Times-Call (Longmont)

White House looks to cap credit card late fees at $8

- By Ken Sweet and Josh Boak The Associated Press

WASHINGTON >> The Biden administra­tion announced a rule Tuesday to cap all credit card late fees, the latest effort in the White House push to end what it has called junk fees and a move that regulators say will save Americans up to $10 billion a year.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s new regulation­s will set a ceiling of $8 for most credit card late fees or require banks to show why they should charge more than $8 for such a fee.

The rule would bring the average credit card late fee down from $32. The bureau estimates banks brought in roughly $14 billion in credit card late fees a year.

President Joe Biden highlighte­d the proposal along with other efforts to reduce costs to Americans at a meeting of his competitio­n council on Tuesday. The Democratic president also said he’s forming a new strike force to crack down on illegal and unfair pricing on things like groceries, prescripti­on drugs, health care, housing and financial services.

Biden said at the start of the council meeting that the current late fees are generating five times more money than what it costs credit card companies to collect late payments.

“They’re padding their profit margins and charging hardworkin­g Americans more,” Biden said. “It’s a lot of money.”

The president also noted that companies are effectivel­y raising prices by putting fewer potato chips in the bags sold at grocery stores. Even the “Sesame Street” character Cookie Monster has noticed socalled “shrinkflat­ion” by saying on social media that he’s paying more for fewer cookies, Biden said.

The strike force will be led by the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission, according to a White House statement.

The Biden administra­tion has portrayed the White House Competitio­n Council as a way to save people money and promote greater competitio­n within the U.S. economy.

The White House Council of Economic Advisers produced an analysis indicating that the Biden administra­tion’s efforts overall will eliminate $20 billion in annual junk fees. The analysis found that consumers pay about $90 billion a year in junk fees, including for concerts, apartment rentals and auto dealers.

The effort appears to have done little to help

Biden politicall­y ahead of this year’s presidenti­al election. Just 34% of U.S. adults approve of Biden’s economic leadership, according to a new survey by The Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

Sen. Tim Scott, R-south Carolina, criticized the CFPB cap on credit card late fees, saying that consumers would ultimately face greater costs through higher interest rates and less access to credit.

“It will decrease the availabili­ty of credit card products for those who need it most, raise rates for many borrowers who carry a balance but pay on time, and increase the likelihood of late payments across the board,” Scott said.

Rob Nichols, the CEO of the American Bankers Associatio­n, said the CFPB “relied on flawed assumption­s and a mischaract­erization of the important role late fees play in promoting responsibl­e consumer behavior.”

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce said it will file a lawsuit to try to prevent the federal agency from capping late fees at $8.

“The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has exceeded its authority,” said Neil Bradley, the chamber’s executive vice president and chief policy officer. “The agency’s final credit card late fee rule punishes Americans who pay their credit card bills on time by forcing them to pay for those who don’t.”

Americans held more than $1.05 trillion on their credit cards in the third quarter of 2023, a record, and a figure certain to grow once the fourth-quarter data is released by the Federal Deposit

Insurance Corp. next month. Those balances are now carrying interest on them, which is the highest it has been since the Federal Reserve started tracking the data back in the mid-1990s.

Further, more Americans are falling behind on their credit card debts as well. Delinquenc­y rates at the major credit card issuers such as American Express, Jpmorgan Chase, Citigroup, Capital One and Discover have been trending upward for several quarters. Some analysts have become concerned Americans, particular­ly poorer households hurt by inflation, might be taking on too much debt.

“Overall, the consumer is credit healthy. However, the reality is that there are starting to be some significan­t signs of stress,” said Silvio Tavares, president and CEO of Vantagesco­re, one of the country’s two major credit scoring systems, in an interview last month.

The growth of the credit card industry is partly why Capital One announced it would buy Discover Financial last month for $35 billion. The two companies, which are two of the largest credit card issuers, are also two companies whose customers regularly carry a balance on their accounts.

This is not the first time policymake­rs have weighed in on credit card fees. Congress in 2010 passed the CARD Act, which banned credit card companies from charging excessive penalty fees and establishe­d clearer disclosure­s and consumer protection­s.

The Federal Reserve issued a rule in 2010 that capped the first credit card late fee at $25, and $35 for subsequent late payments, and tied that fee to inflation. The CFPB, which took over the regulation of the credit card industry from the Fed after it was establishe­d, is proposing going further than the Fed.

The bureau’s proposal is similar in structure to what the bureau announced in January when it proposed capping overdraft fees to as little as $3. In that proposed regulation, banks would be required to either accept the bureau’s benchmark or show regulators why they should charge more, a method that few bank industry executives expect to use.

Biden has made the eliminatio­n of junk fees one of the cornerston­es of his administra­tion’s economic agenda heading into the 2024 election. Fees that banks charge customers have been at the center of that campaign, and the White House directed government regulators last year to do whatever is in their power to further curtail the practice.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden speaks during a meeting of his Competitio­n Council to announce new actions to lower costs for families in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, Tuesday.
ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden speaks during a meeting of his Competitio­n Council to announce new actions to lower costs for families in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, Tuesday.

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