ABA 'On the Air'
ABA speaks up for banks in dozens of broadcast interviews

ABA routinely conducts hundreds of interviews on the nation's most critical banking issues. But these times are anything but routine, and ABA has made a priority of getting the industry's message out – in print and on the air – about banks' health and lending, as well as policies that are harmful to economic recovery.

AUGUST 2010

Chessen on C-Span

C-Span "Washington Journal" | Aug 17
Financial Regulatory Reform

James Chessen, ABA chief economist says, "We need to make sure there’s a balanced approach so that banks can continue to make good quality loans in their communities, and customers feel they have products and services that they can count on."

JULY 2010

Feddis on PBS

PBS "Nightly Business Report" | Jul 9
Credit Card Changes 14m 1s

Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says a new box on your credit card statement "will sum up the amount of fees and the amount of interest paid that month and for that year, so people at the end of the year can look and say, boy, I spent that much on interest. Maybe I should pay down my loan."

JUNE 2010

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "Street Signs" | Jun 25
Financial Regulatory Reform Bill

ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says the bill "is going to impose thousands of pages … of new regulations on community banks who didn't make any subprime loans, and the end result is going to be less credit."

Feddis on WNYC

WNYC "The Brian Lehrer Show" | Jun 18
New Overdraft Rules 11m 28s

Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "The basic rule is that banks may not impose an overdraft fee for an ATM or a onetime point-of-sale debit card overdraft unless the customer expressly consents. This means that consumers are in driver's seat." 

Johnson on NBC

NBC "Today Show" | Jun 18
ATM Skimming

Doug Johnson, ABA VP of risk management policy says, "You're always going to have some very smart people who are at the top of the chain that are very hard to get to." 

APRIL 2010

Yingling on Reuters TV

Reuters TV | Apr 26
Financial Regulatory Reform Bill 

ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling explains the politics of the Senate's procedural votes on the reform legislation during a video interview with Reuters financial reporter Karey Wutkowski. 

Abernathy on C-SPAN

C-Span | Apr 23
Digital Money (1h21m)

Wayne Abernathy, ABA EVP joins a panel at the American Enterprise Institute discussing digital money and the future of electronic payments. 

Yingling on CBS Evening News

CBS Evening News | Apr 22
Financial Regulatory Reform Bill

ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling explains the community-bank stance on the bill saying it "would limit the ability of your local bank to make loans to consumers and to small businesses to create jobs."

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "Kudlow Report" | Apr 19
Financial Regulatory Reform Bill

ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling describes an ABA letter to the Senate in which we identified 27 new or expanded regulations that apply to traditional banks, "Here you have members of Congress all saying, 'Traditional banks had nothing to do with the crisis, we want to support them,' yet you have a bill that has 27 new [or expanded] types of regulations."

McKechnie on FOX News Channel

FOX News Channel "FOX & Friends" | Apr 7
Health Savings Accounts 

Kevin McKechnie, executive director of the American Bankers Insurance Association says, "We visited with all these congressmen to point out that if you're going to order every American to buy insurance, you've got to have something affordable for them to purchase. The irony here is that we may end up being the life boat for this entire plan."

Chessen on Reuters TV

Reuters TV | Apr 7
Consumer Loan Delinquencies

James Chessen, ABA chief economist says, "I'm encouraged by what consumers have done. The debt-to-income level today is what it was back in 2001. So, it has shown a very consistent pattern. Consumers are really working to get those debt levels down."

MARCH 2010

Yingling on FOX Business

FOX Business | Mar 23
Bank Lending

ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling comments on criticism regarding bank lending, "As the President and the Secretary of the Treasury have recently said, we do have a problem with a regulatory overreaction… and so, we have to get the balance right with the regulators.  We have regulators come in and say, 'Well, I know this looks like a perfect loan but I don't want you making any more of those kinds of loans.'"

Shelby and Hoyer at GR Summit on CSpan

C-Span | Mar 18
ABA Government Relations Summit
Senate Banking Committee ranking Republican Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) give bankers their views on financial regulatory reform at the ABA GR Summit. 

