Banks keep high rates inspired by now-dead CFPB rule
By: bitcoin ethereum news|2025/05/07 19:45:01
0
Share
The New York Stock Exchange is seen during morning trading on July 31, 2024 in New York City. Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images News | Getty Images Last year, banks quickly raised interest rates to record levels and added new monthly fees on credit cards when a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule threatened a key revenue source for the industry. Now, they’re far more reluctant to reverse those steps, even after bank trade groups succeeded in killing the CFPB rule in federal court last month. Synchrony and Bread Financial, two of the biggest players in the business of issuing branded credit cards for the likes of Amazon , Lowe’s and Wayfair , are keeping the higher rates in place, executives said in recent conference calls. “We feel pretty comfortable that the rule has been vacated,” Synchrony CEO Brian Doubles said on April 22. “With that said, we don’t currently have plans to roll anything back in terms of the changes that we made.” His counterpart at Bread, CEO Ralph Andretta, echoed that sentiment, “At this point, we’re not intending to roll back those changes, and we’ve talked to the partners about that.” The CEOs celebrated the end of a proposed CFPB regulation that was meant to limit what Americans would pay in credit card late fees, an effort that the industry called a misguided and unlawful example of regulatory overreach. Under previous Director Rohit Chopra, the CFPB estimated that its rule would save families $10 billion annually. Instead, it inadvertently saddled borrowers with higher rates and fees for receiving paper statements as credit card companies sought to offset the expected revenue hit. Retail cards hit a record high average interest rate of 30.5% last year, according to a Bankrate survey, and rates have stayed close to those levels this year. “The companies have made a windfall,” said David Silberman, a veteran banking attorney who lectures at Yale Law School. “They didn’t think they needed this revenue before except for [the CFPB rule], and they’re now keeping it, which is coming directly out of the consumer’s pocket.” Synchrony and Bread both easily topped expectations for first-quarter profit, and analysts covering the companies have raised estimates for what they will earn this year, despite concerns about a looming U.S. economic slowdown. Retailer lifeline While store cards occupy a relatively small corner of the overall credit card universe, Americans who are struggling financially are more likely to rely on them, and they are a crucial profit generator for popular American retailers. There were more than 160 million open retail card accounts last year, the CFPB said in a report from December that highlighted risks to users of the high-interest cards. More than half of the 100 biggest U.S. retailers offer store cards, and brands including Nordstrom and Macy’s relied on them to generate roughly 8% of gross profits in recent years, the CFPB said. Banks may be taking advantage of the fact that some users of retail cards don’t have the credit profiles to qualify for general-purpose cards from JPMorgan Chase or American Express , for example, said senior Bankrate analyst Ted Rossman. Nearly half of all retail card applications are submitted by people with subprime or no credit scores, and the card companies behind them approve applications at a higher rate than for general-purpose cards, the CFPB said. “Companies like Bread or Synchrony, they rely a lot more on people who carry balances or who pay late fees,” Rossman said. Rates on retail cards have fallen by less than 1% on average since hitting their 2024 peak, and they are typically about 10 percentage points higher than the rates for general-purpose cards, Rossman said. That means it’s unlikely that other large players in the retail card sector, including Citigroup and Barclays , have rolled back their rate increases in the wake of the CFPB rule’s demise. The most recent published APR on the Macy’s card, issued by Citigroup, is 33.49%, for instance. Citigroup and Barclays representatives declined to comment for this article. Debt spirals Synchrony’s CEO gave some clues as to why banks aren’t eager to roll back the hikes: borrowers either didn’t seem to notice the higher rates, or didn’t feel like they had a choice. Retail cards are typically advertised online or at the checkout of brick-and-mortar retailers, and often lure users with promotional discounts or rewards points. “We didn’t see a big reduction in accounts or spend related to the actions” they took last year, Doubles told analysts. “We did a lot of test and control around that.” Synchrony will discuss future possible changes to its card program with its brand partners, according to a spokeswoman for the Stamford, Connecticut-based bank. That could include bumping up promotional offers at specific retailers, Doubles said during the April conference call. Brian Doubles, Synchrony President Synchrony Financial “Our goal remains to provide access to financial solutions that provide flexibility, utility, and meaningful value to the diverse range of customers, partners, providers, and small and midsized businesses we serve,” Synchrony said in a statement. A Bread spokesperson declined to comment for this article. Alaina Fingal, a New Orleans-based financial coach, said she often advises people who’ve been trapped in a debt spiral from using retail credit cards. Some have to take on side gigs, like driving for Uber Eats, to work down the balances, she said. “They do not understand the terms, and there are a lot of promotional offers that may have deferred interest clauses that are in there,” Fingal said. “It’s extremely predatory.” Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2025/05/07/credit-card-aprs-banks-keep-high-rates-inspired-by-now-dead-cfpb-rule.html
You may also like

From OKX to Bybit, exchanges are changing tires on the highway at high speed
In the current context of tightening global regulations, if one can directly enter the market with a partner that has already established a compliance system, obtaining federal license endorsement, the credibility of a listed company, and access to banking cooperation channels, the cost is merely gi...

