Mulvaney’s first fine at CFPB is second-largest in history of agency

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Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney

The $1 billion fine imposed by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and first since Mick Mulvaney took over the agency, ranks as the second-highest in the history of the agency.

Wells Fargo & Co.












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 agreed on Friday to pay $1 billion in fines to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency for harm inflicted on mortgage and auto loan borrowers. Technically, the CFPB fined Wells Fargo $1 billion and the OCC fined the bank $500 million, but the CFPB gave credit to Wells Fargo for the $500 million paid to the OCC.

Read: Here’s what Wells Fargo did to trigger a $1 billion fine

For the CFPB, the fine ranks only below the $2.125 billion against Ocwen Financial Corporation












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  and its loan servicing arm for mortgage servicing violations that allegedly put thousands of people across the country at risk of losing their homes.

Organization Fine (In millions) Date Violation
Ocwen Financial and Loan Servicing $2,125 12/19/2013 Consumer protection/Mortgage abuses
Wells Fargo $1,000 4/20/2017 Consumer protection/Mortgage abuses
Bank of America, N.A. $747 4/9/2014 Consumer protection/Banking
Citibank N.A. $733 7/21/2015 Consumer protection/Credit card
Sun Trust Mortgage $550 6/17/2014 Consumer protection/Mortgage abuses
Corinthian Colleges $531.2 10/28/2015 Consumer protection/Student loan abuses
JPMorgan Chase and Chase Bank USA, N.A. $329 9/19/2013 Consumer protection/Credit card
GE Capital retail bank, now known as Synchrony $225 6/19/2014 Consumer protection/Credit card
Discover Bank $214 9/24/2012 Consumer protection/Credit card
JP Morgan Chase $186 7/8/2015 Consumer protection/Credit card
Morgan Drexen $172.9 3/18/2016 Consumer protection
Capital One Bank $165 7/18/2012 Consumer protection/Credit card
Wells Fargo Bank $100 9/8/2016 Banking/Consumer Protection
American Express $99.1 10/1/2012 Consumer protection/Credit card

This is not the first time the CFPB has fined Wells Fargo. In 2016 the CFPB imposed a $100 million penalty for what it said was the multi-year, systemic, illegal practice of opening unauthorized deposit and credit card accounts. The activity was the result, according to the CFPB consent order, of a culture at Wells Fargo of establishing aggressive sales targets and compensation incentives that encouraged employees to pump up sales by secretly opening more than two million accounts. Wells Fargo was ordered to pay full restitution to all victims in addition to the fine.

Read: Where was KPMG, Wells Fargo’s auditor, while the funny business was going on?

Wells Fargo is not the only repeat offender.

JPMorgan Chase












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  and Citigroup












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  are tied for having received four fines each from the CFPB.

American Express












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  has been the target of three credit card related enforcement actions from the CFPB between 2012 and 2017 for a total of $264.2 million.

The CFPB was created by the Dodd-Frank Act in 2010 and formally began operation on mid- 2011 but did not get up in running until mid-2013 when the Senate confirmed Richard Cordray as director.

Mulvaney, also the director of the Office of Management and Budget, was appointed by President Trump to be CFPB acting director after Cordray resigned in November.

This the first CFPB enforcement action under Mulvaney’s leadership. Mulvaney was criticized by Democrats in both the House and Senate for his stewardship at a hearing this month.

It’s also, notably, the only bank Trump has criticized by name.

“So what the president tweeted out, if that’s accurate I don’t have any reason to think that it isn’t, is exactly what the statute tells us to do. And that’s what we did here today,” Mulvaney said in an interview on Fox Business Network.

“But to get down to the actual dollar amount, could we have recovered less by taking this matter to trial? Possibly. Could we have recovered more? Possibly. That’s the nature of a settlement. So no, I don’t think the folks at Wells think a billion dollars is a small amount of money. I don’t think anybody should think a billion dollars is a small amount of money, so this is a historically large collection and we’re very satisfied with the outcome,” Mulvaney said.

Bartlett Naylor, a financial policy advocate with the nonprofit organization Public Citizen, was less congratulatory. “Shareholders, who will be footing the bill for this fine, did not conceive, oversee and conceal this massive fraud. Wells Fargo executives did,” Naylor said in a statement. “Meanwhile, the Republican corporate tax cut more than offsets this penalty. The firm reportedly posted a $3.35 billion benefit from the new law.”

The $500 million penalty collected by the OCC will be credited against the CFPB penalty. The OCC fine ties, before the effect of inflation, with the banking regulator’s 2012 fine against HSBC












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  for Bank Secrecy Act and anti-money laundering compliance violations.





Source : MTV