Skip to content

Exception Tracking Spreadsheet (TicklerTrax™)
Downloaded by more than 1,000 bankers. Free Excel spreadsheet to help you track missing and expiring documents for credit and loans, deposits, trusts, and more. Visualize your exception data in interactive charts and graphs. Provided by bank technology vendor, AccuSystems. Download TicklerTrax for free.

Click Now!


Top Story Lending Related

08/22/2024

FDIC guidance to help financial institutions in South Dakota

The FDIC has issued FIL-58-2024 with guidance to assist financial institutions and facilitate recovery in areas of South Dakota affected by severe storms, straight-line winds, and flooding from June 16 to July 8, 2024. As of August 21, the affected areas included Davison, Lincoln, Turner, and Union counties.

08/19/2024

FTC acts against auto dealer group for discrimination and add-ons

The Federal Trade Commission has announced it is taking action against a large automotive dealer group, Asbury Automotive, for systematically charging consumers for costly add-on items they did not agree to or were falsely told were required as part of their purchase. The FTC also alleges that Asbury discriminates against Black and Latino consumers, targeting them with unwanted and higher-priced add-ons.

In an administrative complaint, the FTC alleges that three Texas dealerships owned by Asbury that operate as David McDavid Ford Ft. Worth, David McDavid Honda Frisco, and David McDavid Honda Irving, along with Ali Benli, who acted as general manager of those dealerships, engaged in a variety of practices to sneak hidden fees for unwanted add-ons past consumers. These tactics included a practice called “payment packing,” where the dealerships convinced consumers to agree to monthly payments that were larger than needed to pay for the agreed-upon price of the car, and then “packed” add-on items to the sales contract to make up that difference.

While some consumers reported that salespeople never discussed these products during the sales process, others said that they specifically declined these products only to find they were added on without consent. The FTC says that Asbury’s sales and financing process made it difficult, if not impossible, for consumers to know they were being charged for these add-ons, with consumers being asked to sign documents on electronic devices that showed only the places where they should sign and not the full documents. In other cases, consumers who noticed the add-on charges were falsely told they were mandatory.

In addition, according to the complaint, company documents show that the dealerships treated Black and Latino consumers differently from non-Latino White consumers, charging them hundreds of dollars extra on average for add-ons – including those add-ons for which they were charged without consent. The complaint alleges that there was no non-discriminatory reason for these higher costs.

The Commission issues an administrative complaint when it has “reason to believe” that the law has been or is being violated, and it appears to the Commission that a proceeding is in the public interest. The issuance of the administrative complaint marks the beginning of a proceeding in which the allegations will be tried in a formal hearing before an administrative law judge.

08/19/2024

FDIC guidance to assist banks in Florida affected by Hurricane Debby

FDIC FIL-57-2024 was issued Friday with information to provide regulatory relief to FDIC-supervised financial institutions and facilitate recovery in areas of Florida affected by Hurricane Debby. The affected areas are Columbia, Dixie, Gilchrist, Hamilton, Lafayette, Levy, Manatee, Sarasota, Suwannee, and Taylor Counties.

08/19/2024

CFPB updates Small Business Lending Filing instructions guide

The CFPB has issued the 2025 Small Business Lending Filing Instructions Guide, which updates dates used in the filing instructions to correspond with the new compliance dates for the rule. Additionally, the Action Taken Date and Application Date data point examples have been updated to reflect the new compliance dates and use year 2025.

The Bureau also updated other Small Business Lending reporting resources to reflect the extended compliance dates.

08/14/2024

CFPB advisory opinion: Contracts for deed subject to consumer protection laws

Yesterday, the CFPB announced it had released an advisory opinion and research report on a form of home seller financing that is often referred to as contract for deed.

Under contract-for-deed deals, the seller agrees to turn over a home’s deed only after the buyer completes a series of payments. During the contract term, the borrower often carries the responsibilities of homeownership, including repairs, property taxes, and improvements. The deals often have little oversight, and investment groups and other sellers can set a series of traps that leave buyers in unlivable homes, on the hook for tax liens and expensive repairs, and at risk of losing their down payments and homes. The advisory opinion affirms that federal home lending rules and laws cover contracts for deed and provide key consumer protections. In yesterday’s report, the CFPB traces the history of contract-for-deed lending. The CFPB has found that these products often target Black, Hispanic, immigrant, and religious communities.

The CFPB's opinion holds that these contracts are in fact covered by the federal Truth in Lending Act. This law imposes certain requirements on larger sellers – often investment groups – such that they must assess borrowers' ability to repay loans, provide informative and accurate disclosures, and limit or avoid balloon payments.

