Bloomberg
Goldman Sachs Group Inc said that investigations and inquiries into its credit-card business has expanded beyond the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) to include other government agencies.
The bank, which has card tie-ups with Apple Inc and General Motors Co, made the disclosure in a regulatory filing. It had said last year that the CFPB is looking into its credit-card practices, including how it resolves incorrect bills and processes refunds. The probe also is examining advertisements and how Goldman credits “nonconforming payments†and reports information to credit bureaus.
The bank was cooperating with the investigation, a spokesman for the New York-based firm said in August. Bloomberg News reported in September that the bank was facing scrutiny from the Federal Reserve into its consumer business that went beyond
its normal course-of-business review.
Goldman made a splashy entrance into the business in 2019 with the launch of the Apple Card, later adding the General Motors card business.
Its credit-card balances climbed to $16 billion at the end of 2022, double the year-earlier amount.
Even as Goldman has abandoned ambitions of dominating the consumer-banking market, it has elected to remain in the credit-card business.
The bank has taken a more cautious approach to expansion in the sector, and hasn’t added any new partnerships in more than a year.