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The CFPB’s First Anniversary: A Look Back at What is has Accomplished and Where it is Headed December 13, 2012
Alan S. Kaplinsky, Practice Leader
Consumer Financial Services Group
Ballard Spahr LLP
1735 Market Street, 51st Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19103
(215) 864-8544
Visit our blog, CFPB Monitor, at www.CFPBMonitor.com
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Alan S. Kaplinsky
• Practice Leader of the Consumer Financial Services Group at Ballard Spahr
• Devotes his practice to counseling financial institutions with respect to bank regulatory and transactional matters and defending them in individual and class action lawsuits (including CFPB investigations and government enforcement matters)
• First President of the American College of Consumer Financial Services Lawyers
• Former Chair of the American Bar Association Committee on Consumer Financial Services of the Business Law Section
• Co-Chair of the Practicing Law Institute’s Annual Consumer Financial Services Institute, now on its 18th year
• Has been named as a tier one banking and consumer financial services lawyer in the 2006 through 2012 editions of Chambers USA
• Has been named in The Best Lawyers in America under financial services regulation law and banking and finance litigation from 2007 to 2013
• Recently named the 2012 Philadelphia Lawyer of the Year for Litigation-Banking & Finance
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A Bit of History
• Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act enacted on July 21, 2012
• Title X – Consumer Finance Protection Act of 2010 created Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
• Designated Transfer Date of July 21, 2011
• Richard Cordray’s appointment as Director on January 4, 2012
• Pending court challenges to the legality of President Obama’s recess appointments
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The Three-Headed Monster
• Regulation
• Supervision
• Enforcement
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Regulations
• Inherited rule-making under the “enumerated consumer laws” and regulations prescribed under Section 1002 of Dodd-Frank
- Alternative Mortgage Transaction Parity Act of 1982
- Consumer Leasing Act
- Electronic Fund Transfer Act (except Section 920)
- Fair Credit Billing Act
- Fair Credit Reporting Act (except Sections 615(e) and 628)
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Regulations (continued)
- Home Owners Protection Act
- Fair Debt Collection Practices Act
- Section 43(b)-(f) of Federal Deposit Insurance Act
- Sections 502-509 of Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act
- Home Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1975
- Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act of 1994
- Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act of 1974
- S.A.F.E. Mortgage Licensing Act of 2008
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Regulations (continued)
- Truth in Lending Act
- Truth in Savings Act
- Section 626 of Omnibus Appropriations Act
- Interstate Land Sales Full Disclosure Act
• Rule-making under Titles X and XIV of Dodd-Frank
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Mortgage-Related Rulemaking
• January 21, 2013 deadline for many mortgage rules to be effective to avoid Dodd-Frank provision becoming effective on that date
• Timeframes regarding major rule-making are as follows:
Ability to Repay;
Qualified Mortgage
Final Rules: Adopted: By January 21, 2013
Final Rules Effective: On or before one-year anniversary of final rules, unless
delayed by CFPB
Appraisals
Higher-Risk Mortgages Comments Due: October 15, 2012
Final Rules Adopted: By January 21, 2013
Final Rules Effective: On or before one-year anniversary of final rules, unless
delayed by agencies
Appraisal Copy Comments Due: October 15, 2012
Final Rules: Adopted: By January 21, 2013
Final Rules Effective: On or before one-year anniversary of final rules, although the
CFPB seeks comment, particularly on proposal to implement disclosure requirement
in conjunction with TILA/RESPA integration
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Mortgage-Related Rulemaking (continued)
AMCs & AVMs Proposal Expected: No estimate
Final Rules Adopted: By January 21, 2013 unless the CFPB takes other action to
prevent Dodd-Frank requirements from becoming effective on that date
Final Rules Effective: On or before one-year anniversary of final rules, unless
delayed by agencies
Dodd-Frank TILA/RESPA
Disclosures Temporary
Exemption
Comments Due: September 7, 2012
Final Rules Adopted: By January 21, 2013
Final Rules Effective: By January 21, 2013 (to avoid the need to revise existing
disclosures to include the requirements)
Escrow Final Rules Adopted: By January 21, 2013
Final Rules Effective: On or before one-year anniversary of final rules, unless
delayed by the CFPB
Expanded Finance Charge Comments Due: November 6, 2012 (comment deadline extended from September
7, 2012)
Final Rules Adopted: No deadline. The proposal is not required by Dodd-Frank,
but the CFPB is considering adoption along with HOEPA rule (although it is
contained in the Integrated Disclosures proposal)
HOEPA Comments Due: September 7, 2012
Final Rules Adopted: By January 21, 2013
Final Rules Effective: On or before one-year anniversary of final rules, unless
