.com⁠⁠ or ⁠⁠follow Taktile on LinkedIn⁠⁠. Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett Follow Dan: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dan-mcgonegle-45602071/
Bank Nerd Corner welcomes Trent Sorbe, chief payments officer at First International Bank and Trust, for this episode of Banker’s Hours.  Banker’s Hours explores the personalities in banking for some real talk on important, interesting and fun topics.  Trent has specialized in payments over his career, and that has led him into the land of payments technology and banking as a service. First International, which includes the Kotapay division Trent oversees, is the $5.5 billion bank unit of Watford City Bancshares and is based in Watford City, North Dakota. Trent and Kiah about why and how South Dakota became the payments capital of the United States, how all banks do payments but not all banks are payment banks, and the risk and opportunity that underpin banking as a service, as well as how this business line has evolved.  Taktile⁠⁠ is an AI Decision Platform that helps financial institutions automate and improve their risk management strategies across the entire customer lifecycle. From onboarding and credit underwriting to fraud detection and transaction monitoring, Taktile empowers risk teams to build, test, and optimize their critical decision processes, without relying on engineers. Taktile has been recognized as category leader — for four quarters in a row — in G2’s Quarterly Report for Decision Management Platforms, and is trusted by leading fintechs, banks, and insurers across the globe. The company is headquartered in New York City and has offices in Berlin and London. For more information, visit⁠⁠ taktile.com⁠⁠ or ⁠⁠follow Taktile on LinkedIn⁠⁠. Follow Trent on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tsorbe/ Read Trent’s piece about why banks must reinvent BaaS: https://www.bai.org/banking-strategies/why-banks-must-reinvent-baas/ Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett
Bank Nerd Corner welcomes BJ Sanford and Matthew Lambert to discuss the 2019 case, Vullo v. OCC, an important and somewhat-unsettled case that continues to have downstream impacts in the financial services space today. BJ is a partner at Sivon, Natter & Wechsler. Matthew is deputy general counsel at the Conference of State Bank Supervisors. Together, they explore the history of the proposed special-purpose charter, the arguments that both the CSBS and New York made against the OCC and some of the major issues and central questions in the case. They also share where they see this decision falling in the realm of U.S. banking law and regulation, what remains unsolved and how it lives on today.  Taktile⁠ is an AI Decision Platform that helps financial institutions automate and improve their risk management strategies across the entire customer lifecycle. From onboarding and credit underwriting to fraud detection and transaction monitoring, Taktile empowers risk teams to build, test, and optimize their critical decision processes, without relying on engineers. Taktile has been recognized as category leader — for four quarters in a row — in G2’s Quarterly Report for Decision Management Platforms, and is trusted by leading fintechs, banks, and insurers across the globe. The company is headquartered in New York City and has offices in Berlin and London. For more information, visit⁠ taktile.com⁠ or ⁠follow Taktile on LinkedIn⁠. Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett Follow BJ: https://www.linkedin.com/in/barak-j-sanford/ Follow Matthew: https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthewdflambert/ Follow the Conference of State Bank Supervisors: https://www.csbs.org/
It’s finally Alex Johnson’s turn to be a guest on Bank Nerd Corner for a monthly download and recap of interesting items in the banking and fintech universe. He and Kiah record for the first time together, in the Washington, DC, offices of Canapi Ventures, ahead of the Fintech Takes Coworking day. In a lively conversation, we talk about banks getting together in the form of M&A, including why buyers are acting now and what it tells us about the direction of the rest of the industry. We then discuss some fractures among banks of different sizes that are emerging from issues like the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s Section 1033 and the proposal to raise the deposit insurance limit for certain accounts at certain banks. And finally, we discuss one potential use of the blockchain, which involves betting and World Cup tickets.  Taktile⁠ is an AI Decision Platform that helps financial institutions automate and improve their risk management strategies across the entire customer lifecycle. From onboarding and credit underwriting to fraud detection and transaction monitoring, Taktile empowers risk teams to build, test, and optimize their critical decision processes, without relying on engineers. Taktile has been recognized as category leader — for four quarters in a row — in G2’s Quarterly Report for Decision Management Platforms, and is trusted by leading fintechs, banks, and insurers across the globe. The company is headquartered in New York City and has offices in Berlin and London. For more information, visit⁠ taktile.com⁠ or ⁠follow Taktile on LinkedIn⁠. Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett Follow Alex:  YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJgfH47QEwbQmkQlz1V9rQA/videos LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alexhjohnson
