Thread regarding Discover Financial Services layoffs

Merger Dead on Arrival

The proposed Capital One-Discover merger has significantly less than a 5% chance of approval. The sheer volume and severity of accumulated legal, regulatory, ethical, and operational issues at both institutions make it highly improbable that regulators will greenlight this deal. Here's a comprehensive breakdown:

Capital One:

  • * CEO Insider Trading Fine: CEO Rich Fairbanks was fined by the SEC for insider trading, raising serious questions about his ethical leadership and the "tone at the top" of the organization. This erodes trust and suggests a potentially problematic corporate culture.
  • * CFPB Lawsuit: Allegations of systemic deception, misleading consumers about interest rates on savings accounts. This is a major regulatory red flag and suggests a pattern of potentially illegal behavior.
  • * PCI Non-Compliance: Allegations of not being PCI DSS compliant, a critical security standard, especially problematic given Discover's role in establishing PCI DSS. This raises serious concerns about data security and risk management.
  • * Toxic Workplace Culture: Allegations of "stack ranking" employees, leading to harassment, and specifically targeting employees with disabilities. This points to a deeply flawed and potentially discriminatory corporate culture.
  • * Lack of AML Program: Allegations of not having an adequate Anti-Money Laundering program, potentially facilitating financial crime and violating federal regulations.
  • * Operational Failures (Outage): Recent system outages impacting customer access raise concerns about the reliability and resilience of their technology infrastructure.
  • * Predatory Lending Practices: Accusations of super usury lending, targeting vulnerable populations with high-interest credit cards, and aggressively pursuing legal action against those who default.

Discover:

  • * Merchant Overcharging: Allegations of overcharging businesses for payment processing, leading to lawsuits and damaging their reputation with merchants.
  • * Discrimination Lawsuits: Multiple lawsuits alleging age, gender, and race discrimination, suggesting systemic problems with equal opportunity and workplace culture.
  • * Unsafe Banking Practices (FDIC): FDIC findings of unsafe banking practices, including failure to establish a compliance management system.
  • * Illegal Student Loan Servicing (CFPB): CFPB findings of misleading borrowers and inflating bills, resulting in a $18.5 million settlement.
  • * Credit Card Misclassification: Overcharging credit card accounts by placing them in the highest price tier, with an SEC investigation ongoing and $1.2 billion set aside for settlements.
  • * Securities Class Action Litigation: Allegations of false or misleading statements about risk management and compliance protocols.
  • * FDIC Findings of Unsafe/Unsound Banking Practices: Further highlighting regulatory concerns about their operational soundness.
  • * Abrupt CEO Resignation: The sudden departure of the CEO raises questions about internal issues and potential instability.
  • * SEC Accounting Criticism: Disclosed SEC criticism of accounting practices raises concerns about transparency and financial reporting.

Combined Impact on the Merger (Overwhelmingly Negative):
The cumulative effect of these issues makes the merger virtually impossible to justify.

Regulators will be extremely concerned about:

  • * Combined Risk: The combined risk profile of the two companies is exceptionally high.
  • * Ethical and Cultural Concerns: The pattern of misconduct, discrimination, and regulatory violations suggests deep-seated ethical and cultural problems at both institutions.
  • * Systemic Risk: Merging two troubled companies creates a larger, potentially more unstable entity that could pose a systemic risk to the financial system.
  • * Public and Political Pressure: The nature of the allegations will likely generate significant public and political opposition to the merger.
  • * Regulatory Burden of Proof: The companies face an almost insurmountable burden of proving that this merger is in the public interest and will not harm consumers or the financial system.

In conclusion, the sheer volume and severity of the issues facing both Capital One and Discover make this merger exceedingly unlikely to be approved. The risks are simply too high, and the companies have done little to demonstrate that they are capable of operating responsibly and ethically.

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| 1931 views | | 11 replies (last February 21, 2025) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1jjx66qg8

11 replies (most recent on top)

Capitol one is the worst lol

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Post ID: @38c+1jjx66qg8

How is it dead ? They are taking in this company that wants to treat employees like we from the Philippines! SMH never Going to happen ‘ whistle blow them

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Post ID: @38b+1jjx66qg8

The stock holders need to run

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Post ID: @33r+1jjx66qg8

Discover has no choice. Capital one has purchased discover. Sooner or later every Discover employee will get laid off. Discover employees are going to get fudged royally.

