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Regulatory Blue Pencil: CFPB Guidance, Enforcement Actions Signal Expanding Focus on Vendor Management
In April 2012, the Consumer Protection Financial Bureau (the ‘‘CFPB’’ or ‘‘Bureau’’) issued Bulletin 2012-03 (the ‘‘Service Provider Bulletin’’), a guidance document setting forth the CFPB’s high-level expectations related to the engagement of third party service providers by supervised financial...
ArticlesTrending: A Principles-Based Approach To US Financial Regs
While the United States has traditionally utilized rules-based policies, there has been a recent trend toward integrating principles-based policies and behavioral economics in regulating consumer financial products. For a framework of applying behavioral economics- and principles-based regulations...
ArticlesThe CFPB's Proposed HMDA Rule: "Getting It Right" in Light of Major Changes to HDMA
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (the “Bureau” or the “CFPB”) proposed rule to amend Regulation C (the “HMDA Proposal”) to implement changes to the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (“HMDA”) will drastically expand the amount of mortgage loan application data that lending institutions will be...
ArticlesNew Day For RESPA: The UDAAPification Of Section 8
The Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act has gone the "UDAAPified" way of debt collection — this time, through enforcement rather than guidance. In July 2013, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Bulletin 2013-07 announced that the principles underlying the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act...
ArticlesDebt Collection in the Post Dodd-Frank Enforcement Era
Sasha Leonhardt and Jessica Pollet authored "Debt Collection in the Post Dodd-Frank Enforcement Era," which appeared in the January/February issue of The Journal of Taxation and Regulation of Financial Institutions. Since the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act, government agencies have increasingly...
ArticlesA New Balancing Act: The DOJ Provides New Direction Regarding the SCRA's Interest Rate Benefit
When Congress reenacted the Servicemembers’ Civil Relief Act (“SCRA”) in 2003, Congress designed the SCRA to balance the interests of active duty servicemembers and their creditors, as it had done under the SCRA’s predecessor legislation. One of the benefits provided by the SCRA is a six-percent...
ArticlesWriting the Facilitating Payments Exception Out of the FCPA
Last summer, a lawsuit brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) alleging Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) violations against two individuals related to Noble Corporation, a global oil and gas drilling services company, nearly went to trial in federal court in Texas. SEC v...
Articles"Do not bet against it: Heightened scrutiny of casinos is here to stay" by Daniel R. Alonso (ACAMS Today)
What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas” may still apply to bachelor parties, but it is no longer true for gaming. Just as the days of the discreet private banker have gone the way of the fax machine, so, too, has the halcyon era of anonymous gaming in land-based casinos. Recent events have made it...
ArticlesCaveat Emptor or Caveat Vendor? The Evolution of Unfairness in Federal Consumer Protection Law
Under the Federal Trade Commission’s original interpretation of unfair or deceptive acts or practices law, financial institutions could feel some sense of security that, if they provided a consumer with a clear understanding of a proposed transaction, the burden was on the consumer to determine...
ArticlesDeference in Decline: ECOA's Regulation B and Agency Discretion Might Not Be Broad Enough to Include Spousal Guarantors
For more than 40 years, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (‘‘ECOA’’)1 has prohibited lenders from discriminating against applicants for credit on various prohibited bases, including marital status. The policy reasons for such protections, including ensuring that married women have full access to...
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