Conference Reaches Deal on Financial Regulatory Reform
The House-Senate Conference to reconcile financial regulatory reform reached a final agreement on the legislation on Friday. The "Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act" calls for the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, an independent agency to be housed at the Federal Reserve, with a broad mandate to regulate consumer financial services of virtually all types.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will have an independent director appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate, with an independent budget and independent rule writing, examination, and enforcement authority. The CFPB consolidates consumer protection responsibilities of the OCC, OTS, FDIC, Federal Reserve, NCUA, HUD, and the FTC. Among other things, the legislation also creates a new Office of Financial Literacy to disseminate information to consumers and a new consumer hotline for consumer questions.
Continue Reading...New Furnisher Rules Effective July 1
The new rules for furnishers of credit reporting information take effect on July 1, 2010. Subject to several exceptions, the rules implement two significant changes for furnishers.
First, the rules require furnishers to implement reasonable written policies and procedures regarding the accuracy and integrity of consumer information. Second, the rules require furnishers to conduct a reasonable investigation into disputes related to credit reporting submitted to a furnisher directly by a consumer. The Fair Credit Reporting Act rules now in place require such an investigation only after a furnisher receives notice of dispute from a credit reporting agency. Significantly, if a furnisher provides a specific correspondence address for such disputes, the furnisher need only respond to disputes submitted to that address.
Fed Issues Final Credit Card Rules
The Federal Reserve yesterday announced its final rule amending Regulation Z regarding late payment fees, interest rate changes, and other penalty fees. The final rule makes a number of significant amendments to Reg Z, including:
- Prohibits credit card issuers from charging a penalty fee of more than $25 for paying late or otherwise violating the account's terms unless the consumer has engaged in repeated violations or the issuer can show that a higher fee represents a reasonable proportion of the costs it incurs as a result of violations.
- Prohibits credit card issuers from charging penalty fees that exceed the dollar amount associated with the consumer's violation. For example, card issuers will no longer be permitted to charge a $39 fee when a consumer is late making a $20 minimum payment. Instead, the fee cannot exceed $20.
- Bans "inactivity" fees, such as fees based on the consumer's failure to use the account to make new purchases.
- Prevents issuers from charging multiple penalty fees based on a single late payment or other violation of the account terms.
- Requires issuers that have increased rates since January 1, 2009 to evaluate whether the reasons for the increase have changed and, if appropriate, to reduce the rate.
The Fed now publishes an online credit card guide for consumers and has issued a new publication with details on the credit card changes effective August 22.
Tracking the Conference on Financial Regulatory Reform
The House-Senate Conference to reconcile financial regulatory reform legislation begins today. Track the conference with the House Financial Services Committee or the Senate Banking Committee. The hearing also will be broadcast live on C-SPAN and webcast live at the House Financial Services Committee site.