- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau preps plan for next month
- Firms charged clients $8.5 billion in fees in 2021, CFPB says
A top US consumer watchdog is preparing to make it much harder for banks to charge clients overdraft fees — setting up a clash with financial firms over billions of dollars in annual revenue.
Washington has been clamping down on overdraft charges, which the Biden administration has dubbed “junk fees.” The CFPB, which declined to comment on the timing of its plans, has said banks got nearly $8.5 billion in 2021 from insufficient fund and certain low-balance fees.
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Some large banks, including
“The CFPB is likely to roll out an overdraft fee proposal very soon, and anything the CFPB does around fees is BAD, REALLY REALLY BAD. NO GOOD, ROTTEN, TERRIBLE BAD,”
The agency’s plans are still in flux, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing the regulator’s internal deliberations. One possibility under consideration would be to include asset thresholds in the rule to let some small banks and credit unions avoid the effects.
CFPB Director
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Stephanie Stoughton
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