ABA GR Summit

C-Span | Mar 18
ABA Government Relations Summit
Federal Reserve Bank Presidents participated in a panel titled The Role of Banking in Local Economic Growth. Among their remarks, they defended their role in supervising small community banks, and warned against proposals circulating Congress that would take away this authority. Following their discussion they responded to audience members' questions. 

ABA GR Summit

C-Span | Mar 18
ABA Government Relations Summit
Three financial reporters talked about how they cover Capitol Hill in a panel called The Media, Financial Institutions and Your Bank. Topics included the financial regulation overhaul bill making its way through Congress. Following their remarks they responded to audience members' questions. 

Feddis on NPR          

NPR "Diane Rehm Show" | Mar 9
Credit Cards
Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "A lot of times when people get into credit card debt the underlying problem isn't the credit card debt. It's a life crisis, a medical problem, a divorce, a lost job. And in many cases, the credit card helped people bridge the gap to get through that crisis."

FEBRUARY 2010

Feddis on ABC News

ABC News | Feb 21
Credit Cards
Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "I think there was a lot of frustration among a lot of customers and this is Congress and the regulators responding to that frustration."

Feddis on CBS Evening News

CBS Evening News | Feb 21
Credit Cards
Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "The consumer is in control. If they get a notice that there is a new fee or an increase, they can just say no."

Feddis on NPR

NPR "All Things Considered" | Feb 21
Credit Cards
Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "We're in a period of transition, where there's going to be experimentation and innovation. Banks will see how consumers respond. At the end of the day, consumers are going to drive the credit card product."

Feddis on CNN

CNN "American Morning" | Feb 19
Credit Cards
Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "Interest rates will be a little bit higher across the board, it'll be harder for people to get cards, limits will be lower, and, beyond that, card companies are looking at annual fees, a reduction in promotional rates, maybe a reduction in rewards programs."

Yingling on CNN

CNN Money | Feb 3
Proposal to Limit Large Banks 
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says, "Within the industry one of the issues is they're trying to understand what the definition of proprietary trading will be. It's pretty clear that legislation in the United States won't have a hard and fast definition. What they're more likely to do, and what the House bill has already done, is say to the regulators 'This is an issue. You need to look at it. You need to address it and you have the tools, if you think it's risky, to address it.'"

JANUARY 2010

Casey-Landry on Washington Times Radio

Nationally Syndicated "America's Morning News" | Jan 26
Anti-Bank Rhetoric (10m20s)
ABA COO Diane Casey-Landry says, "One of the big things that this administration can do is distinguish between Wall Street and the investment banks and the commercial banks and the Main Street banks. Community banks were not part of this and the Wall Street bonuses are certainly not something you see on Main Street, ever."

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "Closing Bell" | Jan 21
Too-big-to-fail 
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says, "We represent banks of all sizes, and community banks are very concerned that the language in Washington is very negative about banks -- that banks are risky, that banks cost the taxpayer. For example, I don't think a lot of the public understands that in every program involving banks the government is making a profit."

Hoffman on C-Span

C-Span | Jan 19
Economic Forecast 
Stuart Hoffman, ABA Economic Advisory Committee chairman and chief economist, PNC Financial Services, Inc., Pittsburgh says, "The recession technically ended last year. However, the normal rapid economic rebound seen in the first year or so following past deep recessions will not occur...I would call it a 'half-speed' economic recovery."

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "Squawk on the Street" | Jan 8

Small Business Lending 
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says, "The demand for credit is down. Now, there are things on margin that can be done to increase the availability of credit. The bankers are looking at second look programs so they can get beyond the routine, normal way you extend credit and say, 'Is there something special we can do to help this small business?'"

Chessen on PBS

PBS "Nightly Business Report" | Jan 5

Treasury's TARP Investments (8m 20s)
James Chessen, ABA chief economist says, "There are certainly risks of investments for the Treasury, but the profits that Treasury is expecting on the banking portion of TARP far outweighs any of the losses that they anticipate."

