The number of new banks in America has fallen off a cliff
One brave soul in Texas shows that it can still be done
THE single-storey main branch of the Texas Hill Country Bank, in Kerrville, sits at the back of a tired shopping centre, in the shade of a six-storey Wells Fargo building. When Roy Thompson, the chief executive, was hired (from Wells) in 2012, three years after it opened, he ran a radio ad campaign to alert locals to its existence. It asked listeners to help a mother (his) to find her child (Roy himself), who had gone missing after joining a community bank.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Small is beautiful”
Finance & economics June 2nd 2018
- Italy’s political crisis is roiling financial markets once more
- A critical task for the Greek economy enters a new phase
- Turkey’s central bank has streamlined its fight against inflation
- There is madness, but perhaps also method, in America’s trade policies
- The number of new banks in America has fallen off a cliff
- In investing, as in poker, following rules works best
- Rwanda refuses to remove tariffs on imports of used clothing
- If wages are to rise, workers need more bargaining power
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