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Goldman Sachs is considering exiting its partnership with Apple, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday. The iPhone-maker and Goldman Sachs started rolling out a virtual credit card in 2019.
Goldman Sachs may be looking to end its partnership with Apple, The Wall Street Journal reported. It started offering an Apple-branded credit card in 2019 and more products since then.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) on Wednesday ordered Apple and Goldman Sachs to pay $89 million over mishandled transaction disputes and misrepresentations that impacted hundreds ...
The order requires Apple to pay $25 million into the CFPB's victims relief fund.Goldman Sachs must pay victims nearly $20 million, plus a $45 million civil penalty, according to the agency's order.
The CFPB characterized Apple Card, which launched in 2019, as a way for Goldman Sachs to get a foothold in consumer financing ...
Moving ahead to 2020, Apple and Goldman Sachs expanded the 0% financing offer to the rest of Apple’s product lineup in June, including Mac, iPad, AirPods Pro, AirPods, Apple Pencil, and more.
Apple's relationship with Goldman Sachs led to the creation of the wildly successful Apple Card, but post-launch friction and a change in priorities has crashed the relationship into the rocks.
Apple launched a high-yield savings account in partnership with Goldman Sachs, but its buzzed-about 4.15% APY isn’t lauded by one executive at the investment bank who didn’t hold back when ...
Apple would have to agree to a transfer, and is aware of the talks that Goldman Sachs has been having with Amex. [ 446 comments ] Get weekly top MacRumors stories in your inbox.
Apple and Goldman Sachs deceived Apple Card customers, regulators say. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau ordered the companies to pay almost $90 million in penalties and refunds.
The CFPB ordered Goldman Sachs to pay at least $19.8 million in redress and a $45 million civil monetary penalty, while Apple was ordered to pay a $25 million civil monetary penalty.