delayed by CFPB
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Mortgage-Related Rulemaking (continued)
Integrated Disclosures Comments Due: November 6, 2012
Final Rules Adopted: No deadline. CFPB targeting 2013
Final Rules Effective: No deadline. The CFPB is requesting comment on mandatory
compliance date based on extent of changes required
Loan Originator
Compensation and
Qualifications
Comments Due: October 16, 2012
Final Rules Adopted: By January 21, 2013
Final Rules Effective: On or before one-year anniversary of final rules, unless
delayed by the CFPB
Loan Originator Anti-
Steering and Related
Prohibitions
Proposal Expected: No estimate
Final Rules Adopted: By January 21, 2013 unless the CFPB takes other action to
prevent Dodd-Frank requirements from becoming effective on that date
Final Rules Effective: On or before one-year anniversary of final rules, unless
delayed by the CFPB
Servicing Comments Due: October 9, 2012
Final Rules Adopted: By January 21, 2013
Final Rules Effective: On or before one year anniversary of final rules, unless
delayed by the CFPB
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Remittances Regulation
• Section 1073 of Dodd-Frank creates comprehensive new system of consumer protection for remittance transfers sent by consumers in the U.S. to individuals and businesses in foreign countries
• CFPB issued final rule on February 7, 2012
• CFPB issued technical correction to the final rule on July 10, 2012
• CFPB issued final rule on August 20, 2012 with effective date of February 7, 2013
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Remittances Regulation (continued)
• CFPB issued Bulletin 2012-08 on November 27, 2012 in which it announced that in December it will propose to refine three elements of the rule
- Error resolution procedures. Will propose that if a remittance transfer provider can show that the transfer was deposited into a wrong account because the consumer provided incorrect information, the provider would be required to try to recover the funds but would not be liable if those efforts were unsuccessful
- Disclosure of third party fees and foreign taxes. Will propose added flexibility for making these disclosures
- Disclosure of regional and local taxes assessed in foreign countries. Will propose that a provider’s obligation to disclose foreign taxes imposed on remittance transfers is limited to taxes imposed at the national level
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What’s Happened and What’s Coming Next in the Enforcement Area
• Enforcement Related Rulemaking
• CID Activity So Far
• Problem Areas with CIDs
• The CFPB’s First Three Consent Orders
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Enforcement-Related Rulemaking
• June 2012: CFPB finalized two sets of procedural rules relating to enforcement:
- Rules relating to investigations (CIDs) (12 C.F.R. part 1080)
- Rules relating to administrative enforcement proceedings (12 C.F.R. part 1081)
• Both sets of rules largely unchanged from interim versions released in 2011
• Administrative enforcement proceedings remain very one-sided and expedited
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CID Activity So Far
• The CFPB does not publicly announce CIDs, but targets have occasionally announced them in securities filings
• We are aware of CIDs in the following sectors of the industry:
- Credit card payment protection / add-on products
- Private student lending
- Subprime auto finance
- Debt collectors/buyers
- Captive reinsurance of PMI
- Payday lending
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Problem Areas with CIDs
• Very overbroad requests
• Reluctance to grant extensions of deadline to file Petition to Set Aside or Modify
• Tight deadlines for production demanded
• Very general and broad descriptions of the “nature of the conduct constituting the alleged violation”
• All decisions on compromises made by the Deputy Director, who does not participate in “meet and confer” discussions
• Petitions decided by the Director, with judicial review unspecified in terms of availability and standard of review
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Analysis of 3 CFPB Consent Orders
• Capital One Bank on July 16, 2012
• Discover Bank on September 24, 2012
• American Express on October 1, 2012
• All consent orders were issued by the CFPB in conjunction with other prudential regulators, including FDIC, OCC and/or FRB
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Capital One Bank Consent Order
• Found that it engaged in certain sales practices that were unfair, deceptive, or abusive in violation of §1036 of Dodd-Frank Act
• Practices related to Capital One’s sale of credit card payment protection and identity theft protection products that were “added on” to credit and deposit products
• Ordered to refund $140 million (total fees plus interest) to approximately 2 million customers from August 1, 2010 – January 17, 2012
• Fine of $25 million
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Discover Bank Consent Order
• Found that it engaged in sales practices that were unfair, deceptive or abusive in violation of §1036 relating to certain credit card add-on products
• Ordered to refund $200 million (total fees and interest) to approximately 3.5 million customers from December 1, 2007 – August 31, 2011
• Fine of $14 million
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American Express Consent Order
• Found that it engaged in deceptive and unfair sales practices relating to credit card enrollment
• Also found that it engaged in deceptive debt collection practices, age discrimination in violation of ECOA, failing to report customer credit report disputes in violation of FCRA and charging unlawful late fees in violation of TILA
• Ordered to refund $85 million to approximately 250,000 customers
• Fine of $27.5 million
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Analysis – Deceptive Advertising
• Implied false claims that a product is free
- Capital One marketed payment protection products as a “special tool” or as a “feature” of credit card accounts
• Consumer confusion about what is a credit score and what affects credit scores
- Capital One allegedly claimed that credit monitoring products could improve credit scores and lead to an increased credit limit
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Analysis – Deceptive Advertising (continued)
• Using statistics in advertising can be red flags for regulatory scrutiny because they lend themselves to objective evaluation
- In marketing identity theft protection products, Capital One stated that “identity theft is the number one crime”
• Express claims must be accurate
- AMEX stated that new cardholders would receive rewards points plus $300 but cardholders never received $300
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Analysis – Inadequate Disclosures
• CFPB found fault with certain disclosures in terms of what they said, when and how they were presented to customers
- Capital One and Discover allegedly failed to state key eligibility information for products
- Discover allegedly asked customers to enroll in products before disclosing material terms – after customer made first payment
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Analysis – Improper Sales Methods
• Sales personnel not following telemarketing scripts
- Discover telemarketers allegedly downplayed disclosures before reading them or read them too quickly
- Telemarketers for Capital One and Discover allegedly never obtained clear, affirmative consent to enroll customers in add-on products because they either didn’t give disclosures at right time, they distracted the customer from the disclosures, or engaged in high pressure sales tactics or played upon the customer’s fears
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Analysis – Customer Service Interaction
• Relates to alleged problems after customer enrolls
• Customers calling to cancel products who end up retaining products after call ends
• Service calls or courtesy calls to customers that lead to sales pitch without clearly informing customer that they are about to hear a solicitation
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Analysis – Deceptive Practices in Debt Collection
• AMEX stated that repaid debts would be reported to consumer reporting agencies and would result in improved credit scores when AMEX allegedly didn’t report certain repaid debts and in many cases the debts were so old that they likely would not have impacted a customer’s credit report anyway
• AMEX dunning letters stated that if customer repaid a portion of debt, then the balance of debt would be waived or forgiven. However, other language in the letters indicated that AMEX required that the full debt would have to be repaid before customer would be eligible for a new financial product from AMEX, such as a credit card
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Analysis – Deceptive Practices in Debt Collection (continued)
• AMEX not reporting amounts as “disputed” to consumer reporting agencies if it conducted an investigation and determined that the dispute was invalid
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Analysis – ECOA and Differential Treatment
• AMEX used a different approval process for applicants under and over 35 years of age which led to higher rates for the latter
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Robust Compliance Programs
• Management designated by Board of Directors who are responsible for the compliance program and for establishing clear lines of authority and communication for elevating compliance reports and issues
• Regular training programs for all employees having responsibility for formulating or implementing policies around unfair, deceptive or abusive sales practices and other applicable legal obligations
• Regular training, monitoring and auditing programs for third-party vendors involved in marketing, credit reporting or customer services
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Robust Compliance Programs (continued)
• Procedures for managing the quick and complete resolution of customer complaints
• Procedures for ensuring that compliance personnel are sufficiently experienced and that the compliance staff is sufficiently resourced
• Policies ensuring that bonuses or other incentive compensation is appropriate and does not skew employee decision-making toward engaging in unfair or deceptive practices
• Procedures for evaluating and reporting performance relating to the compliance program policies, procedures and objectives (including an effective independent audit process)
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Supervision Update
• Whom can CFPB supervise?