Feddis on ABC News

ABC "World News" | Jan 4

Credit Cards 

Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "There's still a lot of competition, there's still a lot of solicitations in the mail and customers can vote with their feet and move to a competitor."

DECEMBER 2009

      Casey-Landry on NPR          

NPR "Marketplace" | Dec 22

Lending Challenges for Community Bankers 

ABA COO Diane Casey-Landry says, "When [regulators] go into a smaller institution, they have the opportunity to go through literally every single loan. And then when you begin criticizing the loans, and you're looking at every one, it can have a ripple effect throughout the institution."

      Seiwert on NPR          

NPR "Marketplace" | Dec 8

Small Business Lending (5m03s)

Bob Seiwert, SVP and senior director for ABA's Center for Commercial Lending & Business Banking says, "When you have a recessionary economy, businesses are not expanding. They're not opening new locations. So when your business line is trending down, you don't need additional funds."

NOVEMBER 2009

Leggett on Washington Ag Today

Northwest Ag Information Network "Washington Ag Today" | Nov 30

Agriculture

Keith Leggett, ABA VP and senior economist says, "If you look at the last two recessions, what you found is that the Fed did not start did not start to raise interest rates until almost a year and a half after the unemployment rate peaked...Overall that means borrowing costs for farmers are going to remain favorable."

Feddis on PBS

PBS "Frontline" | Nov 24

Credit Cards

(Part Four: Consumers Pay the Price 27m30s)

Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "Congress understood when they adopted the rule that credit cards would be more difficult to get, limits would be lower and interest rates would be higher for everyone. But they made the decision that that result was an acceptable consequence, an acceptable trade-off, for the sake of the consumers."

Feddis on CNN

CNN | Nov 19

Credit Cards

Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "There are other ways to address [credit card agreements] rather than having to create an expensive big bureaucracy."

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "Street Signs" | Nov 16

Ally Bank
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says, "Our regulators have learned [from the crisis in the 1980s] that if you have an institution that is troubled and if they are trying to grow their way out by paying very high rates, that often is a prescription for a bigger problem."

Feddis on ABC World News

ABC World News | Nov 10

Credit Cards
Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says in this tough economy, many people can't pay their bills "so losses are up and those losses, in part, are paid for by other borrowers in the form of higher interest rates."

OCTOBER 2009

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC | Oct 27

Resolution Authority
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says, "We need to see the exact language but generally we think Congress is moving very much in the right direction." 

Yingling on FOX Business

FOX Business | Oct 26

Protests at ABA Annual Convention
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says, "These bankers come from all over the country. Probably the median number of employees for these banks is around 50. These are small businesses. Nobody around here made any toxic subprime loans or took big bonuses. They're just trying to serve their communities." 

Mohsberg on NPR   

NPR | Oct 14

ATM Skimming
ABA spokeswoman Margot Mohsberg says, "If you see a machine that looks like there has been something attached to it, you should be suspicious and you should tell your bank, or simply use a different machine." 

Feddis on NPR  

NPR "Marketplace" | Oct 9

Credit Cards
Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "Consumers are in control. If they don't like the new interest rate, they can keep the old one, pay off the balance over time and find another issuer." 

Casey-Landry on NPR

NPR "Diane Rehm Show" | Oct 8

Overdraft Fees
ABA COO Diane Casey-Landry says, "Our surveys and the Federal Reserve and the FDIC have shown that almost 82 percent of people did not have an overdraft last year and that the vast majority were very happy when their bank, in fact, covered it." 

SEPTEMBER 2009

Chessen on PBS 

PBS "Nightly Business Report" | Sept 29

FDIC
James Chessen, ABA chief economist says the FDIC's proposal is "going to have less impact on the banks and less impact on their communities." 

Chessen on FOX Business 

FOX Business "Closing Bell"  | Sept 29

FDIC
James Chessen, ABA chief economist says, "It is a lot of cash out for the industry but it's certainly better than the alternative which was to take a large chunk of money out of income and out of capital from the industry right away. This plan allows the banks to pay for those costs and expense that over the next three years." 

