Bank overdraft fees could jump if consumer watchdog eases rule

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Jessica Dickler | CNBC
Often it’s the smallest charge that triggers the biggest fee. Overdraft fees, which is what banks charge when transactions including debit card purchases cause your account to drop below zero, average $35 — nearly twice the size of the average $20 debit card transaction, according to the Center for Responsible Lending. Altogether, customers of larger banks paid more than $11...

Payday blues: Rural Michigan and the quick-cash debt hole

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Ted Roelofs | Bridge MI
LUDINGTON—Four years ago, Merenda Vincent was desperate for cash. She had an overdue car payment, along with a medical bill she couldn’t pay. Living on a monthly Social Security check of less than $1,000, she had no money in the bank. Vincent recalled that she walked into a payday lending store called Check ‘n Go outside Ludington, a small Lake...

As California mulls rules for payday loan alternative, rifts emerge

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Kevin Wack | American Banker
Startups that provide early access to workers’ earned wages are jostling over key aspects of pending California legislation that would create the nation’s first-ever regulatory framework for the nascent industry. The state Senate passed a bill 35-0 last month, but interviews with executives in the fast-growing sector revealed big disagreements about the legislation. Those disputes reflect key differences in their...

New down-payment grants aimed at helping Orlando-area renters become home buyers

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Kate Santich | Orlando Sentinel
As Orlando-area rents continue to climb, a major bank is offering a pair of home-buyer grants that could help low- and moderate-income residents make the leap to ownership. This week the region became one of 49 national markets targeted by Bank of America for a five-year, $5 billion affordable home ownership initiative. The effort provides eligible home buyers a down-payment...

Will Bank Overdraft Fees Spread Again? Consumer Agency Is Reviewing the Rule

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Ann Carrns | New York Times
Are more $38 cups of coffee on the horizon? The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has opened a review of the decade-old federal “overdraft rule,” which regulates how banks charge fees when their customers spend more than what is in their checking accounts. Under the rule, banks must get their customers’ express permission before charging a penalty for overspending, whether through...

Enough is enough. Let’s abolish overdraft fees

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David Lazarus | LA Times
Bank fees have gotten way out of hand — so much so that they now account for more than a third of revenue for an industry that once made its cash almost exclusively by lending money to customers. And the worst of the worst are overdraft fees. They’re little more than cash grabs, serving no purpose but to fatten bankers’...

A Payday Without the Payoff

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Sara Haji | Zora
On Saturday mornings, locals shuffle through the ACE Cash Express at 16th and Mission in San Francisco, greeting one another in Spanish, if at all. The storefront signage — “Fast Loans Prestamos” — is unremarkable here, between pentecostal churches and stands of Tajin-salted mango. Here, in the city’s historically Latinx Mission District, the median family income hovers around $67,000 and one-third of households speak...

NAREB Takes Fight for Black Homeownership to Congress

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Hazel Trice Edney | The Precinct Reporter
The rate of Black homeownership in America – now at 41.1 percent, according to 2019 U. S. Census numbers – is even lower than it was when the U. S. Fair Housing Act was signed into law 51 years ago on April 11, 1968. This means Black homeownership is 32.1 percentage points lower than that of Whites, which stands at...

The Ongoing Fight Over Payday Loans

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Jefferson Public Radio
The federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau changed its tune on payday loans when the country changed presidents. The Center for Responsible Lendingnoticed. CRL's Ezekiel Gorrocino visits with details of the current situation with payday loans.

Will FHFA’s fair-lending office fill enforcement void?

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Hannah Lang | American Banker
WASHINGTON — When the Federal Housing Finance Agency opened a fair-lending monitoring office last August, there was little fanfare. But the launch of the Office of Fair Lending Oversight stood in contrast to different moves by officials elsewhere in the Trump administration. Today the FHFA’s Office of Fair Lending Oversight is still somewhat under the radar. It has five employees...