
Employees at the nation's consumer financial watchdog say it's become toothless under Trump
The bureau is supposed to be helping oversee the nation's banks and financial services companies and taking enforcement action in case of wrongdoing. During its 15-year existence, the CFPB has returned roughly $21 billion to consumers who were cheated by financial services companies.
Instead, its main function now seems to be undoing the rulemaking and law enforcement work that was done under previous administrations, including in President Donald Trump's first term.
One current employee, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the directive forbids staffers from speaking publicly about their jobs, said outsiders would be amazed at how little work is being done. Employees are reluctant even to talk to one another, out of fear that a conversation between two employees would be considered a violation of the directive.
Another employee described the drastic shift in mission, from trying to protect consumers to doing nothing, as 'quite demoralizing.'
To gain an understanding of what is happening inside the CFPB, The Associated Press spoke with 10 current and former employees, as well as bankers and policymakers who used to interact with the bureau nearly every day but now say their emails and voicemails go into a black hole. The agency's press office doesn't respond to emails.
The CFPB took a lighter approach to its mission in Trump's first term but continued to pursue enforcement actions. Under President Joe Biden, the agency took an expansive view of its authority, targeting profitable practices by banks such as overdraft and credit card late fees, as well as investigating companies over credit reporting and medical debt.
The bureau also turned a spotlight on Big Tech companies that have made inroads into financial services. For example, the CFPB ordered Apple to pay $89 million in fines and penalties for problems related to the Apple Card.
Banks and the financial services industry felt the Biden CFPB acted too aggressively, particularly with a proposal to cut overdraft fees to $5 from the industry average of $27 to $35. The bureau estimated the move would save consumers roughly $5 billion a year. The proposal was overturned by Congress in April with Trump's backing.
Once Trump 2.0 began, the bureau became a main target of the Department of Government Efficiency, then run by Elon Musk, who posted on X that the CFPB should 'RIP' shortly after DOGE employees became embedded at the agency. Through the bureau's acting chief, Russell Vought, the White House issued a directive that CFPB employees should ' not perform any work tasks. '
The administration then tried to lay off roughly 90% of the bureau's staff, or roughly 1,500 employees. Courts have blocked those layoffs, but there is a feeling inside the bureau that the court rulings are only a temporary reprieve.
Companies that committed wrongdoing, or had open investigations, have lobbied the bureau and the White House for their punishments to be rescinded. Last month, the CFPB rescinded an agreement under which Navy Federal Credit Union agreed to pay $80 million to settle claims that it illegally charged overdraft fees to its members, who include Navy servicemen and women, and veterans.
In mid-May, the agency scrapped an order for the auto financing arm of Toyota to pay customers a total of $48 million for illegally bundling products onto car buyers' auto loans.
'Companies are lining up to get out of repaying harmed customers,' said Eric Halperin, former enforcement director at the bureau, who resigned earlier this year.
The Associated Press sent a list of questions to the White House regarding President Trump's vision for the CFPB. The White House did not respond.
While the lack of new initiatives and the scuttling of old ones frustrate employees the most, they also note that even everyday tasks have largely fallen to the wayside.
A report from the office of Sen. Elizabeth Warren, the senior Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee, found that the bureau is uploading roughly 2,200 complaints a day to its complaint database, compared to the roughly 10,500 complaints it was doing in the months before Trump took office again. Warren came up with the idea for the bureau when she was a law professor at Harvard University.
The bureau did take an enforcement action on Friday. The pawn shop chain FirstCash Inc. agreed to pay $9 million to settle claims that it charged excessive interest rates on loans to armed service members, in violation of the Military Lending Act. FirstCash operates more than 1,000 stores.
The bureau is going to be even further diminished in the coming months. The new budget law signed by Trump earlier this month cuts the CFPB's funding by roughly half, meaning the bureau will be forced into mass layoffs. Senate Democrats are looking for ways to restore that funding.
In the meantime, employees go about their mundane routine: They continue to check their email once or twice a day to see if any of their previous work has been slated for being undone. They wait to be laid off. The only constants are the silence from bureau political appointees or the 'mini funerals' that happen every Friday, when another batch of employees who have decided to leave the bureau voluntarily have their last day.
