"Guess I'll be eating ramen again tonight," tweets one customer on third day of issues linked to a data-center power outage.
A technical glitch at Capital One has left thousands of banking customers unable to access their bank accounts, process payments, or receive direct deposits since Wednesday, January 15. The banking giant,
An outage affecting Capital One customers dragged into its second day Friday, further preventing some customers from accessing deposits, payments and transfers. On Thursday, the bank said the technical issue was the result of a glitch with a third-party vendor.
Capital One users were reporting issues with receiving their deposits on Thursday morning, leaving many customers wondering where their money and paychecks are. Complaints on social media were pouring in via the @AskCapitalOne customer service account on X, formerly Twitter.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has filed suit against Capital One for allegedly misleading customers about its high-interest savings accounts.
FIS Global, the Capital One service provider involved, said it has "restored access" and processing should be done Friday.
The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is suing Capital One, claiming the company cheated customers out of $2 billion by misleading them.
Thousands of Capital One users are still reporting issues of the financial corporation being down, impacting direct deposit and other services.
The bank said in a statement to CNN that a "technical issue experienced by a third-party vendor" has "temporarily impacted" some of Capital One's services, including payment processing, deposits and its consumer, small business and commercial banks.
FOX Business reached out to Capital One for comment. It’s the latest blow to the financial institution, which is being sued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) for allegedly misleading customers by not notifying them of account options that paid higher interest rates.
Tens of thousands of Capitol One customers are missing their direct deposits in what the company is calling an issue with a third-party vendor.
Technical issues at Capital One are causing problems with accounts, deposits and payment processing.