CFPB mulls cutting int’l money transfer oversight

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The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau may reduce regulation for some companies in the international money transfer market because it’s “concerned” about whether the cost burdens outweigh the benefits.

The federal agency said this month that it’s mulling a change to its definition of a “larger” participant in that market, thereby changing which ones are subject to its supervision. In the Aug. 8 Federal Register post, the bureau said it’s concerned about its current definition, issued in 2014, because it may result in overly burdensome costs and unneeded regulatory oversight.

Currently, the larger participant definition includes all nonbank entities making one million in international transfers annually. The agency acknowledged it hasn’t been able to source precise data on the market.

Nonetheless, the bureau said it intends to “propose amending the test to define larger participants in the international money transfer market.”

“The Bureau is concerned that the benefits of the current threshold may not justify the compliance burdens for many of the entities that are currently considered larger participants in this market, and that the current threshold may be diverting limited Bureau resources to determine whom among the universe of providers may be subject to the Bureau's supervisory authority and whether these providers should be examined in a particular year,” the agency said in its post.

The proposed change comes as President Donald Trump seeks to put his stamp on the payments system, largely by reversing the Biden administration CFPB regulation that had been aimed at emerging services such as buy now, pay later and earned wage access.

The agency’s mission has been squelched as the Trump administration pursues the firing of about 95% of the bureau’s staff.

In other moves affecting payments, Trump issued an executive order in March seeking to “modernize” the U.S. payments system, partly by banishing the federal government’s use of paper checks .

In its post, the CFPB said its concerns included that the benefits of the supervision may not outweigh the costs of compliance for the covered entities or the agency; that the current definition may disproportionately impact smaller market players; and that covering so many entities may divert scarce bureau resources.

The agency also observed that the industry is highly concentrated, so it postulated that it could narrow the definition of a large market participant and still capture those entities that handle the bulk of the transactions.

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