Feddis on CBS Evening News 

CBS Evening News  | Sept 23

Overdraft Fees
Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "It is really up to the customer to know what their balance is and how much they have to spend." 

      Yingling on NPR       

NPR "Marketplace"  | Sept 23

Regulatory Reform
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says, "You will lose the debates you now have among regulators, which are valuable. It's great to have one regulator if that regulator is right, but it's terrible if it's wrong." 

      Casey-Landry on NPR       

NPR "All Things Considered"  |  Sept 15

Regulatory Reform
ABA COO Diane Casey-Landry says, "We have 8,200 banks in this country, 96 percent of which are well capitalized. The reality is you don't regulate and set new regulations and an entire government bureaucracy because of several institutions that have failed." 

Kaplan on NPR

NPR "Marketplace"  |  Sept 1

Bank Marketing
ABA spokeswoman Carol Kaplan says, "A small bank has more at stake in the small market and more likely to know what might go over well in their community." 


AUGUST 2009

Yingling on FOX Business

FOX Business  |  Aug 27

FDIC and Private Equity Firms
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says, "It does cost the FDIC fund when you have failures and every penny in the FDIC fund is paid for by banks. I think [community banks] are happy, if it's done the right way, to have that extra capital come in and buy troubled banks. They want it to be done fairly they should have an equal footing in terms of these acquisitions." 

Abernathy on CNBC

CNBC "Power Lunch"  |  Aug 26

FDIC and Private Equity Firms
Wayne Abernathy, ABA EVP of financial institutions policy and regulatory affairs says, "I think it's a good idea to make sure that the people who are investing in banks are committed to the banking industry, that they're committed to their investment."

Feddis on PBS

PBS "The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer"  |  Aug 20

Credit Cards
Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "The predominant effect of this new law is that consumers will no longer be surprised by an interest rate increase. For the most part, they will receive a 45-day advanced notice and, more importantly, the option to pay off the existing balance over time at the original rate."

Feddis on NPR

NPR "All Things Considered"  |  Aug 20

Credit Cards
Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "When Congress made these decisions, it understood it would be harder for people and for small businesses to get credit cards and that limits would be lower and that credit card interest rates, in general, would go up across the board. But they made the decision that this was an acceptable compromise for the consumer protection."

Feddis on NBC

NBC News  |  Aug 18

Identity Theft
Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "Bottom line, as a general matter, whether it's a credit card or a debit card, consumers are not liable for unauthorized transactions -- including transactions that are the result of hacking."

Feddis on NBC Nightly News

NBC Nightly News  |  Aug 16

Credit Cards
Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "Everybody presents a higher risk than what they did a year ago. Each individual card company is going to look at thier own portfolio, thier own customers."

JULY 2009

Chessen on FOX Business

FOX Business  |  July 26

Bank Lending
James Chessen, ABA chief economist says, "There's a lot of availability for loans. That's what banks are in business to do and everyday they're looking for good loans."

Tenhundfeld on Bloomberg TV

Bloomberg Television  |  July 26

FDIC and Private Equity Firms
Mark Tenhundfeld, ABA SVP office of regulatory policy says, "It's important that private equity have a high hurdle to clear and that anybody who comes in and buys stock of a bank be serious and responsible and be there in good times and bad."

Chessen on Marketplace

NPR "Marketplace"  |  July 22

Treasury's TARP Investments
James Chessen, ABA chief economist says, "Taxpayers are getting a great return. It's over 12 percent. This is a big success for the government."

Feddis on NBC Nightly News

NBC Nightly News  |  July 21

Credit Cards
Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "Credit card companies are losing money because people are losing jobs. And the first bill they stop paying is their credit card."

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC  |  July 14

Consumer Protection Agency
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says, "It would subject your local community bank to conflicting regulation. So you have one examiner, the safety and soundness examiner, who says one thing, and the consumer examiner comes in the next day and says exactly the opposite."

Feddis on ABC News

ABC News "Nightline"  |  July 8

Overdraft Fees

Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "Overdraft fees are intended to encourage people to manage their checking accounts. It's not that different from a parking ticket. If the fee for parking in a fire lane were five dollars, fire trucks would have a lot harder time getting through."