PUBLICATION UPDATE: Published at 89 FR 68086 on 8/23/2024.

The CFPB also issued a Consumer Advisory on Contracts for Deed.

08/09/2024

CFPB files proposed settlement with Credit Repair Cloud and CEO

The CFPB yesterday announced it had filed a proposed order to resolve its lawsuit against Daniel A. Rosen, Inc., d/b/a Credit Repair Cloud and Daniel A. Rosen, its CEO, for providing substantial assistance or support to credit repair businesses that charge illegal advance fees to consumers. The proposed order, if entered by the court, would impose a $2 million civil penalty against Rosen and a $1 million civil penalty against Credit Repair Cloud. The order would also require the company and Rosen to take steps to ensure credit repair companies using Credit Repair Cloud stop charging consumers illegal advance fees.

On September 20, 2021, the Bureau filed a lawsuit against Credit Repair Cloud — a Los Angeles, California, company that since at least 2013 has provided an “all-in-one solution” for people to start their own credit repair businesses — and its owner and CEO, Daniel Rosen. On January 7, 2022, the Bureau filed an amended complaint. The Bureau alleged that Credit Repair Cloud and Daniel Rosen violated the Telemarketing Sales Rule by providing substantial assistance to credit repair businesses that violated the Telemarketing Sales Rule’s advance-fee prohibition. Specifically, the Bureau alleged that Rosen and Credit Repair Cloud encouraged the credit repair businesses that use their services — including Credit Repair Cloud’s trainings, materials, and software — to telemarket and charge unlawful advance fees. The Bureau further alleges that Rosen and Credit Repair Cloud knew or consciously avoided knowing that these credit repair businesses were telemarketing their services and charging consumers unlawful advance fees. The Bureau also alleges that by violating the Telemarketing Sales Rule, Credit Repair Cloud and Daniel Rosen violated the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010.

08/08/2024

Steps to protect residential solar energy consumers

The Treasury Department has announced that Treasury, the CFPB, and the FTC have taken actions to address unfair and deceptive consumer acts and practices in the residential solar power sector. Treasury, CFPB, and FTC released Consumer Advisories warning the public on how to spot potential unfair and deceptive practices and encouraging consumers to file complaints of suspicious behavior to FTC, CFPB, and state consumer protection offices.

Treasury, CFPB, and FTC, along with the Departments of Energy and Housing and Urban Development, also announced an interagency partnership with the goal of coordinating efforts to prevent predatory practices. The new partnership will foster greater communication and collaboration between the agencies and better protect consumers from bad actors.

Treasury Resources:

FTC Resources:

CFPB Resources:

08/07/2024

Reserve Banks released 21 CRA evaluations in July

Our quick look this morning at the Federal Reserve Board's archive of Community Reinvestment Act evaluations revealed that the Reserve Banks released 21 evaluations last month. We congratulate The Northwestern Bank (Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin), State Street Bank and Trust Company (Boston, Massachusetts), and Vista Bank (Dallas, Texas) on their Outstanding ratings. The remaining eighteen banks received Satisfactory ratings.

08/06/2024

FTC acts to end credit repair pyramid scheme

The Federal Trade Commission has announced that, as a result of a Federal Trade Commission lawsuit, the owners and operators of a sprawling credit repair operation known as Financial Education Services (FES) will end the practices that the FTC alleged created a pyramid scheme and also violated the Credit Repair Organizations Act. In addition, the proposed court orders [see Case Timeline HERE] include substantial monetary penalties.

The FTC first filed suit against the FES scheme in May 2022, alleging that the company preyed on consumers with low credit scores by luring them in with the false promise of an easy fix and then recruiting them to join a pyramid scheme selling the credit repair services to others, costing them millions of dollars.

The proposed settlements in the case will lead to more than $12 million being turned over to the FTC for use in providing refunds to affected consumers, as well as conduct prohibitions against the defendants.

08/06/2024

FDIC releases CRA evaluation ratings

The FDIC has issued a list of 54 state nonmember banks recently evaluated for compliance with the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA).

One of the banks — Farmers Bank & Trust, Great Bend, Kansas, received a rating of "needs to improve." Fifty-one banks received ratings of "satisfactory." We congratulate two banks — Stock Yards Bank & Trust Company, Louisville, Kentucky, and First Federal Bank of Kansas City, Lees Summit, Missouri — on their "outstanding" ratings.

Pages

Training View All

Penalties View All

Search Top Stories