Reposition
In April 2018, to further increase services, locations, and products to the growing organizations, the parent company of First Resource Bank and Eagle Valley Bank merged the institutions and retained the name First Resource Bank. First Resource Bank is a full service bank that continues serving the needs of small businesses, entrepreneurs, and individuals in the Twin Cities and surrounding areas. The company remains owned by a small group of entrepreneurs that understand the needs of its clients. It pride itself on providing prompt client service and simple lending and deposit solutions.
Eagle Valley Bank - Recent News & Articles
Inflation in the euro area rose from 1.7% to 2% in October, flash figures showed Thursday, coming in slightly higher than the 1.9% forecast. Core inf...
Mastercard introduced a new solution that will enable banks to facilitate commercial cross-border payments that are near real-time, predictable and tr...
Growth in the payments industry, which was once characterized by rapid expansion, is now slowing as the shift from cash to digital payments has reache...
Stripe, the FinTech giant, is reportedly in talks to acquire crypto startup Bridge for $1 billion, according to sources familiar with the discussions....
In a significant move to counteract international sanctions and reduce dependency on the global financial system Swift, Russia has called on BRICS nat...
The European Central Bank on Thursday cut its key interest rate to 3.25%, in its third quarter-percentage-point reduction of the year. The move had be...
Companies owned by private equity firms are landing in default more frequently than other speculative-grade borrowers, according to a report from Mood...
China's central bank said on Thursday it would start accepting applications from financial institutions to join a newly created funding scheme, initia...
SWIFT said it is uniquely positioned to interlink the fragmented digital asset landscape with its forthcoming digital currency trials in 2025. Banks i...
The Impact of Two Consumer Classes and the Fed Funds Rate Outlook