E-Commerce

Amazon Drops Wells Fargo Student Loan Program Like Hot Potato

Amazon and Wells Fargo Education Financial Services this week suddenly ended a partnership to offer low-cost loans to college students, less than six weeks after announcing the program.

Wells Fargo, the largest lender of private student loans among all U.S. commercial banks, had offered a 0.50 percent discount to Amazon Prime Student customers under the partnership. They were eligible for an additional 0.25 percent rate reduction if they enrolled in the bank’s automatic monthly loan repayment plan.

Amazon Prime Student offers college students a more targeted series of benefits than the company’s traditional Amazon Prime customer program. The Amazon Prime Student program provides a six-month free trial period, two-day free shipping on more than 30 million items, special promotions targeting college students, free streaming video and music, and a free Kindle First book each month.

More Than Coincidence?

The student loan agreement with Wells Fargo ended less than two weeks after the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau ordered the bank to pay US$3.6 million in civil penalties for a series of illegal practices in its private student lending business.

The bureau last month announced that Wells Fargo charged consumers illegal late fees, failed to correct inaccurate credit information, and failed to provide important credit information to consumers.

Beyond the civil penalties, the CfPB ordered Wells Fargo to pay $410,000 in refunds to borrowers for illegal late fees.

Wells Fargo’s Education Financial Services division originates and services student loans, and has 1.3 million total customers in the U.S., operating in all 50 states, according to the bureau.

Despite the timing of the CFPB action and the end of Amazon’s partnership with Wells Fargo, it remains unclear whether there is any direct link between the two. The CFPB, Amazon and Wells Fargo did not respond to our requests to comment for this story.

Loan Servicers’ History of Failure

There are more than 40 million federal and private student loan borrowers, according to the bureau, and they collectively owe $1.3 trillion. As of 2015, more than 8 million borrowers were in default on $110 billion in student loans, and private student loans comprise more than $100 billion of all outstanding student loans.

The CFPB, along with the Department of Education and Department of Treasury, last year called out the student loan industry for widespread servicing failures that contributed to the delinquency problem.

In comments made last summer, CFPB Director Richard Cordray cited a “vast disconnect” between existing laws and the experiences of many borrowers, who were not provided the relief they qualified for to mitigate student loan debt.

Amazon’s brief attempt to lower the cost of student loans was not the first effort on the part of a technology company in this market.

Online companies have been working for quite a while to help fill the void between federal student aid and private lenders that service the college student loan business, said Tina Malott, a spokesperson for College Ave, a student loan firm led by Joe DePaulo former CFO at Sallie Mae and former CEO of Credit One Financial Services.

“Mainly, there is a gap between what the federal government will loan you and the cost of tuition and living expenses,” Malott told the E-Commerce Times. “That gap is sometimes filled by private student loans.”

David Jones is a freelance writer based in Essex County, New Jersey. He has written for Reuters, Bloomberg, Crain's New York Business and The New York Times.

1 Comment

  • When these businesses whom we have been trusting for years start to go rouge, government should do lot more then just a slap in the back. If not, these businesses as well as the country will roll into an economic decline to 3rd world level. Please leave politics out of this serious issue.

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