Agency looks at financial disputes

Limits on forced arbitration urged

In this March 26, 2015, file photo, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) Director, Richard Cordray, speaks during a panel discussion in Richmond, Va. The CFPB is considering banning a practice known as forced arbitration for financial services.
In this March 26, 2015, file photo, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) Director, Richard Cordray, speaks during a panel discussion in Richmond, Va. The CFPB is considering banning a practice known as forced arbitration for financial services.

NEW YORK -- The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is considering rules that would limit a practice called forced arbitration, which consumer advocates say does a disservice to people who have disputes with banks, credit card issuers and other financial service providers.

Many Americans aren't aware that they can't bring lawsuits against banks or other financial institutions over matters such as disputed charges on their checking accounts or credit card bills.

Instead, consumers are required to go through a binding arbitration process. Consumer advocates say arbitrators are often biased and routinely rule against consumers. If a customer loses an arbitration ruling, often it cannot be appealed.

The goal of forcing disputes to be arbitrated instead of litigated was to streamline and lower the cost of resolving disputes that customers had with financial service providers.

But what started off as a good idea became corrupted over time, critics claim. Companies that didn't like how an arbitration firm would rule could shop around, giving arbitration companies a reason to rule in favor of the companies that hired them. Arbitration rulings were also not transparent.

The proposal, which the agency announced Wednesday, follows years of scrutiny by financial regulators, state attorneys general and consumer financial advocates.

"Companies can sidestep the legal system, avoid big refunds, and continue to pursue profitable practices that may violate the law and harm countless consumers," said Richard Cordray, director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, in a statement.

The proposal is the first step toward restricting the practice. The regulator is likely to face resistance from the financial industry and its lobbyists.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's proposal does not create a blanket ban on arbitration, which is legal in the U.S. under the Federal Arbitration Act of 1925. Instead, the new rules would allow disgruntled customers to sue banks or other financial companies as a group, should they choose to, even if they're subject to arbitration agreements.

Financial companies will still be able to force individuals to settle disputes through arbitration, however those cases are less common. Many disputes are also resolved outside of the formal arbitration process.

Another proposal would force companies that continue to use arbitration to submit those claims to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, so the agency can monitor the process and make sure it's fair to customers.

Arbitration became the common way for financial companies to resolve disputes with customers starting about 20 years ago. Over the years, the practice ballooned to the point that many financial services, ranging from checking accounts to private student loans, have incorporated arbitration clauses in the fine print of their customer agreements.

In one case in 2009, Minnesota Attorney General Lori Swanson found out that a debt collection company and the National Arbitration Forum, at the time one of the largest arbitration companies, were owned by the same investors. National Arbitration Forum was also involved in helping to write arbitration clauses into contracts.

"The [National Arbitration] Forum presented itself as this neutral party like our court system, but consumers didn't know they were affiliated with the same companies bringing the claims against them," Swanson said in an interview.

Shortly after Swanson's lawsuit was filed, National Arbitration Forum agreed to get out of the business of arbitrating consumer financial disputes.

If a group of bank customers found they were victims of unfair practices at their bank, under the new rules they would be able to pursue a class-action lawsuit against the bank.

Under current rules, customers can be bound to use individual arbitration to resolve disputes, even in cases where many individuals were victims of the same practice. For consumers, pursuing individual lawsuits is typically a drawn-out and expensive process.

"It is simply impossible to have an effective group claim where the vast majority of consumers have all lost their right to have their day in court," Cordray said.

While it is only a partial ban in writing, arbitration experts say that by allowing class-action lawsuits to go forward, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's proposal is in essence a de facto ban on arbitration because the service, which is typically paid for by the bank, becomes less cost-effective.

"If I was a consumer advocate against arbitration, and I was looking at what the CFPB proposed, I would be popping those champagne corks right about now," said Alan Kaplinsky, a consumer financial services lawyer with Ballard Spahr LLP.

The Dodd-Frank Act required the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to study forced arbitration and submit a report to Congress. In its final report, released in March, the agency found companies widely used arbitration clauses to dismiss class-action lawsuits and, despite being on the majority of financial products, three out of four Americans did not know they were subject to arbitration.

Business on 10/08/2015

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