A Brief History and Future of Perpetual Contracts
Decentralized perpetual contract exchanges, such as Hyperliquid, are replacing traditional derivatives with structural advantages, becoming trillion-dollar financial platforms that attract global assets.

AI Agent Gets ID and Wallet on the Same Day | Rewire News Morning Brief
Agent infrastructure for the economy is forming faster than anyone expected

IOSG: Power Flexibility Paradigm Shift: From Macro Assets to Distributed Intelligence Layer
The power system is being asked to perform a task it was not designed to do.

Murata 35% Price Increase Explained: A Capacitor that Gives AI Empire a Cold
Choosing to raise at this point in time has a clear financial incentive

MiniMax: A Henan County Youth and His 300 Billion
Money, cards, and people were scarce, yet it spurred the highest levels of engineering prowess and architectural innovation.

From Abandoned Project to Sky-High Target, Mastercorp Acquires BVNK for $1.8 Billion
The stablecoin is no longer a competitor to the card networks, but has instead been assimilated into its underlying network as a highly complementary business subset.

Is Polymarket's Pricing Accurate? I Simulated a Crisis with 200 Agents to Find Out
The more participants, the richer the discussion structure, and the more valuable the resulting signal.

A Decade of Regulation Finally Clarified, Victory for Crypto-Native Logic
Three Charts to Explain What's in This 68-Page Document

The United States Establishes the "Five Categories Law" for Cryptographic Assets: A Summary to Understand the New Regulatory Framework
Is the "Wild West" era of cryptocurrency assets officially coming to an end?

Morning Report | Mastercard plans to acquire BVNK for up to $1.8 billion; Solana Foundation launches aggregator Tokens on Solana; Bitcoin sees its first 8 consecutive rises in four years
Overview of Important Market Events on March 17

Aster Chain officially launches: defining a new era of on-chain privacy and transparency
The privacy-focused trading ecosystem Aster, supported by YZi Labs, announced today that the Aster Chain mainnet is officially launched.

Stargate Debut Illustrated: The 1.4 Trillion Computing Power Empire Dream, Awakened
One Year Plus, Zero Employees, Zero Code

A Billion-Dollar Life Buy Threat Triggered by an Iranian Missile
One Word Change by a Reporter Can Make Gambler Win Millions

BlackRock Launches ETHB: Ethereum ETF Enters 'Interest-Bearing Age'
The BlackRock ETHB is not the first Ethereum ETF in the United States, but it is taking the most standard route.

Nvidia Starts Putting Chips in the Road | Rewire News Evening Update
Huang Renxun said this is the "ChatGPT Moment of Autonomous Driving"

RootData: February 2026 Cryptocurrency Exchange Transparency Research Report
This month's cumulative spot trading volume on cryptocurrency exchanges has decreased slightly by 4.7% compared to January, which is the result of multiple factors including market conditions, the macro environment, and the Spring Festival holiday in Chinese-speaking regions.

「One and Done SEA」, so OpenSea chooses to wait a little longer
It's already Q1 2026, and we're still waiting for OpenSea to launch its token.
From OKX to Bybit, exchanges are changing tires on the highway at high speed
In the current context of tightening global regulations, if one can directly enter the market with a partner that has already established a compliance system, obtaining federal license endorsement, the credibility of a listed company, and access to banking cooperation channels, the cost is merely gi...
A Brief History and Future of Perpetual Contracts
Decentralized perpetual contract exchanges, such as Hyperliquid, are replacing traditional derivatives with structural advantages, becoming trillion-dollar financial platforms that attract global assets.
AI Agent Gets ID and Wallet on the Same Day | Rewire News Morning Brief
Agent infrastructure for the economy is forming faster than anyone expected
IOSG: Power Flexibility Paradigm Shift: From Macro Assets to Distributed Intelligence Layer
The power system is being asked to perform a task it was not designed to do.
Murata 35% Price Increase Explained: A Capacitor that Gives AI Empire a Cold
Choosing to raise at this point in time has a clear financial incentive
MiniMax: A Henan County Youth and His 300 Billion
Money, cards, and people were scarce, yet it spurred the highest levels of engineering prowess and architectural innovation.