Published December 03, 2016 00:30
Innovation Should Not Come at the Expense of Consumer Protection, Evade State Anti-Predatory Lending Laws
WASHINGTON, DC December 2, 2016—Today, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC)
announced its intention to offer national charters to financial technology firms, which could severely undermine
state oversight and state consumer protection laws that protect consumers from abusive financial products and
practices. The OCC is accepting comments on the announcement through January 15, 2017.
Before the OCC’s announcement, 49 organizations sent a letter to the Comptroller expressing “strong opposition
to new federal nonbank lending charters that would enable chartered entities to avoid state interest rate caps,
other state consumer protection laws, and state oversight, putting consumers and small businesses at risk.”
Several leading national advocacy organizations released the following statements after the OCC made today’s
announcement:
“The most effective consumer protection laws at the state level should not be undermined by bad new financial
products that could open the doors for predatory lending. A federally-chartered fintech lender would avoid state
interest rate caps, leaving people vulnerable to financial services abuse,” said Courtney Robinson, Policy
Counsel at the Center for Responsible Lending.

“At a time when the federal commitment to consumer protection is in uncertain, taking state authorities off the
consumer protection beat for fintech companies is especially dangerous. The State of California uncovered
violations by the fintech lender LendUp through its supervisory process, but states are blocked from
investigating potential violations by national banks,” said Lauren Saunders, Associate Director of the National
Consumer Law Center.
“The last time the OCC sought to charter nondepository institutions without specific statutory authority, it was
blocked by the courts from doing so. The National Bank Act of 1864 does not provide an adequate, modern
statutory framework to address chartering, regulation, and resolution of nondepostitory institutions,” said Brian
Simmonds Marshall, policy counsel at Americans for Financial Reform.
“While the fintech industry has the potential to expand lending for small business owners, it is also a breeding
ground for costly, and often predatory, lending practices. Small business owners often face triple-digit interest
rates, questionable underwriting practices, and opaque payment terms. We know that current federal finance
laws are woefully inadequate in protecting small business lenders. State financial protection laws often operate
as the primary line of defense for small business borrowers. By allowing fintech companies to preempt state
laws, an OCC charter would decimate vital safeguards for business owners and further encourage exploitative
lending practices,” said Michelle Sternthal, Deputy Director of Policy and Government Affairs for Main Street
Alliance.
“The mortgage meltdown was caused in part by federal banking regulators pre-empting stronger state laws that
would have protected homeowners from predatory home loans. We know what the ultimate result was from that.
We also know that now certain some fintech companies are originating high-cost, predatory loans to California’s
small businesses and consumers. An OCC charter will not provide the across-the-board protection against abuses
that is needed,” said Kevin Stein, Deputy Director, California Reinvestment Coalition.