New York Attorney General Letitia James announced new state legislation to ban unfair and abusive business practices, giving state regulators broader authority to crack down on consumer abuses.
Opinion
Editorial Roundup: United States
Excerpts from recent editorials in the United States and abroad: ___ March 9 The Washington Post says Americans need the CFPB Ever since the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau opened in 2011 with a ...
With the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau frozen, consumers will have to rely on their state AGs and regulators when they ...
With the Redfin-Rocket deal, buyers could end up paying even more. Previous research by Piskorski and his co-authors found that when fintech mortgage lenders offered more convenience to borrowers, ...
Republican lawmakers are moving to eliminate a Biden-era Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule barring medical debt from ...
Nothing lasts forever, sometimes not even two months. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has officially dropped ...
GM filed a new application with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to start its own bank in late January after withdrawing a ...
Los Angeles officials are reaching out to the local Armenian community for assistance with an ongoing investigation into ...
New CFPB rules may erase $49 billion in medical debt from credit reports, boosting credit scores for 15 million Americans if enforcement proceeds.
Remember when the CFPB announced last year it would cap credit card late fees at $8? A typical late fee hovers around $32, so ...
As the Trump administration looks to neuter the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, advocates urge borrowers to step up ...