Moments ago, the child is identified as 2yearold Benjamin Austin smith. Investigators are not yet exactly saying how they believe this shooting happened. Live in milford township, deanna durante, nbc 10 news. Now to the latest on the septa slowdown. 18 rail cars stopped to be repaired are out of service for a second time. The investigators found an issue with the newly repaired cars last weekend. Septa says they will be repaired and put back into service this week. 120 Regional Rail cars were pulled from service on july 6th, a structural flaw that caused delays for commuters. Septa says it will have all of its trains back on the tracks by november. To decision 2016. As Hillary Clintons health scare keeps her off the campaign trail today. Shes home resting since her campaign admitted she has pneumonia. Yesterday she stumbled and seemed to collapse getting into her car at ground zero. Aides say clinton will call into a california fundraiser this evening. President obama hits town tomorro
CBA to fire up competition in buy now, pay later
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The anticipated launch of Commonwealth Bank of Australia’s buy now, pay later product, StepPay, in early August could herald a new wave of highly credentialled retail banks starting to compete across the buy now, pay later [BNPL] sector.
One of the first symptoms of this new competition could be lower merchant fee margins, according to one of the country’s top-rated banking analysts, Brian Johnson, at Jefferies.
Jefferies banking analyst Brian Johnson said an early August launch for StepPay could be comparable to Aussie Home Loans entry into the mortgage market in the 1990s.
Payments experts and small business groups have delivered mixed responses to the findings of the Reserve Bank’s retail payments review, characterising some of the proposed reforms as potentially inconsistent or “too modest”.
Openpay puts “shocking” death clause to rest
Openpay puts “shocking” death clause to rest
17 March 2021 5:10AM
Fiona Guthrie: Openpay and hospitals BNPL puts sick people at risk of financial harm
Controversial buy now pay later provider Openpay has caved-in to public fury over its credit contracts, saying it will amend its terms and conditions to exclude death as a default event.
Sydney-based payments experts Christos Fragias and Bradford Kelly floated concerns in Banking Day on Tuesday about Openpay’s death clause after the company announced it planned to fund customers for medical treatment in private hospitals operated by St John of God Health Care.
The terms and conditions of buy now pay later provider Openpay are coming under scrutiny from payments experts after the company revealed it was adding a major private hospital network to its list of approved merchants.