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Winnipeg Free Press
an hour ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
In rejecting the jobs report, Trump follows his own playbook of discrediting unfavorable data
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Trump won the 2016 presidential election by clinching the Electoral College, but he lost the popular vote to Hillary Clinton, a sore spot that led him to falsely claim that millions of immigrants living in the country illegally had cast ballots. He lost the 2020 election to Joe Biden but falsely claimed he had won it, despite multiple lawsuits failing to prove his case. — In 2019, as Hurricane Dorian neared the East Coast, Trump warned Alabama that the storm was coming its way. Forecasters pushed back, saying Alabama was not at risk. Trump later displayed a map in the Oval Office that had been altered with a black Sharpie — his signature pen — to include Alabama in the potential path of the storm. — Trump's administration has stopped posting reports on climate change, canceled studies on vaccine access and removed data on gender identity from government sites. — As pandemic deaths mounted, Trump suggested that there should be less testing. 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He said Trump is focused on getting dependable numbers, despite the president linking the issue to politics by claiming the revisions were meant to make Republicans look bad. 'The president wants his own people there so that when we see the numbers, they're more transparent and more reliable,' Hassett said Sunday on NBC News. Jed Kolko, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who oversaw the Census Bureau and Bureau of Economic Analysis during the Biden administration, stressed that revisions to the jobs data are standard. That's because the numbers are published monthly, but not all surveys used are returned quickly enough to be in the initial publishing of the jobs report. 'Revisions solve the tension between timeliness and accuracy,' Kolko said. 'We want timely data because policymakers and businesses and investors need to make decisions with the best data that's available, but we also want accuracy.' Kolko stressed the importance in ensuring that federal statistics are trustworthy not just for government policymakers but for the companies trying to gauge the overall direction of the economy when making hiring and investment choices. 'Businesses are less likely to make investments if they can't trust data about how the economy is doing,' he said. Not every part of the jobs report was deemed suspect by the Trump administration. Before Trump ordered the firing of the Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner, Erika McEntarfer, the White House rapid response social media account reposted a statement by Vice President JD Vance noting that native-born citizens were getting jobs and immigrants were not, drawing from data in the household tables in the jobs report. Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer also trumpeted the findings on native-born citizens, noting on Fox Business Network's 'Varney & Co.' that they are accounting 'for all of the job growth, and that's key.' During his first run for the presidency, Trump criticized the economic data as being fake only to fully embrace the positive numbers shortly after he first entered the White House in 2017. White House says transparency is a value The challenge of reliable data goes beyond economic figures to basic information on climate change and scientific research. Monday Mornings The latest local business news and a lookahead to the coming week. In July, taxpayer-funded reports on the problems climate change is creating for America and its population disappeared from government websites. The White House initially said NASA would post the reports in compliance with a 1990 law, but the agency later said it would not because any legal obligations were already met by having reports submitted to Congress. The White House maintains that it has operated with complete openness, posting a picture of Trump on Monday on social media with the caption, 'The Most Transparent President in History.' In the picture, Trump had his back to the camera and was covered in shadows, visibly blocking out most of the light in front of him. ___ Associated Press writer Michelle Price in Washington contributed to this report.


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
U.S. Justice Department to move forward on investigation into Trump-Russia probe
WASHINGTON — U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi has directed that the U.S. Justice Department move forward with a probe into the origins of the Trump-Russia investigation following the recent release of documents aimed at undermining the legitimacy of the inquiry that established that Moscow interfered on the Republican's behalf in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. Bondi has directed a prosecutor to present evidence to a grand jury after referrals from the Trump administration's top intelligence official, a person familiar with the matter said Monday. That person was not authorized to discuss it by name and spoke on condition of anonymity to The Associated Press. Fox News first reported the development. It was not clear which former officials might be the target of any grand jury activity, where the grand jury that might ultimately hear evidence will be located or which prosecutors — whether career employees or political appointees — might be involved in pursuing the investigation. It was also not clear what precise claims of misconduct Trump administration officials believe could form the basis of criminal charges, which a grand jury would have to sign off on for an indictment to be issued. The development is likely to heighten concerns that the Justice Department is being used to achieve political ends, given longstanding grievances over the Russia investigation voiced by U.S. President