Casey-Landry on FOX Business News

FOX Business  |  July 1

First Trust NASDAQ ABA Community Bank Index Fund

ABA COO Diane Casey-Landry says, "We want to draw some attention to the community bank sector which is still performing extremely well."

Casey-Landry on CNBC

CNBC "Street Signs"  |  July 1

Ally Bank

ABA COO Diane Casey-Landry says, "From our perspective, we don't think we should have 8,000 community banks having to compete against Ally Bank -- having [Ally] drive up their cost of funding while they still get their [government] subsidy. And we do think it's time for them to … quit criticizing the rest of the industry."

JUNE 2009

Feddis on FOX Business

FOX Business  |  June 30

Credit Cards

Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "In an environment where everybody is a little bit at a greater risk of not being able to repay their loan, interest rates are going to go up because interest rates are based on risk."

Abernathy on Marketplace

NPR "Marketplace"  |  June 26

Consumer Protection Agency

Wayne Abernathy, ABA EVP of financial institutions policy and regulatory affairs says, "My first mortgage was a five year ARM. I liked that, because interest rates were falling. Had I locked in a fixed rate, I'd have been paying more than what the market was for a long time. That's the problem when you decide that one size fits all, usually only the average person fits that size."

Feddis on Marketplace

NPR "Marketplace"  |  June 26

Credit Cards

Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says the Credit CARD Act Congress passed in May "restricts the ability to raise interest rates on existing balances. And that means that credit card companies have to use some other model to be able to manage the risks that people aren't going to be able to repay their loans. There's a small group that's really super credit-worthy, and they'll probably have the most choices, but you've got a vast swath of people who may be surprised."

Chessen on Marketplace

NPR "Marketplace"  |  June 23

Credit Cards

James Chessen, ABA chief economist says, "Fifty-six percent of cardholders don't ever revolve any balance, so there's absolutely no reason why they would stop using it. They're using it for convenience."

Abernathy on Bloomberg Television

Bloomberg Television  |  June 19

Consumer Protection Agency

Wayne Abernathy, ABA EVP of financial institutions policy and regulatory affairs says, "To pull consumer protection away from bank regulators, away from safety and soundness and other concerns, we think weakens consumer protection. We want to have consumer protection permeate all aspects of the bank regulatory program."

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "Street Signs"  |  June 18

Consumer Protection Agency

ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says the Administration is proposing to "have a whole new massive regulator that would separate the regulation of an institution from the regulation of its products."

Casey-Landry on PBS

PBS "The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer"  |  June 17

Regulatory Reform 

ABA COO Diane Casey-Landry says many of the administration's regulatory reform proposals -- including eliminating the thrift charter and creating a Consumer Financial Protection Agency -- would "undermine traditional banks that have continued to lend throughout the crisis."

Abernathy on Nightly Business Report

PBS "Nightly Business Report"  |  June 15

Regulatory Reform (5m 33s)

Wayne Abernathy, ABA EVP of financial institutions policy and regulatory affairs says, "We already have a very deep set of regulatory programs in place, very deep set of consumer protections. And yet the problems year after year are happening outside of the banking world and we end up getting tarnished with that brush."

MAY 2009

Feddis on ABC World News

ABC World News  |  May 20

Credit Cards

Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "History has shown that when the government imposes price controls, consumers have fewer choices and they pay more."

Feddis on NBC Nightly News

NBC Nightly News  |  May 14

Credit Cards

Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "At 18 you are able to enter a contract, you're able to join the army. And we're saying 'but you're not competent to have a credit card?'"

PBS "The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer"  |  May 14

Credit Cards

Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "The bills and rules restrict the ability of card companies to adjust to changing environments, to changing risks. Over time, the market changes. Over time, people change. And if they can't adjust to that risk -- and risk equals cost -- other people have to absorb it."

