Finance

The rule capping credit card late fees at $8 is on hold — here’s what it means for you

Products You May Like

Rohit Chopra, director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, speaks during a Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., Dec. 15, 2022.
Ting Shen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The U.S. banking industry won a key victory in its effort to block the implementation of a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule that would’ve drastically limited the fees that credit card companies can charge for late payment.

A federal court on late Friday approved the industry’s last-minute legal effort to pause the implementation of a regulation that was announced in March and set to go into effect on Tuesday.

In his order, Judge Mark Pittman of the Northern District of Texas sided with plaintiffs including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in their suit against the CFPB, saying they cleared hurdles in arguing for a preliminary injunction to freeze the rule.

The outcome preserves, at least for now, a key revenue stream for the U.S. card industry. The CFPB estimates that the rule would’ve saved American families $10 billion a year in fees paid by those who fall behind on their bills. It would’ve capped late fees that are typically $32 per incident to $8 each and limited the industry’s ability to hike the fees.

It is now unclear when, or if, the new regulation will go into effect.

“Consumers will shoulder $800 million in late fees every month that the rule is delayed — money that pads the profit margins of the largest credit card issuers,” a CFPB spokesman told CNBC on Friday.

The industry’s lawsuit is an effort to block a regulation “in order to continue making tens of billions of dollars in profits by charging borrowers late fees that far exceed their actual costs,” the spokesman said.

The CFPB has said the industry profits off borrowers with low credit scores by charging them ever higher late penalties over the past decade, while trade groups have argued that the fee caps are a misguided effort that redistributes costs to those who pay their bills on time.

The Consumer Bankers Association, which is one of the groups that sued the CFPB, said it was “pleased with the District Court’s decision to grant a preliminary injunction to stop the CFPB’s credit card late fee rule from going into effect next week.”

The CBA said it will continue to press its case in the courts on why the CFPB rule should be “thrown out entirely.”

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Activist Starboard took a stake in Match. Here are steps the investor may take to help lift shares
Is the U.S. in a recession? Roughly 3 in 5 Americans think so, report finds
Real Estate Transaction Tax Rates in German States
Alphabet moves past early stumbles in AI to deliver positive story to investors
Bill Ackman’s IPO of Pershing Square closed-end fund is postponed, NYSE says

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *