Skip to main content
Menu Icon
Close

InfoBytes Blog

Financial Services Law Insights and Observations

Filter

Subscribe to our InfoBytes Blog weekly newsletter and other publications for news affecting the financial services industry.

  • FSB releases G20 roadmap for enhancing cross-border payments

    Federal Issues

    On October 10, the Financial Stability Board (FSB) published its priorities for the next phase of work under the G20 Roadmap for Enhancing Cross-Border Payments. According to the FSB, the plan includes steps to strengthen external engagement during the next phase of the group’s work. The FSB noted three priorities for the payment program’s next phase, which include: (i) payment system interoperability and extension; (ii) legal, regulatory and supervisory frameworks; and (iii) cross-border data exchange and message standards. The FSB further noted that it will coordinate work to develop further details of the actions that will take place to follow through with the plan, including discussions with industry participants. The updated roadmap will be provided during the first G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meeting in 2023.

    Federal Issues FSB Payments Of Interest to Non-US Persons

  • OCC releases bank supervision operating plan for FY 2023

    On October 6, the OCC’s Committee on Bank Supervision released its bank supervision operating plan for fiscal year 2023. The plan outlines the agency’s supervision priorities and highlights several supervisory focus areas including: (i) strategic and operational planning; (ii) operational resiliency; (iii) third-party oversight and risk management; (iv) credit risk management with a focus on new products, areas of highest growth, and portfolios representing concentrations; (v) allowances for credit losses (ACL), including instances where ACL processes use third-party modeling techniques; (vi) interest rate risk; (vii) liquidity risk management; (viii) consumer compliance management systems with a focus on how programs are disclosed in relation to UDAP and UDAAP statutes; (ix) Bank Secrecy Act/AML compliance; (x) fair lending risks; (xi) Community Reinvestment Act strategies and the potential for modernization rulemaking; (xii) new products and services in areas such as payments, fintech, and digital assets; and (xiii) climate-change risk management. The plan will be used by OCC staff to guide the development of supervisory strategies for individual national banks, federal savings associations, federal branches and agencies of foreign banking organizations, and certain identified third-party service providers subject to OCC examination.

    The OCC will provide updates about these priorities in its Semiannual Risk Perspective, as InfoBytes has previously covered here.

    Bank Regulatory Federal Issues OCC Supervision Digital Assets Fintech Privacy, Cyber Risk & Data Security UDAP UDAAP Bank Secrecy Act Anti-Money Laundering Climate-Related Financial Risks Fair Lending Third-Party Risk Management Risk Management

  • OCC announces updated FFIEC cyber resource guide

    On October 6, the OCC announced that the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) issued an update to the FFIEC Cybersecurity Resource Guide for Financial Institutions. According to the OCC, the 2022 FFIEC Cybersecurity Resource Guide for Financial Institutions provides a list of voluntary programs and actionable initiatives that are intended to help financial institutions meet their security control objectives and respond to cyber incidents. The 2022 guide rescinds and replaces the 2018 guide, and applies to a wide range of financial institutions including community banks. Highlights of the guidance include: (i) updated resource links for the Assessment, Exercise, Information Sharing, and Response and Reporting categories; and (ii) new ransomware specific resources.

    Bank Regulatory Federal Issues OCC FFIEC Privacy, Cyber Risk & Data Security

  • CFPB blogs about challenging inaccurate appraisals

    Federal Issues

    On October 6, the CFPB released a blog post regarding mortgage borrowers’ ability to challenge inaccurate appraisals through the reconsideration of value process (ROV). Among other things, the CFPB explained that “[a] lender’s reconsideration of value process must ensure that all borrowers have an opportunity to explain why they believe that a valuation is inaccurate and the benefit of a reconsideration to determine whether an adjustment is appropriate.” As required under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act Valuations Rule, the Bureau explained that some lenders include information regarding how to request a ROV in appraisals and other home valuations. The Bureau further noted that when lenders provide clear, plain-language notice of ROV opportunities to borrowers, lenders help ensure that their ROV process is nondiscriminatory. Lenders that do not have a clear and consistent method to ensure that borrowers can seek a ROV may risk violating federal law. The Bureau added that it has taken steps to implement legal requirements to limit bias in algorithmic appraisals, and that regulators are also providing more oversight over the activities of the Appraisal Foundation.

