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Trump’s New Budget Chief Orders Federal Financial Watchdog To Halt Operations

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Trump’s New Budget Chief Orders Federal Financial Watchdog To Halt Operations

The lead architect of Project 2025 and recently appointed acting director for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has told the agency’s employees to essentially halt all operations ― the Trump administration’s latest move to roll back consumer protections against corporate giants.

In a Saturday email obtained by several news outlets, Russell Vought ordered the federal financial industry watchdog’s staff to “cease all supervision and examination activity,” stop issuing regulatory guidance, halt pending investigations while refraining to open new ones, and no longer “make or approve filings or appearances by the Bureau in any litigation, other than to seek a pause in proceedings.”

“As acting director, I am committed to implementing the president’s policies, consistent with the law, and acting as a faithful steward of the bureau’s resources,” wrote Vought, whom the Senate on Thursday confirmed to lead the Office of Management and Budget. One day later, President Donald Trump appointed Vought to also serve as the CFPB’s acting director.

Russell Vought testifies during his Senate Budget Committee confirmation hearing to be director of the Trump administration’s Office of Management and Budget on Jan. 22.

Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The CFPB was created in 2011 by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) as a response to the regulatory failures of the 2008 financial crisis. The watchdog agency targets big banks and corporations engaging in unfair and deceptive practices that end up financially harming consumers.

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Vought’s message is a more severe iteration of Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s order earlier this month, which essentially told CFPB staff to stop doing their job. On top of Bessent’s order, the new acting director added supervision to the freeze.

The bureau’s ceased operations mean that those financial institutions can rip off consumers essentially without any kind of oversight and enforced regulation. Consumers would no longer be protected from predatory financial practices, under the guise of cutting wasteful spending.

“Vought is giving big banks and giant corporations the green light to scam families,” Warren posted Saturday night on X. “The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has returned over $21 billion to families cheated by Wall Street. Republicans have failed to gut it in Congress and in the courts. They will fail again.”

The senator is likely referring to a 2023 vote in which the House defeated right-wing efforts to defund the CFPB, with 78 Republicans joining all Democrats in opposing the measure. Still, Republicans on the Senate Banking Committee applauded Vought’s decision to gut the bureau.

“Accountability at the CFPB is long overdue. From [former Director Rohit] Chopra’s regulation by blog post to repeatedly ignoring the Chairman’s calls to stop rule makings after the election,” the committee said on X. “Acting Dir. Vought will bring responsibility back to the CFPB & refocus its mission to serve the American people.”

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Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) questions Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Rohit Chopra during a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on Nov. 30, 2023.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) questions Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Rohit Chopra during a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on Nov. 30, 2023.

Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call via Getty Images

The CFPB has faced criticism for getting its funding directly from the Federal Reserve instead of through the congressional appropriations process, making quarterly requests to the Fed that are “reasonably necessary” so that it can carry out its duties. Despite anger from the right, the Supreme Court ruled last year that the watchdog group’s funding structure is constitutional.

On Saturday, Vought sent a letter to Fed Chairman Jerome Powell about the third quarter of Fiscal Year 2025. The letter, obtained by RealClearPolitics, included a startling development: that the CFPB is requesting $0.

“I have determined that no additional funds are necessary to carry out the authorities of the Bureau for Fiscal Year 2025,” said Vought, calling the agency’s balance of $711.6 million “excessive.” The acting director reiterated his explanation on social media.

Vought’s decision is just the latest in an avalanche of dangerous moves by the Trump administration to shrink the federal government and consolidate power ― goals that were cited in Project 2025, the disturbing conservative blueprint to overhaul the federal government that was chiefly led by Vought himself.

After his confirmation vote on Thursday, Vought is now also in charge of the Office of Management and Budget where he’s expected to continue carrying out the blueprint with the help of Elon Musk, who is not a government worker, and his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which is not a government agency.

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On Friday, DOGE officials were granted administrative access to CFPB’s headquarters and systems, according to CNN and The New York Times.

“When a bunch of billionaires tell you they know what’s best for you, hang onto your wallet. Over the past few weeks, Republican politicians and billionaires have come out swinging with lies about the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, hoping they can pave the way to ‘delete’ the agency,” Warren said in a Dec. 11 op-ed in The Boston Globe.

“But if you have a checking account, credit card, mortgage or student loan, you might want to know what it could mean for you if the CFPB disappears,” she continued. “That’s the dangerous promise of Project 2025.”

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On X, Musk posted “CFPB RIP” with an emoji of a gravestone, hours after DOGE officials reportedly gained access to the agency’s building. As of Sunday, the CFPB’s account on X is no longer available, and the homepage of the agency’s website says, “404: Page not found.”