• Observations on the Supervisory Process
• Service Providers
• Update on the Privilege Issue
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Whom Can CFPB Supervise?
• Banks, thrifts and credit unions with more than $10 billion in assets (“large banks”) – as of July 21, 2011
• Mortgage originators, brokers, or servicers – as of January 4, 2012
• Payday lenders – as of January 4, 2012
• Private education lenders – as of January 4, 2012
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Whom Can CFPB Supervise? (continued)
• Larger participants of market for other consumer financial products or services
- On February 16, 2012, CFPB issued a proposed rule covering companies with more than $10 million in annual receipts from debt collection activities and companies with more than $7 million in annual receipts from consumer reporting activities
- On July 16, 2012, CFPB issued a final rule (effective September 30, 2012) covering companies with more than $7 million in annual receipts from consumer reporting activities
- On October 24, 2012, CFPB issued a final rule (effective January 2, 2012) covering companies with more than $10 million in annual receipts from debt collection activities
- Expected to further broaden the definition of “larger participants” to include auto finance companies, prepaid cards, all other non-bank lenders, money transmitters, and check cashers
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Whom Can CFPB Supervise? (continued)
• Those covered persons (regardless of size) determined by CFPB order, after notice and opportunity to respond, to be engaged in conduct that poses risks to consumers based on complaints and other information. CFPB recently issued proposed regulation to codify this authority (77 Fed. Red. 31226) (May 25, 2012).
• CFPB also has supervision and enforcement authority as to service providers (regardless of the service provider’s size) to large banks, mortgage originators, brokers and servicers, payday lenders and private education lenders, larger participants.
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Observations on Supervisory Process
• Who are the CFPB examiners?
• Process being followed
• Enforcement lawyers in attendance
• Differences between CFPB exams and exams of federal and state prudential regulators
• How to prepare for first CFPB exam
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Service Providers
• OCC/FRB/OTS Consent Agreements, April 2011
• National Mortgage Servicing Settlement, March 2012
• CFPB Bulletin 2012-03, April 12, 2012
- Applies to both banks and non-banks within CFPB supervision and enforcement authority.
- Supervision and enforcement authority extends to service providers.
- Initial and ongoing due diligence reviews of service providers.
- Contract provides for compliance, with consequences for non-compliance.
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Update on the Privilege Issue
• Still not resolved in the underlying statutes – 12 U.S.C. §§ 1828(x) and 1821(t) still not applicable to the CFPB
• Partial legislative fix passed the House (HR 4014), but stalled in the Senate
• Now new Senate legislation introduced (S.3394) that combines identical provisions of HR 4014 with ATM fee placard issue
• Reports that AFSA has proposed legislation that would go further than HR 4014 in protecting privilege in situations where CFPB shares info with state banking regulators
• Legislative uncertainty did not delay the CFPB in finalizing its privilege waiver rule – announced final rule on June 28, 2012
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“Deceptive” Standard
• Dodd-Frank does not articulate the standard for “deceptive.”
- In contrast, it does articulate standards for “unfair” and “abusive.”
• The CFPB has relied upon prior FTC guidance on the “deceptive” standard
- See CFPB Supervision and Examination Manual, Unfair, Deceptive, or Abusive Acts or Practices (Oct. 2011)
- See FTC Policy Statement on Deception (Oct. 1983)
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CFPB Guidance on “Deceptive”
• “Deceptive” standard in the CFPB’s Examination Manual is:
- “The representation, omission, act, or practice misleads or is likely to mislead the consumer,
- The consumer’s interpretation of the representation, omission, act, or practice is reasonable under the circumstances, and
- The misleading representation, omission, act, or practice is material.”
• Examples in the CFPB Examination Manual:
- Inadequate disclosure of material lease terms in TV advertising
- Misrepresentation about loan terms
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• CFPB “shall have no authority… to declare an act or practice . . . unlawful on the grounds that such act or practice is unfair unless” the CFPB has “a reasonable basis to conclude that” -
(A) “the act or practice causes or is likely to cause substantial injury to consumers which is not reasonably avoidable by consumers”; and
(B) “such substantial injury is not outweighed by countervailing benefits to consumers or to competition.”
