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  • Agencies finalize Call Report capital-related reporting revisions

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance

    On February 19, the FDIC issued FIL-11-2020 announcing the Federal Reserve Board, FDIC, and OCC have finalized capital-related reporting revisions (see Federal Register notice and FIL-10-2020) to the Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (Call Reports) for certain banks (FFIEC 031, 041, 051) as well as the Regulatory Capital Reporting for Institutions Subject to the Advanced Capital Adequacy Framework (FFIEC 101). Among other things, the final revisions include changes to the capital simplifications rule and the community bank leverage ratio rule, in addition to Call Report instructional revisions taking effect in 2021 concerning reporting home equity lines of credit that convert from revolving to non-revolving status. These reporting revisions are subject to approval by OMB.

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance FDIC Federal Reserve OCC Call Report

  • FDIC issues 2020 stress testing scenarios

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance

    On February 14, the FDIC released economic scenarios—developed in coordination with the Federal Reserve Board (Fed) and the OCC—for certain supervised financial institutions with consolidated assets of more than $250 billion. The Dodd-Frank Act requires financial companies to run stress tests using the scenarios. According to the FDIC, the scenarios cover a baseline scenario that is “in line with a survey of private sector economic forecasters” and a severely adverse scenario “designed to assess the strength and resilience of financial institutions.”

    As previously reported by InfoBytes, the OCC and the Fed both released their stress testing scenarios on February 6.

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance Federal Reserve FDIC Stress Test Supervision Dodd-Frank OCC

  • CFPB updates FCRA exam procedures

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance

    On February 11, the CFPB issued updates to its Supervision and Examination Manual to include requirements of the FCRA created by the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act. The updates apply to the examination procedures covering consumer reporting, larger participants, and education loans, and aim to reduce instances of consumer compliance law violations by companies that provide consumer financial products and services. According to the CFPB, the larger participants examination procedures provide guidance to examiners covering a number of areas including, among other things, (i) “accuracy of information and furnisher relations”; (ii) “contents of consumer reports”; (iii) “consumer inquiries, complaints, and disputes and the reinvestigation process”; (vi) “consumer alerts and identity theft provisions”; and (v) “other products and services and risks to consumers.” The Bureau’s guidance to examiners on education loan exam procedures concentrates on servicing and origination. Some of the topics included are: (i) “advertising, marketing, and lead generation”; (ii) “customer application, qualification, loan origination, and disbursement”; (iii) “student loan servicing”; (iv) “borrower inquiries and complaints”; and (v) “information sharing and privacy.”

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance Consumer Finance CFPB Federal Issues Examination Supervision EGRRCPA FCRA

  • FDIC introduces deposit insurance application for nonbanks

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance

    On February 10, the FDIC issued FIL-8-2020, which incorporates Procedures for Deposit Insurance Applications from Applicants that are Not Traditional Community Banks into its Deposit Insurance Application Procedures Manual (manual). In addition to the updating the manual, the agency also issued a handbook, entitled Applying for Deposit Insurance – A Handbook for Organizers of De Novo Institutions (handbook), advising that the updated manual together with the handbook provide comprehensive instructions for completing deposit insurance applications. According to the letter, the updated manual and the handbook contain mostly “technical edits and clarifications” and are meant to “provide transparency and clarity” for applicants. The letter also supplies the definitions of “non-bank” and “non-community bank.”

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance Deposit Insurance Nonbank Federal Issues Community Banks Supervision

  • FFIEC releases 2020 HMDA reporting guide

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance

    On February 13, the FDIC issued FIL-9-2020 announcing the Federal Financial Institutions Examinations Council’s issuance of the 2020 edition of the “Guide to HMDA Reporting: Getting It Right!” The guide applies to HMDA data collected in 2020 that will be reported to supervisory agencies by March 1, 2021, and includes, (i) a summary of responsibilities and requirements; (ii) directions for assembling the necessary tools; and (iii) instructions for reporting HMDA data. According to the announcement, the 2020 edition provides information to assist HMDA compliance in the event of a merger or acquisition, as well as updates to the appendices to reflect amendments to Regulation C made by the CFPB that took effect January 1. As previously covered by InfoBytes, the amendments extend the current temporary threshold of 500 open-end lines of credit under HMDA rules for reporting data to January 1, 2022.

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance FDIC FFIEC CFPB HMDA

  • FinCEN rules on currency transaction reporting

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance

    On February 10, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued administrative ruling FIN-2020-R001 to clarify requirements for financial institutions’ reporting of currency transactions involving sole proprietorships and legal entities operating under a “doing business as” (DBA) name. The ruling replaces and rescinds two prior rulings (FIN-2006-R003 and FIN-2008-R001), and addresses reporting requirements when filing current Currency Transaction Report (CTR) FinCEN Form 112. In the ruling, FinCEN defines a sole proprietorship as “a business in which one person, operating in his or her own personal capacity, owns all of the business’s assets and is responsible for all of the business’s liabilities.” To remain consistent with the Bank Secrecy Act definition of a “person” (where a sole proprietorship is not separate from its individual owner), FinCEN instructs financial institutions to complete CTR FinCEN Form 112 for transactions involving a sole proprietorship with the individual owner’s name and information. The ruling also instructs institutions that additional entries may be required in instances where an individual owner operates a business under a DBA, or multiple DBAs. FinCEN also advises that when a CTR is prepared for a legal entity such as a partnership, incorporated business, or limited liability company, the form should contain, among other things, the entity’s home office or headquarters information. According to the ruling, “[w]hen multiple entity locations are involved in an aggregated CTR, a separate Part I section should be prepared for each location involved.”

