What Dodd Bill Means for Mortgage Bankers and Brokers

A new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau could examine any mortgage banking company, servicer or mortgage brokerage and take enforcement actions against those entities if the Senate passes a bill crafted by Banking Committee chairman Christopher Dodd, D-Conn. The CFPB would be housed at the Federal Reserve Board but operate as an autonomous unit when writing rules to curb abusive mortgage lending and credit card practices at banks and nonbanks. If a banking regulator objects to a CFPB rule, it would take a two-thirds vote of the members of the new Systemic Risk Council to kill the rule. The CFPB's authority over banks and credit unions depends on size. Institutions with assets over $10 billion could be subject to the bureau's exams and enforcement actions. The primary regulators of smaller institutions would retain that authority. Sen. Dodd said he wants the banking committee to markup and vote on his "Restoring American Financial Stability" bill next week. The massive bill merges the Office of Thrift Supervision into the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, regulates derivatives, increases oversight of credit rating agencies and establishes risk retention for mortgage-backed securities.

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