Citibank agrees to refund $700M

Deceptive credit card practices found; $70M fine levied

A man peers into a Citigroup Inc. Citibank branch in Los Angeles earlier this month. The bank Tuesday said it has agreed to refund an estimated $700 million to its credit card customers for deceptive marketing, billing and other illegal practices.
A man peers into a Citigroup Inc. Citibank branch in Los Angeles earlier this month. The bank Tuesday said it has agreed to refund an estimated $700 million to its credit card customers for deceptive marketing, billing and other illegal practices.

WASHINGTON -- Citibank has agreed to refund an estimated $700 million to about 8.8 million credit card customers for deceptive marketing, billing and other illegal practices, federal regulators said Tuesday.

In addition to the refunds, Citibank was fined a total of $70 million by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which regulates national banks.

The consumer bureau has been cracking down on deceptive marketing and billing practices by credit card issuers of so-called add-on products, such as identity theft monitoring and protection programs that cover payments if a person loses a job or is seriously injured.

"We continue to uncover illegal credit card add-on practices that are costing unknowing customers millions of dollars," said Richard Cordray, the bureau's director.

Citibank's violations took place from at least 2003 until 2012, the bureau said. They included misrepresenting the costs and benefits of products and charging consumers for services they did not receive.

Citibank and its subsidiaries Citicorp Credit Services Inc., and Department Stores National Bank also did not disclose to customers making payments over the phone for delinquent accounts that they would be charged $14.95 for the expedited service.

Parent company Citigroup said it had fully cooperated with the regulators and set aside money to pay for the settlement. The company said it already had stopped selling the products and no longer charges the fees for expedited payments by phone.

The company said it has been refunding money since 2013 and "will continue to notify and refund affected customers."

"Affected customers will automatically receive a statement credit or check and those no longer with Citi who are eligible will be mailed a check," Citigroup said.

Citibank agreed to refund about $479 million to approximately 4.8 million customers for deceptive marketing practices.

The company also will refund $196 million to about 2.2 million customers who paid for products such as credit monitoring but did not receive the promised services and $23.8 million to 1.8 million customers who were charged expedited payment fees.

This is the 10th action the consumer bureau has taken against major companies for deceiving consumers, including an $800 million fine against Bank of America last year and a $389 million penalty against JPMorgan Chase in 2013.

The consumer bureau has focused on credit card add-on products since its enforcement action against Capital One Financial Corp. in July 2012.

Information for this article was contributed by Jonnelle Marte of The Washington Post and by Dakin Campbell of Bloomberg News.

Business on 07/22/2015

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