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Cheers Financial Taps into AI to Build Credit – Los Angeles Business Journal

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Cheers Financial Taps into AI to Build Credit – Los Angeles Business Journal

A credit-building tool fintech founder Ken Lian built out of personal need just got an artificial intelligence-powered upgrade.

Lian and co-founders Zhen Wang and Qingyi Li recently launched Cheers Financial – a startup run out of Pasadena-based Idealab Inc. which combines fast-tracked credit-building with “immigrant-friendly” onboarding.

“Our mission is really to try to make credit fair to individuals who want to have financial freedom in the U.S.,” Lian said.

After coming to the U.S. as an international student from China in 2008, Lian said he struggled for four years to get a bank’s approval for a credit card. Since 2021, the USC alumnus’ fintech ventures have aimed to break down the hurdles immigrants like him often face in accessing and building credit.

Since its launch in November, Cheers Financial has seen “healthy growth,” Lian said, with thousands using its secured personal loan product to build credit through automated monthly payments. At the end of the 24-month loan period, users get their principal back minus about 12.2% interest.

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“The product is designed to automate the entire flow, so users basically can set and forget it,” Lian said.

Cheers, partnering with Minnesota-based Sunrise Banks, boasts an average 21-point increase in credit scores within a couple of months among its users coming in with “fair” scores from the high 500s to mid-600s.

With help from AI data summary and matching, the company reports to the three major credit bureaus every 15 days – two times as frequent as popular credit-building app Kikoff. Lian hopes to shave that down to seven days.

Cheers is far from Lian, Wang and Li’s first step into alternative financial tools. An earlier venture launched in 2021, Cheese Inc., served a similar goal as an online platform providing credit-building loans alongside other services, including a zero-fee debit card with cash back.

Cheese folded when the company it used as its middle layer, Synapse Financial Technologies, collapsed in April 2024 and locked thousands of users out of their savings.

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For Lian and other fintech founders, Synapse’s fall was a wake-up call to the gaps and risks of digital banking’s status quo. As he geared up for Cheers, Lian knew in-house models and a direct company-to-bank relationship were key.

“That allows us to build a very secure and stable platform for our users,” Lian said.

Despite cooling investment in fintech, Cheers nabbed backing from San Francisco-based Better Tomorrow Ventures’ $140 million fintech fund. Automating base-level processes with AI has given the company a chance to operate at a lower cost, Lian said.

“You don’t need to build everything from the ground up,” Lian said. “You can let AI build the basic part, and then you optimize from that.”

Strong demand from high-quality users who spread the word to friends and relatives has helped, too. Some have even started Cheers accounts before arriving in the U.S., Lian said, to get a head start on building credit.

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How The Narrative Around ConocoPhillips (COP) Is Shifting With New Research And Cash Flow Concerns

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How The Narrative Around ConocoPhillips (COP) Is Shifting With New Research And Cash Flow Concerns
ConocoPhillips’ fair value estimate has been adjusted slightly, moving from about US$112.37 to roughly US$111.48, as recent research blends confidence in the company’s execution and balance sheet with more cautious views on crude pricing and near term cash flow. The core discount rate has been held steady at 6.956%, while modest tweaks to revenue growth assumptions, from 1.92% to 1.69%, reflect tempered expectations around demand and realizations that some firms are flagging. Stay tuned to…
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Africa’s climate finance rules are growing, but they’re weakly enforced – new research

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Africa’s climate finance rules are growing, but they’re weakly enforced – new research

Climate change is no longer just about melting ice or hotter summers. It is also a financial problem. Droughts, floods, storms and heatwaves damage crops, factories and infrastructure. At the same time, the global push to cut greenhouse gas emissions creates risks for countries that depend on oil, gas or coal.

These pressures can destabilise entire financial systems, especially in regions already facing economic fragility. Africa is a prime example.

Although the continent contributes less than 5% of global carbon emissions, it is among the most vulnerable. In Mozambique, repeated cyclones have destroyed homes, roads and farms, forcing banks and insurers to absorb heavy losses. Kenya has experienced severe droughts that hurt agriculture, reducing farmers’ ability to repay loans. In north Africa, heatwaves strain electricity grids and increase water scarcity.

These physical risks are compounded by “transition risks”, like declining revenues from fossil fuel exports or higher borrowing costs as investors worry about climate instability. Together, they make climate governance through financial policies both urgent and complex. Without these policies, financial systems risk being caught off guard by climate shocks and the transition away from fossil fuels.

This is where climate-related financial policies come in. They provide the tools for banks, insurers and regulators to manage risks, support investment in greener sectors and strengthen financial stability.

