Consumer Group Expresses Concern Over Guidance from NCUA, Other Regulators

WASHINGTON–At least one consumer group is blasting the FDIC announced plans to repeal two guidances that protect consumers against high-cost bank payday loans over 36%, and further expressing concern over an announcement by four federal regulators—including NCUA—after they issued small-dollar loan guidance .

The latter, said the National Consumer Law Center, could “open a crack to permit balloon-payment bank payday loans. By failing to warn against triple-digit interest rates and suggesting that banks may offer single-payment loans, new guidance from the FDIC, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Federal Reserve Board, and NCUA might encourage some banks to make unaffordable loans that trap borrowers in a cycle of debt, advocates warned, though other parts of the guidance emphasize that loans must be affordable and not lead to repeat reborrowing.

“The evidence is clear that bank payday loans, like traditional payday loans, put consumers in a debt trap,” said Lauren Saunders, deputy director of the National Consumer Law Center. “The American public strongly supports limiting interest rates to 36%, so it’s shocking that in the middle of an economic crisis the FDIC would repeal its 36% rate guidance and its letter warning of the dangers of bank payday loans. Congress should pass a 36% rate cap for banks and other lenders, and banks should decline to take the bait and not risk their reputations by making high-cost loans.” 

200% APR

In its statement, the National Consumer Law Center said it was during the 2008 recession that a handful of banks were making balloon-payment bank payday loans – so-called “deposit advance products” – that “put borrowers in an average of 19 loans a year at over 200% annual interest.”

“Most banks stopped making bank payday loans in 2013 after the OCC and FDIC issued guidance warning about the problems the loans cause,” the NCLC said. “But the OCC repealed its guidance in 2017 and the FDIC announced today that it would repeal its deposit advance product guidance, along with its 2007 small dollar loan guidance that encouraged banks to limit interest rates on small dollar loans to 36%.”

‘Few Specifics’

While the organization noted the new guidance encourages banks and credit unions to make “responsible” small dollar loans with appropriate underwriting and terms, it offers few specifics, and explicitly permits “shorter-term single payment structures,” and is “vague on appropriate interest rates, though it does say that pricing should be reasonably related to the institution’s risks and costs.”

“Banks should not read this guidance as an opening to return to bank payday loans, which cannot be made responsibly and lead to a cycle of debt,” said Saunders. “Any hint that bank payday loans or loans over 36% may be appropriate is especially dangerous coupled with the CFPB’s expected gutting of the payday loan rule and the FDIC and OCC’s separate proposal that will encourage rent-a-bank” schemes where banks help non-bank lenders make triple-digit interest loans that are illegal under state law.”

Section: Standard
Word Count: 903
Copyright Holder: CUToday.info
Copyright Year: 2026
Is Based On:
URL: https://cuto-admin.flux5.ccplatform.net/Fresh-Today/Consumer-Group-Expresses-Concern-Over-Guidance-from-NCUA-Other-Regulators