Abernathy on FOX Business

FOX Business  |  May 8

'Stress Tests'

Wayne Abernathy, ABA EVP of financial institutions policy and regulatory affairs says,"The regulators together with Treasury said every one of these 19 banks, today, is well-capitalized based upon all realistic scenarios."

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "Squawk on the Street"  |  May 8

'Stress Tests'

Helping to restore investor confidence in banks, ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling gives insight on what banks have learned from the stress tests.

Tenhundfeld on FOX Business

FOX Business  |  May 7

'Stress Tests'

Mark Tenhundfeld, ABA SVP office of regulatory policy explains that the stress tests will bring certainty to markets and show that banks are healthy. 

APRIL 2009

Feddis on Today Show

NBC "Today Show"  |  April 30

Credit Card Legislation

Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance says, "The interest rates will go up across the board and it will be harder for people and small businesses to get credit cards. They may also find their limits lowered and their accounts closed."

Taylor on Marketplace

NPR "Marketplace"  |  April 28

Supreme Court: Preemption

Gregory Taylor, ABA VP and senior counsel of litigation says, "A patchwork of state laws could limit things such as product offerings, increase operating expense, reduce efficiency in which banks do their business."

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "Kudlow & Company"  |  April 23

Credit Cards

After meeting with President Obama at the White House, ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling discusses consequences of upcoming credit card regulations and proposed legislation with House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank.

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "Kudlow & Company"  | April 17

Capitol to Capital?

ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says banks are returning to normalcy after period of 'dead wrong' speculation.

Feddis on NBC Nightly News

NBC Nightly News | April 14
Credit Cards
Nessa Feddis, ABA VP and Senior Counsel for regulatory compliance, says "we want the banks to repay the loans at interest to the government. That's in everybody's interest. And if they're not able to make profits, they can't repay the government."

Abernathy on FOX Business

FOX Business "Money for Breakfast" | April 10
'Stress Tests'
Wayne Abernathy, ABA EVP of financial institutions policy and regulatory affairs says, "This is a test to see what if the unusual happens, what if the economy stays flat much longer than anyone predicts, how would you do in the unusual."

Yingling on FOX Business

FOX Business | April 2
Mark-to-Market
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling welcomes FASB's guidance on mark-to-market accounting and impairment rules.

MARCH 2009

Yingling on PBS

PBS "The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer" | Mar 27
Economic Recovery
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling describes his meeting with President Obama and Treasury's plan to unfreeze credit.

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "Kudlow & Company" | Mar 27
Economic Recovery
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling describes his meeting with President Obama and CEOs of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the country's largest banks.

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "Closing Bell" | Mar 17
Systemic Risk
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says it is important to create a systemic risk regulator because "we have gaps in our regulatory structure."

Yingling on PBS

PBS "Nightly Business Report" | Mar 12
Mark-to-Market
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling explains the problem of using mark-to-market accounting in a dysfunctional market.

Yingling on C-SPAN

C-SPAN "Newsmakers" | Mar 3
Traditional Banks
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling discusses the association's efforts to fend off mortgage bankruptcy "cram-down" legislation and defend traditional banks, the vast majority of which are well-capitalized and lending.

FEBRUARY 2009

Tenhundfeld on FOX Business

FOX Business "Closing Bell" | Feb 25
'Stress Test'
Mark Tenhundfeld, ABA SVP office of regulatory policy says the point of these stress tests is to "address what is the biggest problem in the market today, and that is uncertainty."

Yingling on CBS Evening News

CBS Evening News | Feb 25
'Stress Test'
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says the tests are intended to identify banks that need "extra capital as an insurance policy" and to reassure investors.

Yingling on FOX Business

FOX News "Cavuto Report" | Feb 20
Nationalization: Bad Idea
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says that he doesn't think the government has an intention of nationalizing the banks.

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "Squawk on the Street" | Feb 20
Nationalization: Bad Idea
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says that he doesn't think the nationalization option is on the table for the Obama administration.

Cripe on FOX Business

FOX Business | Feb 16
Community Banks
Julie Cripe, president of the $400 million-asset Omnibank in Houston, tells Fox correspondent Adam Shapiro that community banks are in a position to pick up the slack left by the exit of the so-called "shadow banking system."

