Firms that securitize mortgages and other assets will have to take a 10% first loss position on any new issuances under draft legislation being discussed in Congress. House Financial Services Committee chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass., said requiring a first loss hit for securitizers would stop Wall Street firms from providing liquidity on mortgages that borrowers cannot repay. Rep. Frank, a key player in any MBS related legislation, noted that assignee liability on MBS failed to stop bad underwriting practices during the subprime boom. The committee chairman is working with the Senate Banking Committee and Treasury Department in drafting proposals that the Obama Administration will present at an international summit on systemic risk in April.
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Balance sheet reduction is a top priority of new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh. Achieving that goal means avoiding the kinds of disruptions that roiled the Treasury bond market in 2019, the last time the central bank embarked on quantitative tightening.
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The government said it was responding to a jailbreaking risk that Anthropic says is minimal.
June 13 -
Lawmakers from both parties defended regional Federal Reserve banks against potential consolidation, arguing local economic perspectives are essential to ensure monetary policy remains sound.
June 12 -
Under the proposed rule, the definition of a manufactured home would allow upper floor sections to be transported and constructed without a permanent chassis.
June 12 -
Even though the SAFE Act does not require AI loan officers licensing, other laws, as well as regulators, still look for a person to be responsible.
June 12 -
The government-related market's push has intensified efforts to draw up classic FICO comparisons or set up interim rating policies pending more data.
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