    Federal Issues CFPB Consumer Finance Mortgages Appraisal

  • CFPB seeks comments on mortgage refinance and forbearance standards

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance

    On September 27, the CFPB issued a notice in the Federal Register requesting input from the public regarding (i) the availability of refinance loans for borrowers with smaller mortgage loan balances, and (ii) options for mortgage forbearance. Specifically, the Bureau sought ways to: (i) “facilitate mortgage refinances for consumers who would benefit from refinancing, especially consumers with smaller loan balances”; and (ii) “reduce risks for consumers who experience disruptions in their financial situation that could interfere with their ability to remain current on their mortgage payments.” The Bureau also noted that some stakeholders have suggested that changes to the Bureau’s ability-to-repay/qualified mortgage rule (ATR–QM rule) may play a role in facilitating beneficial refinances through targeted and streamlined programs, noting that the current rule references “frictions” in the refinance process tied to QM standards. Comments are due by November 28.

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance Federal Issues CFPB Mortgages Refinance Consumer Finance Federal Register Ability To Repay Qualified Mortgage

  • White House proposes AI “Bill of Rights”

    Federal Issues

    Recently, the Biden administration’s Office of Science and Technology Policy released a Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights. The blueprint’s proposed framework identifies five principles for guiding the design, use, and deployment of automated systems to protect the public as the use of artificial intelligence grows. The principles center around topics related to stronger safety measures, such as (i) ensuring systems are safe and effective; (ii) implementing proactive protections against algorithmic discrimination; (iii) incorporating built-in privacy protections, including providing the public control over how data is used and ensuring that the data collection meets reasonable expectations and is necessary for the specific context in which it is being collected; (iv) providing notice and explanation as to how an automated system is being used, as well as the resulting outcomes; and (v) ensuring the public is able to opt out from automated systems in favor of a human alternative and has access to a person who can quickly help remedy problems. According to the announcement, the proposed framework’s principles should be incorporated into policies governing systems with “the potential to meaningfully impact” an individual or community’s rights or access to resources and services related to education, housing, credit, employment, health care, government benefits, and financial services, among others.

    Federal Issues Privacy, Cyber Risk & Data Security Biden Artificial Intelligence Fintech

  • FHA seeks to increase small balance mortgages

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance

    On October 4, FHA announced a request for information (RFI) seeking input on ways to facilitate greater origination of small balance mortgages for FHA insurance. FHA will use feedback received in response to the RFI to help identify barriers to the origination of small mortgages in its program. The agency will also consider the development of policies and programs to better support and expand affordable homeownership opportunities in underserved markets with lower housing prices and to close the racial homeownership gap. According to the announcement, the RFI seeks input on topics related to “the current availability of small mortgage financing, barriers and disincentives to small mortgage lending transactions, changes to policies or processes that would encourage origination of more FHA-insured small balance mortgages, and considerations regarding liquidity provided through securitization.” Comments on the RFI are due December 5.

    In conjunction with the RFI, HUD released a report assessing factors that limit the supply of small mortgage loans and highlighting challenges facing borrowers who need loans to purchase lower-priced homes. The report, titled Financing Lower-Priced Homes: Small Mortgage Loans, found that mortgage loans having an original principal obligation of $70,000 or less represent less than 3.5 percent of originations in 2020. Many of these loans secure properties valued at more than $70,000—an indication that the purchases included substantial down payments, HUD said. Among other things, the report also found that FHA disproportionately insures loans for lower-priced homes compared to the rest of the mortgage market and has loan insurance programs for financing property improvements and manufactured homes that are particularly targeted to lower loan amounts. Additionally, the report flagged the fixed costs of loan origination and servicing as a significant barrier to small mortgage lending, noting that this makes small mortgage loans less profitable and may necessitate additional incentives for lenders, such as reducing costs or providing additional lender or loan originator compensation.