Casey-Landry on NPR

NPR "Diane Rehm Show" | Feb 10
Health of Banking Industry
ABA COO Diane Casey-Landry says most commercial banks are healthy and that some institutions participating in Treasury's Capital Purchase Program will soon make their first dividend payments to the American people.

Abernathy on FOX Business

FOX Business "Money for Breakfast" | Feb 10
Treasury Financial Stability Plan and Health of the Industry
Wayne Abernathy, ABA EVP of financial institutions policy and regulatory affairs says, "Banks are ready to perform their role," commenting on Treasury's financial stability plan and the health of the industry.

Casey-Landry on NPR

NPR "Talk of the Nation" | Feb 9
Capital Purchase Program
ABA COO Diane Casey-Landry says that CPP is an investment program intended for healthy banks.

JANUARY 2009

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "Street Signs" | Jan 14
Bank Lending
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says that Federal Reserve statistics show that traditional bank lending increased slightly in 2008, despite the recession."

DECEMBER 2008

Casey-Landry on PBS

PBS "News Hour" | Dec 24
Troubled Asset Relief Program
ABA COO Diane Casey-Landry says that the banking industry is healthy and never asked for the Treasury Department's Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), but the program has gone "reasonably well."

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "The New Wall Street" | Dec 8
Mark-to-Market Accounting
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says it is important that the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) take action in the next couple of weeks on the issues related to current accounting rules for "other than temporary impairment."

NOVEMBER 2008

Casey-Landry on CBS Evening News

CBS Evening News | Nov 19
Lending
ABA COO Diane Casey-Landry says that banks are making loans to creditworthy customers.

OCTOBER 2008

Yingling on FOX Business

FOX Business | Oct 31
Capital Purchase Program
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling stresses the need to differentiate between the Capital Purchase Program -- which is designed to recapitalize healthy banks so that they can increase lending -- from programs that placed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into a conservatorship and saved AIG from bankruptcy.

Casey-Landry on Good Morning America

ABC "Good Morning America" | Oct 28
ATM and Overdraft Fees
ABA COO Diane Casey-Landry says that ATM and overdraft fees are avoidable.

Yingling on FOX Business

FOX Business | Oct 27
Troubled Asset Relief Program
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says the word "bank" is being used during the financial crisis to describe failed financial institutions that are not, in fact, banks.

Abernathy on C-SPAN

C-SPAN "Washington Journal" | Oct 16
Capital Purchase Plan
Wayne Abernathy, ABA EVP of financial institutions policy and regulatory affairs, responds to viewers' questions about the Caplital Purchase Plan and expresses concerns that aspects of the financial crisis have not been sufficiently addressed.

Rock on FOX Business

FOX Business "Cavuto" | Oct 7
Community Banks
ABA Chairman Brad Rock tells Neil Cavuto that one of the reasons his bank is so successful is that it always has made "good old-fashioned loans."

SEPTEMBER 2008

Casey-Landry on CNBC

CNBC "Street Signs" | Sept 30
Safety and Soundness
ABA COO Diane Casey-Landry says "your deposits are protected" if your bank is FDIC insured.

Casey-Landry on FOX Business News

FOX Business | Sept 26
Financial Crisis
ABA COO Diane Casey-Landry tells Fox Business News "this is an investment banking-generated situation that was also exacerbated by mortgage brokers who are not regulated."

Yingling on CNBC

CNBC "Street Signs" | Sept 17
Health of the Banking Industry
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling tells anchor Erin Burnett that the great majority of banks are in solid shape and anxious to lend.

JULY 2008

Yingling on FOX Business

FOX Business "Happy Hour" | July 25
Short Selling
ABA President and CEO Ed Yingling says that ABA's request that the Securities and Exchange Commission expand its emergency order prohibiting naked short selling to include smaller, publicly-traded banks is a matter of fairness.

 

Questions? Please contact Sarah Marshall for more information.