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Tuesday, April 21, 2020
Class Action Lawsuit Against Big Banks for PPP Discrimination. (CBS News)
"The pigs get fat, but the hogs get slaughtered."
-- Memphis law professor Wade Hampton "Toby" Sides, Jr. (1931-1991),
In this case, the overpaid CEOS of Big Banks that claim they are "too big to fail" think they are "too big to care" about small business."
Looking forward to following the progress of the class action lawsuits.
From CBS News:
Biggest banks "prioritized" larger clients for small business loans, lawsuits claim
BY STEPHEN GANDEL
/ MONEYWATCH
Class-action lawsuits allege that JPMorgan Chase and financial giants like Bank of America and Wells Fargo "prioritized corporate greed" in distributing tens of billions of dollars from a now-emptied federal coronavirus relief fund meant for small businesses. Instead, the complaints claim, big banks put larger borrowers seeking larger loans from the Paycheck Protection Program ahead of smaller firms seeking to support their stretched payrolls.
The suits say the banks did so to maximize loan-origination fees, and their own profits, before the PPP fund ran out. That left many small businesses shut out from the program. The loans, made through the U.S. Small Business Administration, were supposed to be first come, first serve, according to the litigation.
JPMorgan Chase, the largest U.S. bank, lent $14 billion through the Paycheck program, more than any other bank. The average size of JPMorgan's PPP loans was just over $515,300 — more than double the average size of all the loans made by all banks through the program, which was $206,000, according to data from the Small Business Administration.
It's also far larger than the average loans sought by the JPMorgan clients who were unable to gain access to aid in the nearly $350 billion first round of the PPP, which ran out of money in less than two weeks. Congress is working on putting hundreds of billions more into the program, and JPMorgan said on Monday it had processed an additional 40,000 loan applications that it's ready to push though once more small business funding is available. The average size of those loans: $182,500.
"Chase concealed from the public that it was reshuffling the PPP applications it received and prioritizing the applications that would make the bank the most money," according to one of the class-action suits filed Sunday against JPMorgan.
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