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Regulators and banks across Africa have started to adopt climate-related financial policies. These range from rules that require banks to consider climate risks, to disclosure standards, green lending guidelines, and green bond frameworks. These tools are being tested in several countries. But their scope and enforcement vary widely across the continent.

My research compiles the first continent-wide database of climate-related financial policies in Africa and examines how differences in these policies – and in how binding they are – affect financial stability and the ability to mobilise private investment for green projects.

A new study I conducted reviewed more than two decades of policies (2000–2025) across African countries. It found stark differences.

South Africa has developed the most comprehensive framework, with policies across all categories. Kenya and Morocco are also active, particularly in disclosure and risk-management rules. In contrast, many countries in central and west Africa have introduced only a few voluntary measures.

Why does this matter? Voluntary rules can help raise awareness and encourage change, but on their own they often do not go far enough. Binding measures, on the other hand, tend to create stronger incentives and steadier progress. So far, however, most African climate-related financial policies remain voluntary. This leaves climate risk as something to consider rather than a firm requirement.

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Uneven landscape

In Africa, the 2015 Paris Agreement marked a clear turning point. Around that time, policy activity increased noticeably, suggesting that international agreements and standards could help create momentum and visibility for climate action. The expansion of climate-related financial policies was also shaped by domestic priorities and by pressure from international investors and development partners.

But since the late 2010s, progress has slowed. Limited resources, overlapping institutional responsibilities and fragmented coordination have made it difficult to sustain the earlier pace of reform.

Looking across the continent, four broad patterns have emerged.

A few countries, such as South Africa, have developed comprehensive frameworks. These include:

  • disclosure rules (requirements for banks and companies to report how climate risks affect them)

  • stress tests (simulations of extreme climate or transition scenarios to see whether banks would remain resilient).

Others, including Kenya and Morocco, are steadily expanding their policy mix, even if institutional capacity is still developing.

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Some, such as Nigeria and Egypt, are moderately active, with a focus on disclosure rules and green bonds. (Those are bonds whose proceeds are earmarked to finance environmentally friendly projects such as renewable energy, clean transport or climate-resilient infrastructure.)

Finally, many countries in central and west Africa have introduced only a limited number of measures, often voluntary in nature.

This uneven landscape has important consequences.

The net effect

In fossil fuel-dependent economies such as South Africa, Egypt and Algeria, the shift away from coal, oil and gas could generate significant transition risks. These include:

  • financial instability, for example when asset values in carbon-intensive sectors fall sharply or credit exposures deteriorate

  • stranded assets, where fossil fuel infrastructure and reserves lose their economic value before the end of their expected life because they can no longer be used or are no longer profitable under stricter climate policies.

Addressing these challenges may require policies that combine investment in new, low-carbon sectors with targeted support for affected workers, communities and households.

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Climate finance affects people directly. When droughts lead to loan defaults, local banks are strained. Insurance companies facing repeated payouts after floods may raise premiums. Pension funds invested in fossil fuels risk devaluations as these assets lose value. Climate-related financial policies therefore matter not only for regulators and markets, but also for jobs, savings, and everyday livelihoods.

At the same time, there are opportunities.

Firstly, expanding access to green bonds and sustainability-linked loans can channel private finance into renewable energy, clean transport, or resilient infrastructure.

Secondly, stronger disclosure rules can improve transparency and investor confidence.

Thirdly, regional harmonisation through common reporting standards, for example, would reduce fragmentation. This would make it easier for Africa to attract global climate finance.

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Looking ahead

International forums such as the UN climate conferences (COP) and the G20 have helped to push this agenda forward, mainly by setting expectations rather than hard rules. These initiatives create pressure and guidance. But they remain soft law. Turning them into binding, enforceable rules still depends on decisions taken by national regulators and governments.

International partners such as the African Development Bank and the African Union could support coordination by promoting continental standards that define what counts as a green investment. Donors and multilateral lenders may also provide technical expertise and financial support to countries with weaker systems, helping them move from voluntary guidelines toward more enforceable rules.

South Africa, already a regional leader, could share its experience with stress testing and green finance frameworks.

Africa also has the potential to position itself as a hub for renewable energy and sustainable finance. With vast solar and wind resources, expanding urban centres, and an increasingly digital financial sector, the continent could leapfrog towards a greener future if investment and regulation advance together.

Success stories in Kenya’s sustainable banking practices and Morocco’s renewable energy expansion show that progress is possible when financial systems adapt.

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What happens next will matter greatly. By expanding and enforcing climate-related financial rules, Africa can reduce its vulnerability to climate shocks while unlocking opportunities in green finance and renewable energy.

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