The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's funding system, lifting a legal threat that could have derailed an agency set up after the 2008 financial crisis to regulate mortgages and other consumer-finance products.
Voting 7-2, the justices rejected arguments that the CFPB, which gets its money through the Federal Reserve, was set up in violation of the constitutional provision that requires a congressional appropriation for government spending.
A loss for the CFPB could have cast doubt on a dozen years of agency work, including rules governing credit cards, banking and loans. The decision reversed a federal appeals court ruling that the Biden administration said threatened to re-open even long-finalized rules and enforcement cases. The high court ruling rejected an industry challenge to a never-enforced payday lending rule.
The decision bolsters a bureau that under Biden-appointed Director Rohit Chopra has taken an especially aggressive tack. The agency has sought to stamp out abuses in the mortgage-lending market, scrutinize the use of artificial intelligence in credit underwriting and rein in bank overdraft fees.
The high court decision rejected a "radical theory that would have devastated the American financial markets," the CFPB said in a statement. "The court repudiated the arguments of the payday loan lobby and made it clear that the CFPB is here to stay."
A ruling against the government might have effectively killed the agency given that Congress would have had to provide funding — an unlikely prospect at the moment with Republicans in control of the House of Representatives.
Conservatives have targeted the CFPB, the brainchild of now-Sen. Elizabeth Warren, since its creation, calling it a symbol of an unaccountable and overreaching federal bureaucracy.
"Small businesses will feel the negative impact of this decision," said Beth Milito, executive director of the National Federation of Independent Business's Small Business Legal Center. "We are disappointed with the court's ruling, which will ultimately leave small businesses with expensive penalties and burdensome inspections at the hands of the CFPB."
Unusual Breakdown
Backers say the agency has provided crucial safeguards and an independent check against corporate power.
"Woo hoo!" Warren said outside the court. "The United States Supreme Court followed the law and the CFPB is here to stay."
The ruling could help clear the path for new CFPB-mandated caps on credit-card late fees. A federal judge in Texas put the CFPB rules on hold last week while awaiting the Supreme Court ruling. The caps threaten billions of dollars in revenue at banks including JPMorgan Chase & Co., nonbank players like Synchrony Financial and retailers such as Macy's.