The CFPB’s current proposal to the court is inadequate.

As we noted on April Fool’s Day, the CFPB has proposed to the court a dramatic cut in the CFPB staffing. If only it were in fact an Apri Fool. American Banker’s Kate Berry has more here. Bloomberg’s Evan Weinberger has this paragraph in his story on the proposal: The cuts may still be “draconian,” […]

Podcast on BNL regulation and more in NY

On the Ballard Spahr Consumer Finance Monitor podcast: an interview with the NY Department of Financial Services’ Max Dubin, Chief of Staff to the Acting Superintendent of Banking. With the CFPB’s sidelining, state regulatory agencies have become even more important, and New York, aside from being a large market, may foreshadow what other states do.

Tenth Circuit Grants Rehearing En Banc re Interest Rate Caps and State Banks

The Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980 (DIDA) sets a national standard for interest rates that state-chartered banks may charge on loans, preempting state laws that cap interest at lower rates.  The statute expressly authorizes states to opt out of the national standard for “loans made in such State.”  In 2023, Colorado announced […]

Consumers’ antitrust and unfair competition suit against AAA to go ahead

Last year, four consumers who were parties to arbitration agreements in which the sole choice of forum for dispute resolution was the American Arbitration Association sued the company under the Sherman and Clayton Antitrust acts, the Arizona Constitution, and state antitrust and unfair and deceptive practices laws. They alleged monopolistic practices, and that “the AAA […]

Trump administration proposes cutting CFPB staff by two-thirds

The proposal is here. It can’t go into effect until the preliminary injunction in the NTEU case is lifted. The administration claims the plan would “allow CFPB to continue meeting its statutory obligations while expanding on the reforms that have dramatically increased its efficiency and stewardship of taxpayer funds, in line with Presidential and Congressional […]

“Complete stranger” to contract not bound by arbitration clause, groups say

Public interest groups filed an amicus brief this past week in the case Gemini Trust Company, LLC v. National Association of Consumer Advocates, Inc. (NACA), opposing the company’s attempt to force arbitration of the dispute. In 2024, *NACA sued Gemini, a cryptocurrency exchange, in the District of Columbia Superior Court, alleging that the company’s terms […]

Paper on how consumer protection enforcement is going away

Alisher Juzgenbaye, a Northwestern JD/Ph.D student has written The Vanishing Enforcer: Consumer Protection in an Era of Dual Retrenchment. Here’s the abstract (the paper left out the third source of retrenchment: arbitration clauses): Recent developments, including reductions in the federal workforce, effective suspension of certain enforcement activities, and attempted centralization of independent agency rulemaking in the […]

Nelson paper: Pre-Arbitral Red Tape

Ryan H. Nelson of South Texas has written Pre-Arbitral Red Tape. Here’s the abstract: While legal scholars debate the merits of mandatory arbitration, a more insidious barrier to justice has quietly proliferated beneath their radar. I call that barrier “pre-arbitral red tape”—that is, procedural condition precedents to initiating arbitration in a pre-dispute agreement between a consumer […]