Fintech Legal Report - February 2022 #2

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  • The CA DFPI issued an interpretive opinion on an earned wage access product, finding that the structure of the earned wage access program was not a loan product.
  • The CFPB issued a compliance bulletin outlining and reiterating prohibitions and restrictions under ECOA and Regulation B related to the distribution of government benefits via prepaid cards.
  • Numerous financial regulators issued an interagency statement to encourage creditors to engage in special purpose credit programs.

CA DFPI Issues Interpretive Opinion on Earned Wage Access

On February 11, 2022, the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI)  issued an interpretive opinion letter that FlexWage, a New Jersey-based financial services company that partners with employers to provide employees’ earned wages in advance of payday, is not subject to licensure under the California Deferred Deposit Transaction Law (CDDTL) with respect to its earned wage access (EWA) product. EWA products provide employees with access to earned but as yet unpaid wages. DFPI also concluded that FlexWage did not require a license under the California Financing Law (CFL).

DFPI stated that FlexWage’s EWA product is not a loan subject to the CFL because it is the employer, not FlexWage, that is providing the funds and those funds do not exceed the amount that the employer already owes the employee. FlexWage does not originate or facilitate loans since the wages have already been earned by the employee and are not subject to repayment.  Therefore, this product is not a loan but a facilitation of an existing financial obligation from the employer to the employee.

While cost typically is not a factor in the assessment, DFPI considered whether FlexWage’s EWA product suggested evasion of the CFL. DFPI determined that it did not and noted the fact that the fee FlexWage charges for this service, which appears as an itemized deduction from the employee’s pay, is substantially lower than what it could charge as an “administrative fee” under the CFL.

DFPI also determined that the EWA product was not a “deferred deposit transaction” under the CDDTL. This was based largely on the same reasoning as DFPI’s reasoning under the CFL–specifically, the source of the funding, the limit on the funding amount, and the limit on the fees were determining factors against imposing a licensing requirement on FlexWage under the CDDTL.

CFPB Issues Compliance Bulletin on Reg. E’s Compulsory Use Prohibition

On February 15, 2022, the CFPB issued a compliance bulletin on outlining and reiterating prohibitions against prepaid cards being the sole method for distributing government benefits.

The Electronic Fund Transfer Act (EFTA), as implemented by Regulation E, provides that no person may require a consumer to establish an account for receipt of electronic fund transfers with a particular financial institution as a condition of receipt of a government benefit. This prohibition applies to “government benefit accounts,” accounts established by a government agency for distributing government benefits to a consumer electronically, with certain exemptions listed in Regulation E.

Typically, consumers receive their government benefits (e.g., social security payments, veterans’ benefits, unemployment insurance, child support, pension plan payments) through direct deposit into their bank account, by prepaid card, or by check.

The compulsory use prohibition is designed to ensure that consumers receiving government benefits have a choice with respect to how they receive their funds. For example, a government agency that requires consumers to receive benefits through direct deposit will not violate the compulsory use prohibition if it allows consumers to choose the financial institution they want to use in receiving the direct deposit. Alternatively, a government agency may give a consumer the choice of having their benefits deposited at a particular institution (designated by the government agency) so long as the consumer is able to receive their benefits by another means.

However, the CFPB’s Compliance Bulletin highlights and reinforces the CFPB’s existing position that consumers are not provided a choice, and that there is a violation of the EFTA, when a consumer is required to receive the first payment of government benefits on a prepaid card (or otherwise at a particular institution), even if the consumer can later redirect the payment to an account of their choice. In such a scenario, the CFPB’s position is that the consumer does not have a choice with respect to how to receive the first payment of the government benefit; rather, with respect to that first payment, the consumer was required to establish an account with the financial institution that issued the prepaid card as a condition of receiving the funds.

Although the Compliance Bulletin does not announce a new position, it serves to highlight one that was recently an element of a CFPB consent order issued to prison financial services company JPay that included a $6 million fine (as covered in our blog here).

Financial Regulators Encourage Special Purpose Credit Programs

On February 22, 2022, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the National Credit Union Administration, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Department of Justice, and the Federal Housing Finance Authority issued an interagency statement reminding creditors that ECOA and Regulation B permit creditors to establish special purpose credit programs (SPCPs) to provide credit to specified classes of persons.

The interagency statement notes that there has been confusion over the applicability and permissibility of creditors instituting SPCPs and this interagency statement aims to encourage creditors to pursue SPCPs that comply with ECOA and Regulation B. If creditors have questions, the agencies also encourage engagement and consultation with the applicable regulator.

A number of agencies have made prior statements through advisory opinions or other guidance to explain the availability of SPCPs to various types of creditors, including:

  • The CFPB issued an Advisory Opinion on SPCPs to clarify that for-profit creditors must include a written plan to establish and administer to SPCP and to clarify the types of data that may be relied on to inform the creditor’s determination of the need for the SPCP.
  • HUD released guidance concluding that SPCPs that conformed with the requirements of ECOA and Regulation B did not violate the Fair Housing Act.

This blog has covered these developments here, here and here.

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DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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