New report providing a snapshot of how every member of Congress voted on consumer protections, climate financial regulation, Wall Street, and financial industry legislative measures during the first session of the 118th Congress.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) issued final guidance that outlines the terms and conditions that should be considered by designated contract markets (“DCMs”) when they list voluntary carbon credit (“VCC”) derivative contracts. The CFTC has rightly acknowledged the serious transparency and integrity challenges in the underlying, unregulated VCC market, but the guidance alone cannot prevent fraud and manipulation.
The bills coerce financial actors to ignore critical environmental, social, and governance (ESG) risks in investment decisions. This approach can only benefit corporate boards and fossil fuel interests at the expense of workers, investors, and long-term sustainability.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s new guidance on overdraft fees linked to ATM and one-time debit card transactions will help curtail predatory junk fees that obscure accurate pricing on bank services. The CFPB’s new guidelines can reduce the likelihood that overdraft services flout the law and prevent people from being charged illegal fees.
As the focus on the American voter intensifies with the coming election, a new poll released today shows voters across the political spectrum overwhelmingly support the mission of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), financial regulation generally, and a variety of specific CFPB actions, including efforts to limit credit card late fees, reduce overdraft charges, and prohibit medical debt from appearing on credit reports.
BlackRock and Vanguard, the world’s two largest asset managers, voted against a shareholder proposal requesting an independent audit of Amazon’s notoriously dangerous warehouse working conditions for the third year in a row, according to recently-disclosed proxy voting data. This vote reflects a troubling pattern of powerful asset managers using their immense power over public companies to stand in the way of shareholder efforts to force corporate boards and executives to address very real financial risks.