After three years of investigation, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau officially closed its probe into PayPal and its subsidiary Venmo this week. According to PayPal, the investigation centered around Venmo’s unauthorized funds transfers and collections processes, along with related issues such as the handling of consumer payments when mistakenly directed to unintended recipients.
PayPal states it has been cooperating with the CFPB’s requests for documents and responses to written questions. The probe began on January 21, 2021, the day after President Biden took office and appointed new leadership at the CFPB.
Analysts view the outcome as beneficial for both parties. The CFPB has wrestled for a long time with differentiating the various types of payment providers, and this closure could mark a strong step forward for both providers and consumers.
“I believe this action creates final separation between P2P payments and true prepaid payments, said Jordan Hirschfield, Director of Prepaid Advisory Services at Javelin Strategy & Research. “The clarity allows the CFPB to create better focus on issues of each sector without unnecessary regulatory hurdles on the P2P side.”