TARP's Warren Not Ready to Concede on CFPA

Despite the dimming prospects for the creation of an independent Consumer Financial Protection Agency, TARP watchdog Elizabeth Warren isn't ready to consider alternatives. "Right now there is no Plan B," Ms. Warren, the chairman of the Troubled Asset Relief Program's Congressional Oversight Panel, said in response to a reporter's question on a conference call. "Right now all the chips are on the table with the Consumer Financial Protection Agency." If the CFPA becomes reality it would oversee mortgages, credit cards and other types of consumer debt, taking certain oversight functions away from federal banking regulators. The conference call was organized by the U.S. Public Interest Research Group ahead of a Monday compliance deadline for the Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility and Disclosure Act.

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