    Agency Rule-Making & Guidance Federal Issues HUD FHA Mortgages Consumer Finance Mortgage Origination

  • Fed announces pilot climate scenario analysis for large banks

    On September 29, the Federal Reserve Board announced that six of the nation’s largest banks will participate in a pilot climate scenario analysis exercise intended to enhance the ability of supervisors and firms to measure and manage climate-related financial risks. The Fed noted that the scenario analysis, in which the resilience of banks is assessed under different hypothetical climate scenarios, is an emerging tool for assessing climate-related financial risks. The Fed further noted that the process is exploratory in nature and that “there will be no capital or supervisory implications from the pilot.” Over the course of the exercise, the participating banks will analyze the impacts of hypothetical climate scenarios on specific portfolios and business strategies. The climate analysis will be separate and distinct from bank stress tests, which are designed to assess whether large banks have enough capital to continue lending to households and businesses during a severe recession. The Fed noted that the climate scenario analysis "can assist firms and supervisors in understanding how climate-related financial risks may manifest and differ from historical experience.”

    Bank Regulatory Federal Issues Climate-Related Financial Risks Federal Reserve

  • Democrats urge FTC to update COPPA

    Privacy, Cyber Risk & Data Security

    On September 29, Senator Edward J. Markey (D-MA), along with three other Congressional Democrats, sent a letter to FTC Chair Lina Khan requesting that the Commission update its regulations under the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). The Senators encouraged the FTC to use its regulatory authority to update COPPA to implement additional protections addressing online threats to children as their use of technology increases. They laid out several areas for the FTC’s consideration, including (i) “expanding the definition of ‘personal information’ covered under COPPA”; (ii) “implementing rules to effectuate COPPA’s prohibition on conditioning a child’s participation in an online activity on the child sharing more data than is reasonably necessary”; (iii) “implementing rules to effectuate COPPA’s requirement that platforms protect the confidentiality, security, and integrity of children’s data”; (iv) “ensuring that COPPA’s requirements protect children on the platforms they actually use by updating COPPA’s regulations defining platforms that are directed to children and updating regulations defining platforms that have actual knowledge they are collecting data from children”; (v) “implementing regulatory protections that reflect the increased use of online platforms for educational purposes”; and “(vi) implementing regulatory protections that reflect changes in online advertising practices.”

    The Senators also applauded the FTC’s recently issued advanced notice of proposed rulemaking requesting feedback on questions related to a wide range of concerns about commercial surveillance practices (covered by InfoBytes here), including those involving children and teens, and advised the Commission to closely review and consider expert responses when crafting its rules aimed at the protection of children’s privacy.

    Privacy, Cyber Risk & Data Security Agency Rule-Making & Guidance FTC Federal Issues COPPA Consumer Protection

  • Fed finalizes debit card transaction requirement changes

    On October 3, the Federal Reserve Board adopted a final rule amending Regulation II, which implements Section 920 of the EFTA, to require that each debit card transaction, including “card-not-present” transactions, must be able to be processed on at least two unaffiliated payment card networks. The final rule, which is substantially similar to the Fed’s notice of proposed rulemaking issued in May 2021 (covered by InfoBytes here), also clarified that the debit card issuer is responsible for ensuring at least two unaffiliated networks have been enabled to process a debit card transaction, and standardizes and clarifies the use of certain terminology in the Fed’s Official Board Commentary on Regulation II. The Fed noted that when the rule was initially issued in 2011, the market had not yet developed solutions to broadly support multiple networks for card-not-present debit card transactions. Claiming technology has since evolved to address these challenges, the Fed said the final rule includes changes to make it easier for debit card issuers to determine whether they are in compliance and encourages competition between networks. The Fed noted, however, that the final rule does not modify interchange fee requirements. The agency said it will continue to review these requirements in light of recently collected debit card industry cost data, and may propose to modify these requirements in the future. The final rule is effective July 1, 2023.

    Federal Reserve Governor Michelle W. Bowman voted against adopting the final rule. “During the public comment process, community banks raised substantial concerns with the proposal,” she said. “Although the Board has attempted to identify the likely effects of the proposed rule based on available information, I believe that significant questions remain about how the rule will affect banks, and particularly community banks, with respect to both fraud and the cost of compliance. Given this continued uncertainty, I do not support the final rule.”

    Bank Regulatory Federal Issues Agency Rule-Making & Guidance Debit Cards Federal Reserve EFTA Regulation II

Pages

Upcoming Events