Los Angeles Times

Warren pushes to kill overdraft fees

- By Max Abelson and Jenny Surane Abelson and Surane write for Bloomberg.

Massachuse­tts Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren has called Jamie Dimon the “star of the overdraft show” because of the billions of dollars JPMorgan Chase & Co. has made from those banking fees. Now she’s telling Dimon and two of his fellow Wall Street chief executives to stop.

The senator sent letters Wednesday to Dimon, Wells Fargo & Co.’s Charlie Scharf and Bank of America Corp.’s Brian Moynihan, pushing them to follow the lead of some rivals and get rid of all fees for overdrafts. The letter was also signed by two other Democrats, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey and Rep. Carolyn Maloney of New York.

“Capital One and Citigroup Inc. moved to eliminate these predatory fees,” Warren wrote, according to copies of the letter seen by Bloomberg News. “It is now time for the industry as a whole, and in particular, the major institutio­ns raking in these fees, to follow suit and protect consumers.”

This year, Citigroup became the first of the biggest U.S. banks to say it would ditch the charges amid criticism that they were hurting low-income consumers. Bank of America and Wells have said they’ll stop nonsuffici­ent fund fees and at least ease off on overdraft charges, either reducing fees or giving grace periods.

JPMorgan in December said it had helped 2 million customers avoid the costs.

In a letter to Booker and four other senators in March, JPMorgan touted those changes while saying overdrafts were a matter of customer choice.

“At Chase, we know our customers want options,” the New York-based bank said in its letter. “We offer accounts that allow them to ‘go overdrawn’ (often without charging them for it) to complete a requested payment, as well as accounts that do not offer overdraft services and, therefore, do not incur overdraft fee.”

JPMorgan and Bank of America declined to comment on the lawmakers’ letter, and Wells Fargo had no immediate comment.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau found in December that 9% of consumers pay 10 or more overdraft fees a year, accounting for about 80% of that revenue for banks.

The three banks Warren wrote to — JPMorgan, Bank of America and Wells Fargo — made a combined $3.76 billion in overdraft fees last year alone, in an industry where revenue from overdraft and nonsuffici­ent funds fees totaled more than $15 billion in 2019, according to the report.

Overdraft fee revenue dropped during the COVID-19 pandemic, as stimulus checks helped prop up consumers’ bank accounts and widespread lockdowns cut into spending.

Warren’s letter, which continues a battle she’s been fighting for years, asked the banks to respond by midMay with answers about how much they’ve charged customers on overdraft fees since making their changes, and what kind of limits they have in place.

“In recent months, as several major financial institutio­ns moved to eliminate or reduce overdraft fees, there has been a ‘race-tothe-top’ in establishi­ng more pro-consumer fee policies,” she wrote. “But not all banks fully participat­ed.”

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