Senate Democrats have narrowed the scope of the bankruptcy provisions in a foreclosure prevention bill so that only nontraditional and subprime mortgages could be restructured by bankruptcy judges. The Democrats were pushing for a cloture vote on the bill Thursday (Feb. 28), and the financial services industry was lobbying to defeat it because of the bankruptcy provisions. The White House has threatened to veto the bill. If the Democrats can get 60 votes, it opens the door to debate and amendments before final passage. The original bill (S. 2636) would have given the bankruptcy courts the authority to reduce the principal amount or interest rate on any single-family mortgage. In trying to get Republican support, the authors limited the scope to nontraditional and subprime mortgages originated before the date of enactment. The Democrats also allow lenders to recoup any increase in the property's value if the bankruptcy filer sells the house within five years.
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The longtime Federal Reserve chair served under four presidents and presided over the deregulatory and pro-market push of the 1990s and early 2000s that set the stage for the 2008 mortgage crisis.
4h ago -
Life insurers have offloaded long-term policyholder liabilities into offshore reinsurance and captive subsidiaries, raising concerns over state oversight of opaque investment vehicles and whether insurers have adequately funded claims.
8h ago -
AI is leaving its marks in a wave of recent pro se litigation with fabricated citations and debunked arguments found throughout lawsuits, attorneys say.
8h ago -
The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals halted the Trump administration's attempt to fire nearly two-thirds of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's workforce, upholding a March 2025 injunction.
June 21 -
Anthropic's head of banking told New York Banking Summit attendees that the future is agents that operate autonomously alongside employees.
June 19 -
The industry association said total multifamily mortgage debt alone increased by $23 billion, or 1% in Q1, representing a $2.32 trillion increase from Q4 2025.
June 18









