Practice Areas
Molly Swartz is a partner in the Fintech practice at Paul Hastings and is based in the firm's San Francisco office. Molly advises fintech and financial services companies, internet marketplaces and commercial and consumer lenders regarding a broad spectrum of product, regulatory and transactional matters. As part of Paul Hastings’ Band 1-ranked Fintech practice, she is one of a few preeminent financial services attorneys in the U.S. that companies turn to as they seek to commercialize their product offerings further.
Molly has extensive experience with financial services and consumer protection laws, including the Truth-in-Lending Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, the Electronic Fund Transfer Act, the Bank Secrecy Act, state money transmission and licensed lending laws, gift card laws, payment network rules such as the Nacha, Visa and Mastercard Rules, and other state and federal statutes related to money movement.
Molly advises household name companies regarding a host of product and regulatory issues. From ideation and strategy through launch and beyond, Molly assists in all aspects of product development. She frequently negotiates commercial agreements in the financial services space, including bank-fintech partnership agreements and commercial agreements between fintech companies. Molly drafts user-facing documentation for financial services clients including foundational contracts between clients and their customers and advises on design elements of the user experience. Beyond product development, Molly supports clients through financing services licensing and registration, and assists clients in responding to regulatory inquiries.
Molly is one of the foremost experts in non-recourse liquidity and earned wage access (collectively, NRL/EWA). She was part of the original legal team that helped define the space and has engaged with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and numerous state agencies on a variety of EWA/NRL issues. Molly has helped numerous clients to develop no-fee, non-recourse forms of financing.