FTC sues Asbury Automotive, says it charged Black, Latino customers more

By Jody Godoy

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Federal Trade Commission sued Asbury (NYSE:ABG ) Automotive Group on Friday, alleging that three of its dealerships in Texas charged Black and Latino customers higher prices than others and routinely added services to customers' contracts without their consent.

Up to 75% of customers of Asbury's David McDavid Ford (NYSE:F ) dealership in Fort Worth, and Honda (NYSE:HMC ) dealerships in Irving and Frisco, Texas, reported being charged without their permission for services such as protective coatings, service contracts and insurance, according to the FTC.

In some cases, customers had declined the services or been falsely told they were mandatory, while in others their permission was never sought, the FTC said.

The dealerships on average charged Black customers $298 more and Latino customers $214 more for the same add-on products than they did white customers who were not Latino, the FTC said.

Asbury said it rejects the allegation and will contest the lawsuit. It denied in a statement that minority customers were charged more for protection products than other customers.

The company said it verified through a Freedom of Information Act request that the FTC did not receive any consumer complaints about McDavid dealerships between 2019 and late spring of 2024.

"We will not allow the FTC to coerce fines from us or subject us to onerous requirements that negatively impact the car-buying experience for our customers, would not apply to others, and would place us at a competitive disadvantage in the industry," CEO David Hult said in a statement.

Asbury operates more than 155 dealerships in more than a dozen states.



All five FTC commissioners voted to authorize the case against Asbury, although Andrew Ferguson, one of two Republican commissioners, took issue with using a separate case settled on Thursday against a different dealership to classify discrimination as an unfair business practice.

FTC Chair Lina Khan and the Democratic commissioners said on Thursday that exempting discriminatory conduct from unfair practices would give companies that discriminate a pass.

Source: Investing.com

Publicații recente
The risks of carrying cash as rates decline
29.09.2024 - 12:00
Leveraging GenAI for asset management
29.09.2024 - 12:00
5 big analyst AI moves: Microsoft downgraded, Micron rally ‘will sustain’
29.09.2024 - 11:00
US southeast faces daunting cleanup from Helene as death toll rises
29.09.2024 - 03:00
UBS chair warns against big increase in capital requirements, newspaper reports
29.09.2024 - 02:00
Steward Health CEO who refused to testify to US Senate will step down
28.09.2024 - 23:00
Exclusive-TPG in lead to buy stake in Creative Planning at $15 billion valuation, sources say
28.09.2024 - 22:00
US southeast faces daunting clean up from Helene; death toll rises
28.09.2024 - 22:00
UniCredit CEO Orcel attended virtual meeting with Commerzbank, source says
28.09.2024 - 17:00
Online sellers on Walmart's Flipkart sue India watchdog over antitrust probe
28.09.2024 - 16:00
If your AI seems smarter​, it's thanks to smarter human trainers
28.09.2024 - 15:00
Thyssenkrupp steel head prepares staff for 'tough' cuts
28.09.2024 - 15:00
Why gene therapy for sickle cell is slow to catch on with patients
28.09.2024 - 15:00
Here's how Morgan Stanley expects the US election to impact textile retailers
28.09.2024 - 13:00
How to prepare your portfolio for Q4
28.09.2024 - 12:00

© Analytic DC. All Rights Reserved.

new
Prezentare generală a pieței Cheltuielile de consum din SUA au înregistrat o creștere moderată în august
Bine ați venit în mesageria de suport!!
*
*

Solicitarea dvs. a fost trimisă cu succes!
Veți fi contactat în scurt timp.