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Trump's Move To Gut Financial Protection Agency Could Cost Consumers $15 Billion A Year, Say Advocacy Groups
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President Donald Trump's bid to dismantle the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has shifted at least $18 billion in costs onto consumers through higher bank fees and canceled restitution, two advocacy groups said Tuesday.

What Happened: The Student Borrower Protection Center and the Consumer Federation of America calculated the hit by tallying policies the administration halted since Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent froze most CFPB activity in February.

In a statement shared with Reuters, they say scrapping Obama and Biden-era plans to cap credit-card late fees at $8 and overdraft charges at $5 will alone cost consumers about $15 billion a year.

The CFPB has also dropped or settled 22 enforcement cases inherited from the prior administration, including actions against JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM), Bank of America (NYSE:BAC), Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) and Capital One (NYSE:COF), covering another $3 billion in alleged harm.

Earlier this month, CFPB lawyers quietly voided redress agreements with Toyota's lending arm and a major payments processor, erasing roughly $50 million owed to borrowers, the groups said.

See also: Ken Rogoff Warns AI’s Hunger For Power Could Send Interest Rates Soaring: ‘You’re Going To See Even More Spending, Not Less’

Why It Matters: The watchdog groups urged Congress to restore the fee caps and reopen canceled cases, warning that each month of inaction transfers billions from families to financial giants.

Trump has previously called the CFPB an "ultra-left" agency and boasted he "shut it down after bankers were almost crying," according to a February interview. Administration allies argue the bureau overreached and stifled free enterprise. According to Reuters, Senate Republicans recently tried to defund it in a sweeping tax bill before parliamentarians stripped the provision for violating budget rules.

Consumer advocates counter that households are absorbing higher costs just as real wages lag inflation and the Fed holds rates near two-decade highs. Meanwhile, analysts reveal that the regulatory freeze could boost lender profits and certain financial-sector ETFs as oversight weakens.

Photo Courtesy: Maxim Elramsisy / Shutterstock.com

Read next: Americans Used To Fantasize About Getting Rich, Now They Just Want To Be Comfortable: 1-In-4 Don’t Feel Financially Safe, Many Want $150,000 Payslips

Disclaimer:This article represents the opinion of the author only. It does not represent the opinion of Webull, nor should it be viewed as an indication that Webull either agrees with or confirms the truthfulness or accuracy of the information. It should not be considered as investment advice from Webull or anyone else, nor should it be used as the basis of any investment decision.
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