Equifax Inc. (NYSE:EFX) Files An 8-K Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement
Item 1.01. Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement.
As previously disclosed, Equifax Inc. (the Company) has been a party to a significant number of legal proceedings and investigations in connection with a cybersecurity incident in 2017 following a criminal attack on the Companys systems that involved the theft of certain personally identifiable information of consumers.
On July 19, 2019 and July 22, 2019, the Company entered into multiple agreements that resolve a class action lawsuit filed on behalf of U.S. consumers captioned In re: Equifax, Inc. Customer Data Security Breach Litigation, MDL No. 2800 (Consumer Cases) (the U.S. Consumer Litigation) and the investigations of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the Attorneys General of 48 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico (the MSAG Group) and the New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) (collectively, the Consumer Settlement).
Under the terms of the Consumer Settlement, the Company will contribute $380.5 million to a non-reversionary settlement fund (the Consumer Restitution Fund) to provide restitution for U.S. consumers identified by the Company whose personal information was compromised as a result of the 2017 cybersecurity incident (the affected consumers).
The Consumer Restitution Fund will be used to (1) compensate affected consumers for certain unreimbursed costs or expenditures incurred by affected consumers that are fairly traceable to the 2017 cybersecurity incident, (2) provide affected consumers with an opportunity to enroll in at least four years of credit monitoring services provided by a third party unaffiliated with the Company or alternative compensation for affected consumers who already have other credit monitoring services, (3) provide affected consumers with additional benefits such as identity restoration services and (4) pay reasonable attorneys fees and reasonable costs and expenses for the plaintiffs counsel in the U.S. Consumer Litigation (not to exceed $80.5 million) and administrative and notice costs.
The Company has agreed to contribute up to an additional $125 million to the Consumer Restitution Fund to cover unreimbursed costs and expenditures described in (1) above in the event the $380.5 million in the Consumer Restitution Fund is exhausted. In addition, if the number of affected consumers who enroll in the third party credit monitoring services described above in (2) exceeds seven million, the Company may be required, under certain circumstances, to contribute additional money into the Consumer Restitution Fund to cover the incremental cost of providing credit monitoring services to the additional affected consumers.
The Company also agreed to pay an additional $180.5 million to the MSAG Group and the following monetary penalties: (1) $100 million to the CFPB and (2) $10 million to the NYDFS.
The Company also agreed to implement certain business practice commitments related to information security to safeguard the personal information of consumers, including conducting third party assessments of its information security program.