Recent regulatory releases reinforce the increasing focus on fees
乐鱼(Leyu)体育官网 Insight.聽In line with the Administration鈥檚 executive orders on fairness and competition, regulators, have focused on consumers and investors fees.聽 The focus has been on both the transparency and clarity of fees (e.g., advertising, disclosures, communication, disparate targeting), as well as the application of fees (e.g., sales practices, billing, disparate impacts).聽 Note: the CFPB and FTC have directly solicited input from consumers and industry groups for the purpose of helping to shape the agencies鈥� rulemaking, guidance, and enforcement agendas.聽 Companies should anticipate that the 鈥榝ocus on fees鈥� will not abate in the near term and should consider re-evaluating their product features, fee structures, consumer/investor marketing, billing, and communications.聽
Recent regulatory releases reinforce the increasing focus on fees, and especially those that may be considered unfair or deceptive and cause harm to consumers. These releases include: 聽
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued聽聽rule amendments to its investment company advertising rules that aim to 鈥渟tandardize fee and expense computations across investment company advertisements,鈥� and address materially misleading statements about fees and expenses in investment company sales literature. The adopted amendments apply to all registered investment companies (including mutual funds, ETFs, open-end funds, closed-end funds, and business development companies). The new rule amendments provide:
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) issued a聽聽(2022-06) on unanticipated, or 鈥渟urprise,鈥� overdraft fee assessment practices, as well as a Compliance聽聽(2022-06) pertaining to 鈥漵urprise鈥� returned deposited item fee assessment practices. In both issuances, the CFPB states that fees that cannot be reasonably avoided by consumers are likely to be deemed unfair. Under the Consumer Financial Protection Act (CFPA), an unfair act or practice is one that:
Circular 2022-06 highlights that unanticipated overdraft fees may arise in a variety of circumstances, and offers 鈥渁uthorize positive, settle negative (APSN)鈥� transactions as one example where financial institutions risk charging overdraft fees that consumers would not reasonably anticipate. In such a case, a transaction is authorized at a time when the customer鈥檚 account had a sufficient balance to cover the transaction but an insufficient balance at the time of settlement due to intervening transactions.
Bulletin 2022-06, states that blanket policies on charging returned deposited item fees to consumers for all returned transactions irrespective of the circumstances or patterns of behavior on the account are likely unfair. It outlines, as a statement of policy, how the CFPB intends to exercise its enforcement and supervisory authorities on this issue. The CFPB suggests that such fees may be unfair because, in many circumstances, the consumer depositing the check has no control over whether a check originator has funds in their account, will issue a stop payment instruction, or has closed their account.
Other CFPB Actions. CFPB has previously focused on a variety of fees issues as part of an initiative announced in January 2022, including publishing a(n):
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) released an advance notice of proposed rulemaking () seeking input on a potential rulemaking to address certain unfair or deceptive acts or practices (UDAP) relating to fees. The FTC is particularly focused on what it terms 鈥渏unk fees,鈥� which it defines as unfair or deceptive fees charged for goods or services that:
The FTC is considering if and how it should use its UDAP rulemaking authority (Section 18 of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. 57a) to address 鈥渏unk fees and hidden fees.鈥� The FTC states this authority permits the agency to promulgate, modify, and repeal trade regulation rules that define with specificity acts or practices that are unfair or deceptive. Practices under consideration include:
1.聽聽聽聽聽聽聽Advertisements or marketing materials that misrepresent or fail to disclose clearly and conspicuously:
2.聽聽聽聽聽聽聽Misrepresentations or failure to disclose clearly and conspicuously:
3.聽聽聽聽聽聽聽Billing or charging consumers for fees, interest, goods, services, or programs:
Commenters are requested to provide their views, arguments, experiences, and the qualitative and quantitative data that support or inform their answers to the questions provided within the ANPR. Comments must be received on or before sixty days after the date of publication in the Federal Register.
Other FTC Actions. Within the ANPR, FTC references many actions it has taken to address 鈥渏unk fees鈥� including 鈥渕obile cramming鈥� charges, connection and maintenance fees on prepaid phone cards, account fees, fees that diminish the amount a borrower receives from a loan, miscellaneous fees levied on fuel cards, auto dealer fees, publishing undisclosed fees for funeral services, hotel 鈥渞esort鈥� fees, hidden fees for academic publishing, poorly disclosed ancillary insurance products, membership programs, and discounts for food, travel, long-distance calls, and merchandise.
Separately, in 2021, the FTC issued an enforcement policy statement on聽聽to regulate marketing practices where a consumer鈥檚 silence or failure to take affirmative action to reject or cancel a good or service is interpreted as an acceptance of the good or service and consent to be charged.