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U.S. Lawmakers Probe Kabbage, BlueVine and Partner Banks over Pandemic Loans

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on
U.S. lawmakers have opened an investigation into financial technology companies Kabbage Inc. and BlueVine and their partner banks for their roles in distributing billions of dollars in pandemic aid to small businesses, according to letters seen by Reuters. The investigation, due to be announced on Friday, highlights how an unprecedented $780 billion loan program launched by the U.S. government to help companies weather the COVID-19 economic shutdown has led to legal and regulatory woes for lenders. The loan scheme, known as the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), has drawn criticism from regulators and the media for failing to implement adequate checks, resulting in widespread fraud. The U.S. House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis has asked Kabbage, BlueVine, and their partners Cross River Bank and Celtic Bank, respectively, to provide documents and information to detail the fraud controls and compliance systems they implemented for the PPP, as well as the revenues they earned in facilitating the program, the letters showed. "I am deeply troubled by recent reports alleging that financial technology lenders and their bank partners failed to adequately screen PPP loan applications for fraud," said the letters, which were signed by Democratic U.S. representative James Clyburn, chairman of the subcommittee. According to the letters, Kabbage issued $7 billion worth of PPP loans between April and August of last year, making it the second-largest PPP lender by application volume. BlueVine is estimated to have issued over $4.5 billion in PPP loans, ranking it among the top 10 PPP lenders by application volume. Lenders have said they were under enormous pressure to make millions of loans quickly while keeping up with ever-changing PPP rules. The U.S. Department of Justice's civil division is also investigating fintechs, including Kabbage, over whether they miscalculated how much PPP aid borrowers were entitled to due to confusion over how to account for payroll taxes, Reuters reported earlier this month.