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Financial Data Mobility Within Reach for CFPB Director to Advocate Consumer Benefit

Rohit Chopra, the newly appointed director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), recently appeared before Congress for his first session in this role. During his testimony, Chopra detailed his main objectives for the Bureau, emphasizing that his overall aim is to:

CFPB Director Now Has Chance to Utilize Financial Data Mobility for Consumer Benefit
CFPB Director Now Has Chance to Utilize Financial Data Mobility for Consumer Benefit

Financial Data Mobility Within Reach for CFPB Director to Advocate Consumer Benefit

In the realm of consumer finance, data portability has emerged as a significant issue, with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) taking a leading role in its regulation. Rohit Chopra, the former director of the CFPB, aggressively pursued the implementation of strong data portability and open banking rules.

Under Chopra's leadership, the CFPB finalised open banking rules requiring banks with assets over $850 million to provide standardised, API-based access to consumer financial data without fees, and prohibiting screen-scraping methods. These rules aimed to empower consumers to easily access and share their financial data, facilitating switching banks and comparison shopping for financial products.

However, in early 2025, Chopra was removed from the CFPB, and his successor, Acting Director Russell Vought, signaled a more cautious and restrained regulatory approach. The CFPB paused and is currently redoing the “open banking” rules due to concerns that the prior version exceeded CFPB authority. This marks a significant reversal from Chopra’s robust agenda to rapidly advance consumer data portability protections.

Despite the pause, the CFPB remains legally obligated to issue a data access rule under Section 1033 of the Dodd-Frank Act. Future versions are expected to be narrower, more favourable to banks, and focus on safe, secure, and transparent access mechanisms. This shift reflects the current administration’s preference for balancing innovation with industry concerns.

The regulatory uncertainty and pushback from banks (including planned fees on fintechs for data access) have complicated implementation. Nevertheless, the CFPB's efforts to bolster consumer privacy and security through data portability remain a priority.

The UK's financial sector offers a successful example of data portability, with millions of consumers using open-banking enabled services. The value of industry-led data standards, such as those in the UK, can help ensure that the development of data portability does not get bogged down in the regulatory process.

In summary, while Rohit Chopra’s tenure saw major progress in advancing financial data portability rules, the current status in mid-2025 reflects a pause and revision under new CFPB leadership, with future plans likely more restrained but still aiming to enable consumer data access in a secure, standardised way. Other jurisdictions are also advancing data portability rights, suggesting a global trend balancing ambition with technical and legal challenges.

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