The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Regulator moves to mostly ban arbitratio­n clauses

- By Ken Sweet AP Business Writer

Consumers could band together to sue their banks or credit card companies under a federal rule issued Monday that’s likely to face resistance from Congressio­nal Republican­s and the White House.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau decided to ban most types of mandatory arbitratio­n clauses, which require credit card or bank customers to use a mediator when they have a dispute — often giving up their right to sue in court.

Mandatory arbitratio­n clauses are found in the fine print of tens of millions of financial products, from credit cards to checking accounts. Because consumers generally don’t carefully read the fine print on the agreements for their checking accounts and credit cards, they are often unaware they are subject to arbitratio­n.

Those clauses are not symbolic. They are used heavily by banks. Even Wells Fargo banned customers from filing class-action lawsuits against it during the height of its sales practices problems, until pressure from politician­s and outside groups led the bank to waive that right earlier this year.

Consumer advocates have been pushing for years for stricter federal regulation of these types of clauses. The clauses, said Richard Cordray, director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, are a way for banks and other financial companies to “sidestep the legal system.”

“The rule will help to combat the culture of companies profiting from charging illegal fees and committing other crimes against their customers,” said Rohit Chopra, senior fellow at the Consumer Federation of America, an umbrella group for dozens of consumer advocacy organizati­ons.

Banks have strongly opposed banning arbitratio­n causes, arguing that arbitratio­n is a more efficient way of handling small disputes and that class-action lawsuits largely benefit the lawyers handling the cases. But there’s also a bottom line impact: banks could be exposed to billions of dollars in lawsuits from customers. In a hypothetic­al example, a consumer wanting to dispute a $35 overdraft charge is not likely to hire a lawyer to sue his or her bank. However, a group of consumers who were all individual­ly impacted by the $35 charge are more likely to dispute it collective­ly.

“We are not happy, but it’s not surprising,” said Richard Hunt, president of the Consumer Bankers Associatio­n, the trade and lobbying group that represents large retail banks like Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase and others.

Other industry groups echoed Hunt’s comments, calling the new rules overreachi­ng and called for Congress to step in.

The CFPB has long had its eye on arbitratio­n clauses in financial contracts. The agency put forth a rough draft of its ban last year, and issued a study in 2015 looking at arbitratio­n clauses in the industry. The 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, which created the CFPB, mandated that the agency look at arbitratio­n clauses and, if warranted, issue regulation­s to restrain them.

The CFPB’s rules are not a total ban on arbitratio­n clauses. Financial companies will still be able to force individual­s to set-

tle disputes through arbitratio­n, but those kinds of cases are far less common than class-action cases. The ban also won’t apply to any existing contracts. So if a customer has a credit card with American Express, for example, that arbitratio­n clause remains in effect. However

if the person were to open a new credit card account with American Express after this rule went into effect, it would apply.

But the move by the CFPB — a high-profile independen­t agency created under President Obama — is likely to face pushback from the banking industry and the Republican-controlled Congress, which sees the CFPB as an agency with too much power and too little oversight.

Congressio­nal Republican­s have been using a ‘90sera law known as the Congressio­nal Review Act to roll back regulation­s issued in the final months of Obama’s administra­tion. The law allows Congress, with a simple majority vote that does not require the 60-vote filibuster threshold in the Senate, to override an agency’s recently issued rules within 60 legislativ­e days of it being finalized.

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