Thursday, February 13, 2025

Financial firms hated US consumer watchdog, but rapid unraveling creates limbo

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By Douglas Gillison, Nupur Anand, Pete Schroeder and Isla Binnie

(Reuters) – At a JPMorgan townhall meeting on Wednesday, CEO Jamie Dimon was asked whether the Trump administration’s decision to abruptly stop work at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and question its existence was good news for the industry.

Dimon told his employees that it was hard for the bank when “policies flip back and forth” and that he preferred consistent policies. The CFPB had some good consumer protection rules, especially when it came to areas like payday lenders, he said, according to a recording of the meeting that Reuters reviewed, which has not been previously reported. Still, he was not mourning the dismantling of the agency.

“The only good I’ll say about the CFPB is there are consumer protection rules that are good,” said Dimon. He added that the agency had “massively overstepped their authority” and used an expletive to describe the former CFPB director, Rohit Chopra, a Democrat who led an aggressive enforcement campaign against the industry. JPMorgan was among three banks the CFPB sued in December, alleging “widespread” fraud on the Zelle payment service.

JPMorgan declined to comment. A spokesperson for Chopra declined to comment.

Established in 2010 to protect consumers after lax mortgage rules and other shoddy industry practices led to the financial crisis of 2008, the CFPB has been reviled by conservatives and the industry, which has accused it of overreach and overzealous enforcement actions.

Even so, its abrupt undoing over a weekend by the Trump administration, including by the Elon Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), is causing upheaval among those it regulates, according to half a dozen people who either advise or work at banks or financial technology firms regulated by the CFPB.

The sudden halt of work has a swath of consequences: it leaves much of consumer finance, from mortgage companies to payment apps, unsupervised, and removes a venue where consumers could file complaints about their providers. It also leaves many investigations hanging in the balance, according to the industry advisers as well as several current and former CFPB staffers.

In the industry, which has had a flurry of conversations to assess the impact of the CFPB’s neutering, concern is emerging that a patchwork of state regulators could take on issues the CFPB had led, potentially leaving them with even more onerous requirements, the industry insiders said.

Some executives also raised concerns during industry calls about DOGE’s access to their proprietary data that CFPB collects and questioned who Musk’s team was accountable to, given the billionaire entrepreneur’s plans for his own competing payments business, said one public policy executive at a fintech company.

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