Bank Nerd Corner welcomes Todd Phillips, an assistant professor at the Georgia State University’s Robinson College of Business, to discuss a not-so-theoretical thought experiment about the intersection of artificial intelligence, deposit stability and bank liquidity,  Todd’s paper, “When Siri Becomes Deposit Broker,” explores the implications for banks if consumers and businesses widely adopt agentic artificial intelligence capabilities that could automatically and autonomously move customer funds out of banks, either for rate seeking or stability reasons.  This imagined application would continue the long tradition of “deposit brokers” in the industry, a historic deposit designation that indicated the deposits were “hot” and not fully relationships. This time, they — and their regulators — may not realize their customer deposits are “hot” before it’s too late. We talk about the technology that makes this possible, why the definition of deposit broker matters, what are regulators’ limitations and how banks should respond.  Taktile⁠ is an AI Decision Platform that helps financial institutions automate and improve their risk management strategies across the entire customer lifecycle. From onboarding and credit underwriting to fraud detection and transaction monitoring, Taktile empowers risk teams to build, test, and optimize their critical decision processes, without relying on engineers. Taktile has been recognized as category leader — for four quarters in a row — in G2’s Quarterly Report for Decision Management Platforms, and is trusted by leading fintechs, banks, and insurers across the globe. The company is headquartered in New York City and has offices in Berlin and London. For more information, visit⁠ taktile.com⁠ or ⁠follow Taktile on LinkedIn⁠. Read “When Siri Becomes a Deposit Broker” here: https://southstatecorrespondent.com/category/banker-to-banker/ Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett
Bank Nerd Corner welcomes Chris Nichols, the director of capital markets at SouthState Bank Corp., for the inaugural episode of Banker’s Hours.  Banker’s Hours explores the personalities in banking for some real talk on important, interesting and fun topics.  Chris is a writer in addition to being a banker. He shares why he gives so many secrets away in his popular financial blog “Banker to Banker” and how he identifies operational, performance or technology topics to write about. We discuss tech hot topics like cryptocurrency, stablecoins and artificial intelligence, but also old standbys like deposits and profitability. Chris shares his thoughts on his favorite nonbank topics and a small banking hill he’ll die on.  Taktile is an AI Decision Platform that helps financial institutions automate and improve their risk management strategies across the entire customer lifecycle. From onboarding and credit underwriting to fraud detection and transaction monitoring, Taktile empowers risk teams to build, test, and optimize their critical decision processes, without relying on engineers. Taktile has been recognized as category leader — for four quarters in a row — in G2’s Quarterly Report for Decision Management Platforms, and is trusted by leading fintechs, banks, and insurers across the globe. The company is headquartered in New York City and has offices in Berlin and London. For more information, visit taktile.com or follow Taktile on LinkedIn. Follow Chris on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cknichols/ Read Banker to Banker here: https://southstatecorrespondent.com/category/banker-to-banker/ Fintech Takes Banking is the weekly newsletter for bank execs who get it. Subscribe for the latest in regulation, tech, financials, operations and, yes, accounting, straight to your inbox: https://fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription/ Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett
Bank Nerd Corner is back with Kiah Haslett returning … not just as co-host, but as an official member of Fintech Takes!  That’s right, big news: Bank Nerd Corner will soon be its own podcast feed, with Kiah hosting (and Alex dropping in monthly as a guest).  Kiah’s podcast launches this September alongside her new weekly newsletter, Fintech Takes Banking! If you’re listening to this episode, you basically asked for it (sign up at fintechtakes.com/banking/newsletter-subscription). Now, onto Bank Nerding!  First up,  the topic that's going to end up on my tombstone when I die: open banking.  We dig into the CFPB’s sudden flip on open banking. JPMorgan Chase tried charging for data access, the Bureau hit pause on litigation, and now an accelerated rulemaking process is underway. Will banks get the green light to price data, or did Chase just overplay its hand? Is this the beginning of monopoly pricing in disguise? Next, Kiah schools Alex (and the rest of us) on why crypto firms are suddenly obsessed with national trust charters (what they are, why they matter, and how they could function as narrow banks in disguise). Stablecoin reserves, custody rules, and OCC oversight are all on the table. And finally, the Palmer Luckey-backed digital bank Erebor enters the chat, promising to be the new Silicon Valley Bank for startups, crypto, and defense companies. Their pitch: political connections will fast-track their national bank charter with the OCC. But can political connections really expedite a de novo charter without wrecking regulators’ credibility? Sign up for Alex’s Fintech Takes newsletter for the latest insightful analysis on fintech trends, along with a heaping pile of pop culture references and copious footnotes. Every Monday and Thursday: https://workweek.com/brand/fintech-takes/   Follow Kiah: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/khaslett/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/khaslett   Follow Alex:  YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJgfH47QEwbQmkQlz1V9rQA/videos LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alexhjohnson Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/AlexH_Johnson