WSJ What’s News - Big Banks Under Investigation for Handling of Zelle Scams
Episode Date: August 7, 2024P.M. Edition for Aug. 7. WSJ exclusively reports that regulators are investigating how banks respond when customers dispute transactions made through Zelle. Banking reporter Andrew Ackerman has more.... And Disney’s streaming and movie businesses are attracting consumers, unlike its theme parks. Heard on the Street tech columnist Dan Gallagher discusses the entertainment giant’s latest quarterly results. Plus, is it possible to drink too much water? Health and science reporter Jennifer Calfas explains the dangers of water intoxication. Francesca Fontana hosts. Sign up for the WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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What is dedication?
People ask, how your children learn how to ride a bike and you didn't.
I just created an environment where they taught themselves and all I had to do was be there.
That's dedication.
Visit fatherhood.gov to hear more.
Brought to you by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the Ad Council.
Disney is getting consumers out of the house, just not to its theme parks,
where the entertainment giant needs them the most.
And, regulators are investigating how banks respond when customers say they paid a scam the house, just not to its theme parks, where the entertainment giant needs them the most.
And regulators are investigating how banks respond when customers say they paid a scammer
over Zelle.
In any given year, there are billions of transactions.
They happen without any incident.
The problem is when you're talking about billions of transactions, a very small percentage
figure can add up to hundreds of thousands of disputed transactions.
Plus, is it possible to drink too much water?
We look at why water intoxication could actually be dangerous.
It's Wednesday, August 7th.
I'm Francesca Fontana for the Wall Street Journal.
This is the PM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories that move
the world today.
Disney streaming and movie businesses are booming.
Its theme parks, not so much.
In its latest quarterly report, Disney posted profit and revenue that both beat Wall Street
expectations.
Its streaming business, which includes Hulu, its flagship platform Disney+, and the sports-focused
ESPN+, posted its first profit.
And its unit that includes its theatrical film releases
reported its first profit since early 2022,
in large part thanks to Inside Out 2,
the coming-of-age animated feature
produced by the Disney-owned Pixar.
Those areas are picking up the slack
in Disney's theme park business,
which the company expects to face more challenges
on the horizon.
Here to discuss Disney's results is our Hurt on the Street tech columnist, Dan Gallagher.
Dan, Disney's success this quarter seems pretty uneven.
As you say in your story, Disney's getting more people out of the house, just not necessarily to the right places.
Yeah, more than half of Disney's operating profits come from theme parks these days,
and that's way up from about a quarter in the pre-pandemic years. And that's because, you know, the company's media
business is going through this major transition. Cable TV is shrinking. Streaming is growing,
but it just doesn't have the profits. It hasn't grown to that. So it's really been relying on
theme parks. And so this quarter was actually kind of a reversal we've been seeing with the
company lately. So all of a sudden they have these movies out that are doing really well,
We've been seeing with the company lately. So all of a sudden they have these movies out that are doing really well, looking good,
right as the weakening consumer is starting to not go to the theme parks quite as much.
And you touched on this, but why is the theme park business so important to Disney?
Disney is this flywheel.
They put out movies that make popular characters, people buy the videos, people buy the toys,
and those become theme park attractions.
They help get people into parks.
And so when they open a new attraction,
they sell a lot of tickets.
So what we saw for a while was that media side
was kind of weak because obviously the pandemic
closed theaters and then people were slow to come back
because of streaming.
So that was looking problematic,
but theme parks are really holding up well.
Right now you've got the reverse. And I don't think what we're seeing now is
going to be permanent forever, but I do think the U.S. is coming into a period
where consumer spending is going to be weaker. So we're seeing that impact at
the same time that their movie business is finally doing well again. But right
now it's just a complicated story where like not every part of the business is
humming like it typically does.
Is it possible for all of its key businesses to be humming at the same time?
You know, can Disney grow all of its areas, parks, film, streaming?
They've actually had a good history of that over the longer term.
Obviously the pandemic hurt them a lot because it closed movie theaters,
it closed sporting events, and it closed theme parks.
And that was not unique to them.
So like their competitors, they've been kind of coming out of this and it's been a slow
process.
Their business is still really strong.
But it's again, because now it's so reliant on theme parks to make those operating profits.
If there's any kind of like speed bumps or whatever, or a little bit of weakness in those,
it tends to hurt.
That was tech columnist Dan Galgar.
In the markets, strong daily gains for U.S. stocks evaporated before the closing bell
today as the market's rebound faltered.
The S&P 500 ended the day down 0.8% after climbing as much as 1.7% in morning trading.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite and Dow Jones Industrial Average
also rallied in early trading before finishing the session down 1% and 0.6% respectively.
Investors say they expect the sharp moves to continue.
Coming up, why regulators are investigating how banks respond to scams on Zelle.
That's after the break.
What is dedication? People ask, how your children learn how to ride a bike,
and you didn't.
I just created an environment where they taught themselves,
and all I had to do was be there.
That's dedication.
Visit fatherhood.gov to hear more.
Brought to you by the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services and the Ad Council.
We report exclusively that regulators are investigating some of the biggest U.S. banks
for their handling of customer funds on the peer-to-peer payments platform, Zelle.