Donald Trump, who has called for the jailing of perceived political adversaries. Any criminal investigation would revisit one of the most dissected chapters of modern American political history. It is also surfacing at a time when the Trump administration is being buffeted by criticism over its handling of documents from the Jeffrey Epstein sex trafficking investigation. The investigation into Russian election interference resulted in the appointment of a special counsel, Robert Mueller, who secured multiple convictions against Trump aides and allies but did not establish proof of a criminal conspiracy between Moscow and the Trump campaign. The inquiry shadowed much of Trump's first term and he has long focused his ire on senior officials from the intelligence and law enforcement community, including former FBI Director James Comey, whom he fired in May 2017, and former CIA Director John Brennan. The Justice Department appeared to confirm an investigation into both men in an unusual statement last month but offered no details. Multiple special counsels, congressional committees and the Justice Department's own inspector general have studied and documented a multi-pronged effort by Russia to interfere in the 2016 presidential election on Trump's behalf, including through a hack-and-leak dump of Democratic emails and a covert social media operation aimed at sowing discord and swaying public opinion. But that conclusion has been aggressively challenged in recent weeks as Trump's director of national intelligence and other allies have released previously classified records that they hope will cast doubt on the extent of Russian interference and establish an Obama administration effort to falsely link Trump to Russia. In one batch of documents released last month, Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, disclosed emails showing that senior Obama administration officials were aware in 2016 that Russians had not hacked state election systems to manipulate the votes in Trump's favor. But former U.S. president Barack Obama's administration never alleged that votes were tampered with and instead detailed other forms of election interference and foreign influence. A new outcry surfaced last week when Sen. Chuck Grassley, the Republican chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, released a set of documents that FBI Director Kash Patel claimed on social media proved that the 'Clinton campaign plotted to frame President Trump and fabricate the Russia collusion hoax.' The documents were part of a classified annex of a report issued in 2023 by John Durham, the special counsel who was appointed during the first Trump administration to hunt for any government misconduct during the Russia investigation. Durham did identify significant flaws in the investigation but uncovered no bombshells to disprove the existence of Russian election interference. His sprawling probe produced three criminal cases; two resulted in acquittals and the third was a guilty plea from a little-known FBI lawyer to a charge of making a false statement. Republicans seized on a July 27, 2016, email in Durham's newly declassified annex that purported to say that Hillary Clinton, then the Democratic candidate for president, had approved a plan during the heat of the campaign to link Trump with Russia. But the purported author of the email, a senior official at a philanthropic organization founded by billionaire investor George Soros, told Durham's team he had never sent the email and the alleged recipient said she never called receiving it. Durham's own report took pain to note that investigators had not corroborated the communications as authentic and said the best assessment was that the message was 'a composites of several emails' the Russians had obtained from hacking — raising the likelihood of Russian disinformation. The FBI's Russia investigation was opened on July 31, 2016, following a tip that a Trump campaign adviser, George Papadopoulos, had told a Russian diplomat that Russia was in possession of dirt on Clinton. Eric Tucker And Alanna Durkin Richer, The Associated Press


Globe and Mail
an hour ago
- Globe and Mail
SBAC Earnings Jump on Strong Sales
Key Points Revenue (GAAP) reached $698.98 million, surpassing the analyst estimate by 4.1% (GAAP), driven by robust domestic leasing and higher site development activity. Adjusted Funds From Operations (AFFO) per share was $3.17 (non-GAAP), though down 3.6% year over year due to higher interest expenses. Full-year 2025 guidance for revenue, AFFO (non-GAAP), and Adjusted EBITDA (non-GAAP) was raised on strong backlogs and the early Millicom site acquisition closing. These 10 stocks could mint the next wave of millionaires › SBA Communications (NASDAQ:SBAC), a leading owner and operator of wireless communications towers, announced results for the second quarter on August 4, 2025. GAAP revenue was $698.98 million, above the expected $671.15 million (GAAP) and up 5.8% year over year. Diluted earnings per share (GAAP) were $2.09, above the $2.13 consensus (Non-GAAP) EPS estimate, but net income jumped 41.5% year over year. Adjusted Funds From Operations (AFFO) per share came in at $3.17, though declining from the prior year. Management raised financial guidance for full year 2025 across all key metrics, reflecting strong domestic demand, accelerated site acquisitions, and favorable leasing trends. The quarter showed solid progress in several business lines, despite margin pressures and increased interest costs. Metric Q2 2025 Q2 2025 Estimate Q2 2024 Y/Y Change EPS – Diluted (GAAP) $2.09 $2.13 $1.51 38.5 % Revenue $698.98 million $671.15 million $660.48 million 5.8% Adjusted EBITDA $475.5 million $467.1 million 1.8% AFFO per Share $3.17 $3.29 (3.6 %) Tower Cash Flow $511.2 million $503.9 million 1.4 % Source: Analyst estimates provided by FactSet. Management expectations based on management's guidance, as provided in Q1 2025 earnings report. Understanding SBA Communications