12 U.S.C. § 5531(c).
“Unfair” Standard
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“Unfair” Standard (continued)
• Consideration of public policies, 12 U.S.C. § 5531(c)(2)
- In determining whether an act or practice is unfair, the CFPB “may consider established public policies as evidence to be considered with all other evidence.”
- “Such public policy considerations may not serve as a primary basis for such determination.”
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CFPB Guidance
Nuanced Approach suggested in the Examination Manual:
- Actual injury is not required in every case -- a “significant risk of concrete harm is also sufficient.”
- Trivial impact or pure emotional harm likely will not suffice.
- “A key question is not whether a consumer could have made a better choice. Rather, the question is whether an act or practice hinders a consumer’s decision-making.”
- Public policy: including whether conduct is legally permitted under another federal statute or conversely whether the practice is prohibited by state law.
- Costs for alternatives may include institution’s preventative costs and those of society as a whole.
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Specific Examples of “Unfair” Acts
• Refusing to release lien after consumer makes final payment on a mortgage
- City Capital Mortgage 2005 (FTC enforcement action)
• Dishonoring credit card convenience checks without notice
- American Express Bank, FSB 2009 (OTS and FDIC enforcement action)
• Processing payments for companies engaged in fraudulent activities
- Wachovia Bank, NA 2008 (OCC enforcement action)
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“Abusive” Standard
The CFPB “shall have no authority . . . to declare an act or practice
abusive . . . unless the act or practice”
“(1) materially interferes with the ability of a consumer to understand a
term or condition of a consumer financial product or service; or
(2) takes unreasonable advantage of—
(A) a lack of understanding on the part of the consumer of the
material risks, costs, or conditions of the product or service;
(B) the inability of the consumer to protect the interests of the
consumer in selecting or using a consumer financial product or
service; or
(C) the reasonable reliance by the consumer on a covered person to
act in the interests of the consumer.”
12 U.S.C. § 5531(d).
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“Abusive” – Novel Concept
• No similar state law standard.
• No similar federal standard.
• CFPB’s Examination Manual: An unfair, deceptive, or abusive act or practice may also violate other federal or state laws. For example, pursuant to the TILA, creditors must “clearly and conspicuously” disclose the costs and terms of credit. An act or practice that does not comply with these provisions of TILA may also be unfair, deceptive, or abusive.
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CFPB Guidance re: “Abusive”
• An “Introduction” to the “Abusive” standard in the
CFPB’s Examination Manual:
As examiners review products or services, such as
deposit products or lending activities, they generally
should identify the risks of harm to consumers that are
particular to those activities. Examiners also should
review products that combine features and terms in a
manner that can increase the difficulty of consumer
understanding of the overall costs or risks of the product
and the potential harm to the consumer associated with
the product.
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CFPB Guidance re: “Abusive” (continued)
• An abusive act or practice:
• Materially interferes with the ability of a consumer to understand a term or condition of a consumer financial product or service or
• Takes unreasonable advantage of –
- A lack of understanding on the part of the consumer of the material risks, costs, or conditions of the product or service;
- The inability of the consumer to protect its interests in selecting or using a consumer financial product or service; or
- The reasonable reliance by the consumer on a covered person to act in the interests of the consumer.
• Although abusive acts also may be unfair or deceptive, examiners should be aware that the legal standards for abusive, unfair, and deceptive each are separate.
CFPB’s Examination Manual
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Consumer Complaints – Key
• “Consumer complaints play a key role in the detection of unfair, deceptive, or abusive practices.”
• Patterns in complaints involving particular products or services
• May provide “a window into the perspective of the reasonable consumer.”
• Absence of complaints not dispositive.
CFPB Examination Manual
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Questions/Resources
If you have any questions, please contact:
Alan S. Kaplinsky, Practice Leader
Consumer Financial Services Group
215.864.8544
Visit our blog, CFPB Monitor, at www.CFPBMonitor.com. Subscribe to our e-alerts at www.ballardspahr.com (click “subscribe”)