Mon, May 28, 2012, 11:06 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Fed approves Capital One acquisition of ING Direct

Federal Reserve approves Capital One's acquisition of ING Direct

RELATED QUOTES

SymbolPriceChange
COF51.13-0.59

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Capital One has won approval to acquire ING Direct for $9 billion, clearing the way for it to become the nation's fifth-largest bank.

The Federal Reserve, which regulates bank holding companies, announced the unanimous vote on Tuesday. It had delayed making an announcement on Monday after a closed-door meeting on the matter.

In a brief statement, the Fed said it had given its approval after directing Capital One to upgrade its risk-management functions to reflect the bank's new size and complexity.

Capital One Financial Corp., based in McLean, Va., had announced in June that it planned to buy the U.S. digital unit of Netherlands-based company. The deal is aimed at expanding Capital One as a national bank without adding to its roughly 1,000 branches. ING Direct has about 7.5 million customers.

Some community banks and consumer advocates had opposed the deal. They said it would create another bank that could put the broader financial system at risk, if it failed. And they argued that the acquisition relied too heavily on credit cards, which are a riskier business than general consumer banking.

About 65 percent of Capital One's revenue comes from its heavily advertised credit card business. The bank also plans to buy HSBC's U.S. credit card business.

 

10 comments

  • Michael  •  San Ramon, California  •  3 months ago
    oh no, what happens to my great ING Checking account! In a few months I'm sure I'll see new fees, etc.
  • Dan  •  3 months ago
    What happened to too big to fail and we are not going to let that happen ever again?
    Then here we go another merger to be number 5 in size.
  • john  •  Seattle, Washington  •  3 months ago
    The banking system will not receive the fixes it requires until the politician’s campaigns stop receiving money from special interest such as Wall Street, pharmaceutical companies, big oil, big agriculture and unions and many, many others. Special interest money has corrupted our democracy.
  • Linda  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  3 months ago
    Creepy. Behind closed doors, big banking is getting too big to fail. Positioning for the next bail out?
  • benrobbed  •  Madison, Wisconsin  •  3 months ago
    i hate cap one. i had a card with them for 3 years and they didnt want to give me more than $1750 credit line. I spend that much in a month. I could see if i had bad credit but my #$%$ score is 769 and i only had one other credit card. i left them punks and went to hsbc
  • Zach  •  Plano, Texas  •  3 months ago
    This is unfortunate. I have had terrible experiences with CapitalOne.
  • William  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    Don't worry, Dan, the Fed looked into it, and figured it out, like the other ones.
  • Reality  •  3 months ago
    #$%$!
  • Hello  •  3 months ago
    ING direct pays .80 percent, Capital One .65%. Bye Bye Capital One. Been nice not knowing you.
  • Hello  •  3 months ago
    Well, I think I am closing out my ING direct account.
 
Recent Quotes
Symbol Price Change % Chg 
Your most recently viewed tickers will automatically show up here if you type a ticker in the "Enter symbol/company" at the bottom of this module.
You need to enable your browser cookies to view your most recent quotes.
 
Sign-in to view quotes in your portfolios.

Trading Center

Yahoo! Finance on Facebook

  YAHOO! FINANCE ON TWITTER