According to people familiar with the matter, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is
looking at how the banks respond when customers dispute transactions made through Zelle, which
has been facing scrutiny over scams
and fraudulent transactions. Zelle was created in 2017 to compete with popular money transfer
services like Venmo and Cash App and is owned by a network of big banks. But with its rapid growth
came an increase in complaints that the banks weren't doing enough to help retrieve money that
their customers were duped into sending. WSJ banking reporter Andrew Ackerman joins us with more. Andrew, first off, what are regulators trying to determine in this
investigation?
Andrew Ackerman, WSJ Banking Reporter The regulators are trying to determine a couple
of things. One is, are the banks living up to their obligations under the law, which
is if a customer is the victim of a fraud where they didn't authorize a payment and
there was a money transfer, are they actually repaying customers for that?
The other issue is what are the bank's obligations
when their customers are the victims of scams?
They might see tickets to like a Taylor Swift concert online,
they send some money to a stranger for them
and they turn out to be non-existent tickets.
They've been duped out of several hundred dollars.
In that case, do the banks have any obligation
to repay their customers? And legally, the answer is no, because the customers authorized the transaction.
But it's a gray area. And the CFPB to date has been under a ton of political pressure
to address that issue. And without changing the law, it's unclear what happens.
How widespread of a problem is this for people who use Zelle? According to the banks, it's a very small problem. 99.95% of all of the
transactions over Zelle and in any given year there are billions of
transactions, they happen without any incident. The problem is when you're
talking about billions of transactions, a very small percentage figure, and that's
all the banks are releasing as percentages.
That can add up to hundreds of thousands of disputed transactions.
And while they may not be legally compelled to do anything for customers who are scammed,
what are some of the things that banks are doing?
The banks say they go above and beyond their legal requirements. And since last summer, Zelle basically changed its rules for the banks that are part of the
Zelle network.
And there's over 2000 banks that participate in Zelle where they say, hey, if you haven't
part of a scam, if you're duped into sending money because somebody impersonated your bank
or they impersonated a government agency, we will reimburse you
in those specific instances.
We don't have a lot of clarity on whether those rules are really working.
The banks essentially say what is working is all the warnings that if I send money to
somebody for the first time, I get a warning.
Are you sure you want to send money to this person?
Are you really sure you want to send money to this person?
It causes people to reassess, like, are they being scammed in real time?
Now that we know that this investigation is happening, what are some of the banks saying
in response?
So right now, only one bank has disclosed the existence of the CFPB probe. That's JP
Morgan. On Friday night, they had a quarterly disclosure that had a paragraph on this
that for the first time said the CFPB was investigating. And they've signaled that they're
ready to litigate, that the CFPB staff have said they are prepared to offer a settlement or to
pursue legal action against banks. And the banks have said they're kind of ready to defend themselves in court,
or at least JP Morgan said that.
That was my colleague WSJ banking reporter Andrew Ackerman.
Economic data says inflation's coming down, but it still might not always feel like it.
What's your view?
From food to housing, healthcare to utilities, what costs that are a big part of your budget
are still going up? Which ones aren't? And overall, how confident are you that your situation
is going to get better? Send a voice memo to wnpod at wsj.com or leave a voicemail
with your name and location at 212-416-4328. We might use it on the show. Elon Musk's ambitions for dozens of SpaceX
launches at the Cape Canaveral region are facing a backlash. Florida's residents aren't
happy with the billionaire space company's plans to launch Starship, the Earth's largest
and most powerful rocket, up to 44 times a year from a launch pad on the Cape.
Wall Street Journal investigative reporter Susan Pulliam.
People who live there are already unhappy about the large number of launches that have
been happening.
There are often several launches a week, sometimes even two times a day, and the launches rattle
people's windows.
They wake them up at night.
The second issue is that there are a lot of industries that compete for that space including commercial fishermen. There's the cruise
industry at Port Canaveral. During launches, ocean space and airspace are
both closed for a period of time so that impacts the businesses of the commercial
fishermen and also the airlines. And of course the other direct competitors, the
rocket companies, are upset about the application as well.
Blue Origin, for one, thinks that the number of SpaceX launches should be capped.
And finally, in the heat of summer, it makes sense to worry about dehydration. But it turns
out drinking too much water comes with risks of its own. Some researchers warn that water
intoxication could be a growing issue.
Health and Science reporter Jennifer Kalfus explains what excessive water consumption
does to the human body and how to avoid it.
When we drink too much water over a short period of time, and I'm talking about a really
excessive amount of water that goes beyond our thirst levels, what we might usually drink
during a day, it can kind of flood our
system. And when I say that, I mean it dilutes the sodium levels in our blood. That can make
us feel nauseated, dizzy. It can cause headaches, make us feel fatigued. This also can get actually
pretty dangerous. In fact, it can cause swelling in our brain cells and when that occurs that expansion puts pressure on certain parts of the brain and could
lead to more serious issues like coma, seizures, or even death. The most simple
thing people can think about based off of what doctors and researchers have
told me is that we should all just try to drink to satisfy our thirst. That might
be the most simple way of thinking about
this and ensuring you aren't drinking too much water when you're trying to stay safe
in the heat of the summer.
And that's What's News for this Wednesday afternoon. Today's show was produced by Anthony
Bansi and Pierre Bienamé with supervising producer Michael Cosmitis. I'm Francesca
Fontana for the Wall Street Journal. We'll be back with a new show tomorrow morning.
Thanks for listening.