Today, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) sued Capital One, N.A., and its parent holding company, Capital One Financial Corp., for cheating millions of consumers out of more than $2 billion in interest. The CFPB alleges that Capital One promised consumers that its flagship “360 Savings” account provided one of the nation’s “best” and “highest” interest rates, but the bank froze the interest rate at a low level while rates rose nationwide. Around the same time, Capital One created a virtually identical product, “360 Performance Savings,” that differed from 360 Savings only in that it paid out substantially more in interest—at one point more than 14 times the 360 Savings rate. Capital One did not specifically notify 360 Savings accountholders about the new product, and instead worked to keep them in the dark about these better-paying accounts. The CFPB alleges that Capital One obscured the new product from its 360 Savings accountholders and cost millions of consumers more than $2 billion in lost interest payments. The CFPB’s lawsuit seeks to stop the companies’ unlawful conduct, provide redress for harmed consumers, and impose civil money penalties, which would be paid into the CFPB’s victims relief fund.
As a Brit I don’t know anything about the CFPB, but let me just say they have a top-tier logo right there.
The ‘spotlight’ shining out from inside the C to shed light on anti-consumer shenanigans tells you instantly what the CFPB is presumably all about.
Graphical masterpiece of a logo.
Don’t worry, Trump will soon shutter the CFPB and get rid of these pesky lawsuits
In exchange for a 15% donation from the interest money that was supposed to be paid to account holders.
It will be used to strong arm those that don’t want to play along.
I’m going to sit here and hold my breath while I wait for either Capital One to be penalized anywhere close to $2B or for any of that penalty to actually flow down to the people who were harmed…
Holding…
Yup, they did this to me. Luckily I noticed somewhat quickly and moved the money into a better account.
Edit: this is what tipped me off, a reddit post. https://www.reddit.com/r/personalfinance/comments/er5qj8/alert_for_people_with_capital_one_savings_accounts/
Yeah, wells Fargo was giving me an atrocious rate and I had a good chunk of change in there. Eventually, I moved it to a Robinhood Gold account and made like not even joking 10x more in interest.
I only noticed in the last couple of weeks.
I thought under Trump it was renamed to the financial protection bureau
… As in protecting financial institutions from consumers?