However, it’s not clear whether the motivations are to disempower enforcement or rationalize the integration of enforcement and supervision. Industry watchers weigh in.
The CFPB is facing legal challenges from fair lending advocacy groups over its Home Mortgage Disclosure Act final rule that raises reporting thresholds for mortgage lenders.
The CFPB is rushing to get certain rulemakings done this year as the presidential election looms. Most items on the CFPB’s to-do list have deadlines in the fall.
Lawmakers, led by Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-OH, are urging Director Kathy Kraninger to not weaken the bureau’s ability to identify discriminatory lending patterns, particularly during the pandemic.
Amid talk about regulatory delays due to the lockdown, the CFPB finalized a rule on collecting and reporting data under the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act. More rulemaking could follow.
Industry stakeholders have 30 more days to submit their feedback on a proposed rule that would require debt collectors to make certain disclosures under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.
CFPB updates HMDA small entity compliance guide; the bureau files a lawsuit against Citizens Bank for credit card dispute issues; industry and consumer groups seek a delay in risk-retention rule revision.
Important mortgage regulatory changes and robust examinations of financial institutions are on the consumer watchdog’s 2020 agenda, but all decisions are up in the air with the battle over the bureau’s constitutionality looming in court.
CFPB releases annual adjustment of asset-size thresholds under HMDA and TILA; CFPB issues financial literacy annual report for fiscal 2019; progressive groups call on Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh to recuse himself from the CFPB constitutionality case; the New Civil Liberties Alliance files lawsuit challenging the CFPB’s funding mechanism.