The CFPB last week brought an $18.5 million enforcement action against Discover Bank and its student loan affiliates for engaging in allegedly illegal private student loan servicing practices. The bureau’s enforcement action “demonstrates how Discover failed at providing the most basic functions of adequate student loan servicing for a portion of the loans that were transferred from Citibank,” said the bureau. Thousands of consumers encountered problems as soon as their loans became due and Discover gave them account statements that overstated their minimum payment, the CFPB said. Also, “Discover denied consumers information that they would have needed to obtain tax benefits and called consumers’ mobile phones at inappropriate times to contact them about their debts.” The CFPB concluded that the ...
The CFPB and the Department of Justice resolved a $24 million enforcement action against American Honda Finance Corp. last week with a settlement that will put new measures in place to address discretionary auto loan pricing and compensation practices. The joint CFPB/DOJ investigation concluded that Honda’s policies resulted in minority borrowers paying higher dealer markups. “Honda violated the Equal Credit Opportunity Act by charging African-American, Hispanic, and Asian and Pacific Islander borrowers higher dealer markups for their auto loans than non-Hispanic white borrowers,” said the bureau. “These markups were without regard to the creditworthiness of the borrowers.” Honda’s policies also injured thousands of minority borrowers, according to the CFPB. “Honda’s discriminatory pricing and compensation structure meant thousands of minority borrowers ...
The CFPB has filed a complaint and a proposed $5.2 million consent order in federal court against Sacramento, CA-based Student Financial Aid Services for allegedly illegal sales and billing practices.The company has operated websites and related call centers where it offers fee-based assistance to consumers filling out the federal government’s Free Application for Federal Student Aid. According to the CFPB’s complaint, when consumers entered their payment information for certain financial advisory services, SFAS began to bill them for an annual subscription without their knowledge or consent. These recurring charges typically ranged from $67 to $85 each year and were renewed annually, according to the bureau. The company enrolled consumers in these annual subscriptions without adequate disclosures and imposed recurring ...
The CFPB recently won some and lost some when it comes to the debt-collection arguments it advanced in CFPB v. Frederick J. Hanna & Associates, which the bureau initiated in July 2014. According to the CFPB’s complaint, the firm and its three principal partners – Frederick Hanna, Joseph Cooling and Robert Winter – ran a debt-collection lawsuit mill that used illegal tactics to intimidate consumers into paying debts they may not have owed. Between 2009 and 2013, the firm filed more than 350,000 debt-collection lawsuits in Georgia alone, but the attorneys only spent less than a minute reviewing each suit, according to the CFPB. In its motion to dismiss, Hanna & Associates argued that the claims brought by the CFPB focus only...
The CFPB recently launched the first in a new series of monthly reports to highlight key trends from consumer complaints submitted to the bureau, including data on company performance, complaint volume, state and local information, and product trends. The first installment in the series focuses on debt-collection complaints and complaints from consumers in Milwaukee. The bureau said it expects companies to respond to complaints within 15 days and to describe the steps they have taken or plan to take to resolve the complaint. “The CFPB expects companies to close all but the most complicated complaints within 60 days,” it said. “Complaints inform the bureau’s work and help to identify issues in the market, which feed into the bureau’s supervision and ...
New issuance of non-mortgage ABS increased in most major product categories during the second quarter of 2015, although a slowdown in floorplan deals dampened the party slightly. The ABS market generated $54.15 billion in new issuance during the second quarter, a gain of 5.8 percent from the first three months of 2015. It was the strongest new issuance figure since the financial market meltdown, with the previous high ($54.22 billion) coming in the third quarter of 2007. ABS issuance has climbed...[Includes two data tables]
The CFPB rang the credit card industry’s bell last week, compelling JPMorgan Chase to refund at least $50 million to consumers and to pay $136 million in penalties and payments to settle an enforcement action related to allegations of selling bad debt and robo-signing documents. The lender also must pay a $30 million penalty to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency in a related action. According to CFPB officials and attorneys general from 47 states and the District of Columbia, who collaborated in bringing the action, Chase sold credit card accounts to debt buyers that included amounts that were inaccurate, settled, discharged in bankruptcy, not owed, or otherwise not collectible. Debt buyers then sought to collect the faulty ...
The CFPB recently took action against some credit card add-on product vendors – Affinion Group Holdings and its affiliated companies, and Intersections Inc. – accusing the companies of charging consumers for credit card add-on benefits they did not receive. When it comes to Affinion, the CFPB alleges that from about July 2010 through August 2012, the company enrolled consumers in add-on products that claimed to provide consumers with credit monitoring, credit report retrieval, or both. Consumers generally paid between $6.95 and $15.99 per month for these products, which were typically billed directly to their credit cards or deposit accounts. However, the bureau alleges that Affinion or its partner banks billed full product fees to at least 73,000 accounts while failing to provide ...
U.S. military personnel are still having to deal with problems and challenges when they contact student loan servicers to invoke the military rights and protections earned through their service, according to a recently released report from the CFPB. Among the problems cited in the report are continued mistakes handling service members’ student loan repayments, resulting in improper denials of legal benefits, negative credit reporting, and shoddy follow-through on legal protections for military families. Complaints also include frustrations from grieving parents seeking to discharge a co-signed loan following the death of their child. Specifically, the report found that service members continue to report difficulties in obtaining the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act interest rate cap of 6 percent, despite action by federal ...
The CFPB’s latest supervisory report finds illegal mortgage servicing practices are still continuing in at least corners of the marketplace. According to the report, the bureau’s examiners found at least one servicer that sent notices of intent to foreclose to borrowers already approved for trial modifications. “This dual-tracking could mislead consumers to believe the servicer had abandoned the trial modification,” the CFPB said. Bureau examiners also found at least one servicer that, because of a system error, sent notices to borrowers who were current on their loans, saying that foreclosure would be imminent. There are also still problems with illegal runarounds with loss mitigation applications, according to the report. For example, examiners found at least one servicer requesting additional documents ...