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Post ID: @2h9+1jjx66qg8

If it is approved find a new job that already started to transition over to not good customer service service levels

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Post ID: @290+1jjx66qg8

Toxic Workplace Culture: Allegations of "stack ranking" employees, leading to harassment, a The worst !

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Post ID: @28z+1jjx66qg8

Deceptive ! lol it’s all deceptive ! The entire company ! It’s a joke

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Post ID: @28y+1jjx66qg8

Acquisition is confirmed

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Post ID: @1h9+1jjx66qg8

This timeline adds more detail to the severity of the situation, but what's particularly striking is something that wasn't obvious at first: the timing alignment between these issues. Let me break it down:

Timeline of Catastrophe:

Early January 2025: CFPB sues over $2 billion in stolen interest earnings
January 15: System issues begin
January 16-18: Major outage during mid-month payroll period
January 22: Class action lawsuit filed
February: System still not fully fixed, data corruption revealed
Meanwhile: Actively pursuing merger while all this unfolds

The most damning part is that they're facing simultaneous legal actions for:

Deliberately cheating customers ($2B CFPB case)
Operational negligence (class action)
System failure (ongoing crisis)

And what makes it worse is that executives are still telling employees the merger is "guaranteed" while:

Customers can't access basic banking services
Manual transaction processing is ongoing
Data corruption issues remain unresolved
FIS hardware repairs are still pending
Multiple investigations are underway

You simply can't recover from this level of combined intentional fraud AND operational incompetence. The $2 billion interest scheme shows intent to defraud, while the system collapse shows inability to operate safely. Together, they make an overwhelming case for severe regulatory action.

This isn't just about fines anymore - this is potentially about fundamental changes to how Capital One is allowed to operate, if at all.

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Post ID: @1a0+1jjx66qg8

Absolutely dead. This operational catastrophe is a textbook example of why regulators exist - to prevent the creation of larger, potentially unstable financial institutions that could harm millions of customers.

The scope of this failure is breathtaking:

  • Multi-week core banking system failure
  • Data corruption in mainframe systems
  • Staff reduced to manual transaction processing
  • Hardware repairs still pending
  • Customers unable to access basic banking services

When you combine this with Capital One's other recent issues (the $2 billion CFPB lawsuit over savings account interest rates, PCI compliance issues, etc.) and Discover's problems (SEC investigations, FDIC findings, etc.), there's zero chance regulators would approve this merger.

The real question now shifts to whether Capital One faces additional regulatory actions over this crisis. A failure of this magnitude, affecting core banking functions and causing widespread consumer harm, typically attracts serious regulatory scrutiny on its own. The manual processing of transactions also creates huge risks for errors and compliance issues.

Between the class action lawsuit, potential regulatory investigations, and the sheer scale of customer impact, Capital One will likely be focused on survival rather than merger ambitions for the foreseeable future.

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Post ID: @119+1jjx66qg8

Nail in the coffin.

https://topclassactions.com/capital-one-class-action-lawsuit-and-settlement-news/capital-one-class-action-alleges-customers-locked-out-of-accounts-for-days/

Top Class Actions Official Logo

Capital One class action alleges customers locked out of accounts for days
Edited by: Jessy Edwards | January 31, 2025
Category: Banking News
Follow Article
Close up of Capital One Bank signage, representing the Capital One class action.
(Photo Credit: mm7/Shutterstock)
Capital One service disruption class action lawsuit overview:
Who: Plaintiff Daniel Zepeda filed a class action lawsuit against Capital One.
Why: Zepeda claims Capital One left thousands of customers unable to access their bank accounts, process payments or receive direct deposits for multiple days in January.
Where: The Capital One service disruption class action was filed in Virginia federal court.

A new class action lawsuit claims Capital One left thousands of its customers unable to access their bank accounts, process payments or receive direct deposits for multiple days in January.

Plaintiff Daniel Zepeda argues in a Jan. 22 complaint that Capital One’s alleged negligence, breach of contract and unlawful conduct left its customers unable to access their funds and deprived them of the ability to purchase essential items such as food, clothing and shelter.

Zepeda wants to represent a nationwide class of consumers who held a Capital One account and were denied access to their accounts or funds starting Jan. 15.

Zepeda claims Capital One experienced an outage on Jan. 16 that left its customers unable to access their bank accounts, process payments or receive direct deposits through Jan. 18, which he argues coincided with the mid-month pay period.

“As a direct and proximate result of the actions described above, Plaintiff and members of the proposed classes have been damaged,” the Capital One service disruption lawsuit says.