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance FinCEN Bank Secrecy Act Of Interest to Non-US Persons

  • SEC commissioner proposes cryptocurrency safe harbor

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance

    On February 6, SEC Commissioner Hester M. Pierce announced her proposal for a three-year safe harbor rule applicable to companies developing digital assets and networks. Pierce suggested that not only would the rule provide regulatory flexibility “that allows innovation to flourish,” but it would also protect investors by “requiring disclosures tailored to their needs” while still maintaining anti-fraud safeguards, allowing investors to participate in token networks of their choice. Proposed Securities Act Rule 195 would allow companies to sell or offer tokens without being subject to the Securities Act of 1933, and without the tokens being subject to the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1934. In order to qualify for these exemptions, the proposed rule requires that a company developing a network must, among other things, (i) “intend for the network on which the token functions to reach network maturity…within three years of the date of the first token sale”; (ii) disclose key information on a freely accessible public website,” including applicable source code and descriptions of how to search and verify transactions on the network; (iii) offer and sell its tokens in order to allow access to or development of its network; (iv) make “good faith and reasonable efforts to create liquidity for users”; and (v) “file a notice of reliance” with the SEC’s EDGAR system within 15 days of the company’s first token sale made in reliance on the safe harbor. Pierce suggested that the three-year grace period for qualifying companies would allow time for the development of decentralized or functional networks, and, at the end of the three years, a successful network’s tokens would not be regulated as securities.

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance Digital Assets SEC Securities Cryptocurrency Safe Harbor Blockchain Virtual Currency Fintech Federal Issues

  • Fed, OCC issue 2020 stress test, capital adequacy scenarios

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance

    On February 6, the Federal Reserve Board (Fed) released the hypothetical scenarios banks and supervisors will use to conduct the 2020 Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review (CCAR) and Dodd-Frank Act stress tests exercises for large bank holding companies and large U.S. operations of foreign firms. This year’s stress tests will evaluate 34 large banks with more than $100 billion in total assets to ensure that these banks have adequate capital and processes to continue lending to households and businesses, even during a severe recession. Both scenarios—baseline and severely adverse—include 28 variables that cover domestic and international economic activity. In addition, banks with large trading operations must also factor in a global market shock component as part of their scenarios. Capital plan and stress testing submissions are due by April 6. The Fed noted that it “continues to work toward having the stress capital buffer in place for this year’s stress tests,” and that “[t]he release of these hypothetical scenarios does not affect that separate rulemaking process.”

    In related news, on February 6 the OCC also released its own stress testing scenarios for OCC-supervised institutions.

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance Federal Reserve CCAR Stress Test OCC Of Interest to Non-US Persons Dodd-Frank Supervision

  • Fannie, Freddie to drop LIBOR in favor of SOFR

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance

    On February 5, the FHFA announced updated LIBOR transition plans for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (GSEs) single-family and multi-family mortgage sellers and lenders, providing the next steps in the transition from LIBOR to the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) for adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) instruments. The next steps include (i) a “[n]ew language require[ment] for single-family Uniform…ARM instruments closed on or after June 1, 2020”; (ii) a requirement that “[a]ll LIBOR-based single-family and multifamily ARMs…loan application dates [must be] on or before September 30, 2020 to be eligible for acquisition”; and (iii) that “[a]cquisitions of single-family and multifamily LIBOR ARMs will cease on or before December 31, 2020.” The announcement links to information directly from the two GSEs: Fannie Mae Multifamily Mortgage Business Lender Letter 20-02, and Fannie Mae Single-Family Sellers Lender Letter LL-2020-01; and Freddie Mac Selling Updates Bulletin 2020-1 and Freddie Mac Multifamily Update on LIBOR Transition. The FHFA LIBOR Transition page notes that the GSEs have already stopped buying ARMs based on LIBOR that mature after 2021 in preparation for the termination of the benchmark’s use.

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance FHFA Fannie Mae Freddie Mac LIBOR GSE Mortgages Mortgage Lenders Of Interest to Non-US Persons SOFR

  • CFPB, DOE sign MOU on student loan complaint data

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance

    On February 3, the CFPB and the Department of Education (Department) announced a new agreement to share student loan complaint data. (See press releases here and here.) The newly signed Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) is the first information sharing agreement between the agencies since the Department terminated two MOUs in 2017. As previously covered by InfoBytes, the Department cancelled the “Memorandum of Understanding Between the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection and the U.S. Department of Education Concerning the Sharing of Information” and the “Memorandum of Understanding Concerning Supervisory and Oversight Cooperation and Related Information Sharing Between the U.S. Department of Education and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau,” and at the time rebuked the Bureau for overreaching and undermining the Department’s mission to serve students and borrowers.

    The new MOU clarifies the roles and responsibilities for each agency and permits the sharing of student loan complaint data analysis and other information and recommendations. Among other responsibilities, the Department will direct complaints related to private loans governed by TILA to the Bureau, and both agencies will discuss complaints regarding federal student loans with program issues that may have an impact on federal consumer financial laws. The agencies will also conduct quarterly meetings to discuss complaint observations and borrower characteristics, as well as complaint resolution information when available. Additionally, the MOU addresses permissible uses and confidentiality of exchanged information and the development of tools for sharing data analytics.

    The MOU was released a few days after Senators Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and Robert Menendez (D-NJ) sent a letter to CFPB Director Kathy Kraninger expressing frustration with the Bureau’s oversight of federal student loan servicers and delay in reestablishing an MOU with the Department that would allow the Bureau to resume examining federal student loan servicers.

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance CFPB Department of Education MOUs Consumer Complaints Student Lending

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