and Its Business Model SBA Communications owns, operates, and leases wireless tower infrastructure to mobile carriers and other wireless service providers. Its primary business is renting antenna space on its towers, a model that delivers stable, recurring revenue. Site leasing generates most of its operating profit, while the company also provides site development services, such as construction and network upgrades, to wireless carriers. In recent years, SBA Communications has focused on three major areas: expanding its international tower footprint, maximizing tower capacity by increasing colocation (multiple tenants per tower), and securing long-term control of the land under its towers. The company also closely follows wireless technology trends, like the rollout of 5G networks, as these drive demand for more tower space and additional equipment installations. Quarter Highlights: Growth Drivers and Strategic Moves In Q2 2025, site leasing remained the core of SBA Communications' business, accounting for 97.4% of segment operating profit. Domestic site leasing revenue grew to $469.8 million, up 1.4% from a year ago. International site leasing revenue was $162.0 million, a slight decrease on a reported (GAAP) basis, but up 4.0% when adjusting for foreign currency movements. The tower cash flow margin, a key indicator of profitability for tower operations, held steady at 81.0% (non-GAAP). The services segment, which includes site development, saw rapid growth as revenue nearly doubled to $67.2 million. This surge reflects increased carrier investment in network upgrades and new infrastructure. However, these projects have lower margins compared with core site leasing -- the spike in services revenue contributed to an overall decline in company-wide Adjusted EBITDA margin compared to Q2 2024. The company accelerated the integration of more than 4,300 newly acquired sites from the Millicom deal several months ahead of schedule. This brought the total tower count up to 44,065 as of June 30, 2025. It also advanced plans to sell its Canadian tower assets, entering into an agreement on July 21, 2025 to sell all 369 towers and related operations in Canada, with the transaction expected to close in Q4 2025, expecting this divestiture to be immediately beneficial to AFFO per share after closing, as stated by management in the earnings release. These actions demonstrate a strategy of growing internationally while exiting less efficient markets to focus on higher-return regions. Capital allocation remained active, with 799,000 shares repurchased and $1.45 billion authorized for future buybacks. Quarterly dividends held steady at $1.11 per share. The company maintained a high level of debt, with a net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio of 6.5x, and net cash interest expense rose 23.2% year over year from Q2 2024 to $111.5 million. Management emphasized that the balance sheet remains strong. Strategic Business Areas and Their Impact Site leasing continues to dominate company profits, supported by the recurring nature of tower rental agreements with wireless carriers. This stability is underpinned by long-term contracts. SBA Communications closely monitors lease churn and seeks to add new tenants through strategic marketing and infrastructure upgrades. International expansion is a core strategy. While most new towers come from acquisition -- as with the Millicom deal -- the company also constructs new sites in regions where wireless networks are maturing. Diversifying across 13 countries insulates SBA Communications from market-specific risks and taps into growing demand for wireless infrastructure in developing regions. Maximizing tower capacity is another focus. By increasing the average number of tenants per tower, SBA Communications boosts revenue from existing assets with limited additional cost. About 75% of new U.S. leasing activity in Q1 2025 derived from colocations, which generate higher incremental revenue than simple contract amendments. Often prompted by requirements to meet 5G coverage mandates. The company also invests in long-term land control through ownership and long-term leases. This provides operational security, cost predictability, and margin protection well into the future. About 72% of tower sites are on land with over 20 years of control remaining as of December 31, 2024, and the company reported ongoing spending to extend lease terms where possible. Looking Ahead: Guidance and Market Trends Management raised its full-year 2025 financial outlook, expecting total revenue (GAAP) to reach $2.78–2.83 billion, AFFO per share (non-GAAP) of $12.65–13.02, and adjusted EBITDA of $1.91–1.93 billion. These increases reflect strong current leasing backlogs, robust site development, early benefits from the Millicom site acquisition, and positive foreign currency effects. The Canadian asset sale, which is still pending, is not yet included in the outlook. But overall commentary remains constructive for continued growth in the U.S. Key risks highlighted this period include margin pressures, flat-to-slow international organic growth due to carrier churn in markets like Brazil, and persistently high debt levels that heighten interest expenses. Nonetheless, strong domestic leasing demand, expanding service backlogs, and high levels of tower colocation suggest ongoing near-term growth. SBA Communications does pay a dividend, and the current quarterly dividend remains at $1.11 per share. Revenue and net income presented using U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) unless otherwise noted. Where to invest $1,000 right now When our analyst team has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,019%* — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 178% for the S&P 500. They just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy right now, available when you join Stock Advisor. See the stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of August 4, 2025