Bill seeks finance agency compromise
Real estate brokers would be exempt from purview
By Inman News, Wednesday, September 23, 2009.The Obama administration's proposed Consumer Financial Protection Agency shouldn't have authority over real estate brokers and other businesses that bill customers after services are provided, such as doctors and lawyers, says Rep. Barney Frank, chairman of the powerful House Financial Services Committee.
In a memo to fellow members of the committee -- which on Wednesday kicked off three weeks of hearings on overhauling the financial regulatory system -- Frank, D-Mass., reportedly outlined changes he's prepared to make to the administration's proposed regulatory reforms in order to push a bill through Congress.
The American Financial Services Association is coordinating opposition to the proposed Consumer Financial Protection Agency, which would regulate financial products like mortgages and credit cards -- an effort the National Association of Realtors elected not to join (see story).
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce this month launched a campaign against the creation of the agency, "Stop the CFPA," claiming it would have authority over butchers and bakers who extend credit to customers.
In addition to exempting some nonfinancial businesses from oversight by a Consumer Financial Protection Agency, Frank said the agency should not have the power to require that lenders offer "plain vanilla" mortgages, the Washington Post reported.
As proposed by the Obama administration in June, the Consumer Financial Protection Agency would set standards, gather information from lenders, and provide information to consumers to protect them from deceptive lending practices. During the housing boom, no single regulator was charged with overseeing mortgage lenders, the Treasury Department said in proposing the agency (see Inman News story).
The Obama administration wants to give the agency the authority to develop a uniform mortgage disclosure form, require a "duty of care" for mortgage brokers, and ban "yield spread premiums" -- rebates paid by lenders when mortgage brokers place borrowers in high-interest-rate loans.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner outlined the Obama administration's proposals for financial regulatory reform at a hearing this morning.
"If enforcement and supervisory authorities remain divided among the agencies as they are today, we will continue to see regulatory inertia and arbitrage, uneven protection, and eroding standards," Geithner said in his prepared testimony. "Just as importantly, a rule-writing agency that does not receive information from and examine institutions and address their violations will not understand how institutions operate and the burdens that regulations put on them."
At an afternoon hearing, regulators who would see their roles revamped by the reform proposals -- including the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and Office of Thrift Supervision -- expressed their reservations. ...CONTINUED
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Submitted by John Rakoci on September 24, 2009 - 6:30am.
Let's hope there is some protection for consumers and also remember they have some responsibility. Next look into what possible agenda the administration could have.