Wall Street Ripoff Counter: How Big Banks Block Caps on Junk Fees
Wall Street Ripoff Counter
Big Banks Block Caps on Junk Fees
The current ripoff amount is $3,813,832,956
You pay $317 every second for their greed.
In March 2024, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau banned excessive late fees on credit cards, bringing down the average hit to cardholders from $32 to $8. By closing a longstanding loophole in banking regulations, the measure would have saved people $10 billion each year.
But Wall Street banks filed a lawsuit with the most right-wing regional court in the United States, the Fifth Circuit. The court then prohibited the CFPB from doing its job: protecting consumers from banker tricks.
The delay is costing credit card users $317 every single second that the CFPB is not allowed to do its job. This counter is tallying up the losses, starting from the very day – May 14 – that the Fifth Circuit stopped the junk fees ban from taking effect.
And $317 per second adds up:
- $19,020 per minute
- $114,120 per hour
- $2.7 million per day
- $19.2 million per week
- $76.7 million per month