United States | Community banks

What America’s tiny banks do that big ones don’t

The advantages of boots on the ground

|CANANDAIGUA and MANHATTAN

CANANDAIGUA AND Manhattan’s Chinatown are about as different from each other as two places in the same state can be. One is a small town in the bucolic Finger Lakes region, where almost everyone is a white English-speaker. Chinatown packs nearly ten times as many residents, many of them foreign-born and Chinese-speaking, into a much smaller space. What links them, and many other small towns and neighbourhoods across America, is financial services: both host community banks that cater to local needs.

This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Mighty minnows”

Peak China?

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