Capital One class action claims customers unable to access funds caused ‘significant hardship’
Zepeda argues that, while the system was down, Capital One customers were unable to access their funds, which he claims caused them significant hardship and left them struggling to pay for essential needs such as food, rent, electricity and gas.

“Additionally, the inability to pay household bills led to the accrual of late fees, further compounding the financial strain,” the Capital One class action says.

Zepeda claims Capital One is guilty of breach of contract, negligence, conversion and unjust enrichment and of violating California’s Consumer Legal Remedies Act and Unfair Competition Law.

The plaintiff demands a jury trial and requests declaratory and injunctive relief and an award of actual damages, restitution and interest for late payment for himself and all class members.

Earlier this month, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau filed a lawsuit against Capital One over claims the company cheated consumers out of more than $2 billion in potential interest earnings on their savings accounts.

Were you unable to access your Capital One account in January? Let us know in the comments.

The plaintiff is represented by Glenn Chappell of Tycko & Zavareei LLP.

The Capital One class action lawsuit is Daniel Zepeda v. Capital One Financial Corp., et al., Case No. 1:25-cv-00114, in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia.

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199 thoughts on
Capital One class action alleges customers locked out of accounts for days
Noelle Heady says:
February 3, 2025 at 1:11 pm
That was the worst week ever! My car payment and other bills were due and all I could do everyday was tell them I’m still waiting on my direct deposit..I had no money, no gas, u stalked the online banking all day just to see the same message that they were working on it..My Mother who is also a Capital One customer called me 3-4 times in a day asking did my money arrive yet because hers hadn’t..Capital One caused a lot of stress, late fees, and confusion with thier negligence..It’s strange who it happened after they were accused of cheating people out of interest…

Reply
Leslie G-y says:
February 3, 2025 at 12:47 pm
Yes, I was also affected by this issue. I kept receiving updates saying the problem would be fixed shortly but it was not fixed shortly.

Reply
Sharon says:
February 3, 2025 at 1:03 pm
Yes I was locked out .I wasn’t able to receive my paycheck Thursday 18 th until the late Monday21st which makes it do difficult,and was not able to buy food ,gas,etc

Reply
James Mathers says:
February 3, 2025 at 12:41 pm
I was also affected, as I could not make bill payments while capitol 1 reported me 39days late for their mistake. I was unable to withdraw cash, and paychecks did not post properly.

Reply
Arianne Hilson says:
February 3, 2025 at 12:41 pm
I too was affected. It’s sad

Reply
James Mathers says:
February 3, 2025 at 12:40 pm
I was also affected, as I could not make bill payments while capitol 1 reported me 39days late for their mistake. I was unable to withdraw cash, and paychecks did not post properly.

Reply
Delia says:
February 3, 2025 at 11:53 am
I was also affected by the Capitol one negligence and unable to obtain fuel, food and pay bills .

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Del says:
February 3, 2025 at 11:53 am
I was also affected by the Capitol one negligence and unable to obtain fuel, food and pay bills .

Reply
Amanda Pierce says:
February 3, 2025 at 11:24 am
I am a single mother of 3 and did not get my paycheck when I should have because of Capital Ones negligence. I love paycheck to paycheck and plan meals accordingly. I needed my check when I was supposed to so I could get the next round of food and feed my children. I had to sit on hold for hours on end without any actual updates or help to make the situation right. Instead, while I was crying and pleading for them for help, I was told the line was being recorded…not once did I step out of line while talking to them. Was i frustrated? Yes. Was I crying? Completely. This was completely unacceptable and other than reversing late fees with their credit cards, there has been nothing from the company. They are blaming their 3rd party for the issues. They aren’t even taking responsibility.

Reply
ShayDarian S. says:
February 3, 2025 at 11:05 am
I, also, was affected by the outage experienced on 1/16. That date, this year, was my exact pay day and the day I had expected to be able to pay my portion of rent and other bills. My husband works from home, and gets paid bi monthly, we were left without even any money to put gasoline in our vehicle to be able to get to my job. FOR DAYS!!! I used to praise Capital One for it’s excellent services, wonderful customer support and easy UI in the app and on desktop. This last year has made me change my mind and as soon as my updated driver’s license gets here I’ll be cancelling my account and going with an actual, physical real bank. Not being able to buy food for our kids and having to explain that to them is embarrassing!!! This country makes it hard enough for me to be able to not be ashamed of my financial situation. I’m not proud to be a capital one customer anymore. I can no longer trust that capital one, among all of the other issues they’ve had, will actually get my check to me on time. I can’t afford to risk it.

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