Politics and policy
Politics and policy
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California Attorney General Rob Bonta and 21 other AGs urged the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to include consumer costs for certain mortgage payment services in a review of "junk" charges.
April 12 -
Suburban pushback against a proposal that would have loosened regulations of new units in New York State led to its removal from the state budget.
April 11 -
The municipality and the bank have been at odds over similar issues in the past, and no agency currently has deposit accounts with the lender.
April 8 -
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer took a procedural step before the Senate leaves for a two-week break seeking to limit debate on Lael Brainard’s nomination for vice chair, as well as Lisa Cook’s nomination for Fed governor when lawmakers return.
April 7 -
Servicers of Fannie Mae- and Freddie Mac-backed loans should hit pause for up to 60 days once they know the borrower has sought relief, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
April 6 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau argues borrowers in the case had a right to answers even if the inquiries were origination related and foreclosure litigation was pending.
April 5 -
Louisiana's Transportation Secretary and the former Assistant to the President for Infrastructure discuss the state of play in the U.S. P3 sector, the impact of the new infrastructure law, and what's in store for the next decade.
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The core function of the Federal Home Loan Bank System — advances to member institutions — plummeted 20% last year to $350 billion, its lowest level in 15 years. That erosion of purpose is emboldening critics, who say the Home Loan banks need to change or face irrelevance.
April 4 -
Laws in at least a dozen states allow municipalities or investors to acquire valuable property to satisfy tax liens far below the asset’s value, a legal organization said.
April 1 -
Lawmakers during a committee meeting on senior housing doubled down on past arguments blaming investors and government spending for the nation’s tight market.
March 31 -
The Federal Housing Administration confirmed the exclusion of real estate taxes and hazard insurance premiums, and discussed timelines.
March 30 -
Consumers should be sharing in the benefits from this fiscal year’s expected earnings of $8.8 billion, said the CHLA's Scott Olson.
March 29 -
An analysis of Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data reveals that banks continue to trail nonbanks in volume and another reveals that despite some improvement, inequities in lending to minority groups persist.
March 28 -
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will potentially be banning business practices, forcing the divestiture of business lines and working with state agencies to revoke licenses, Director Rohit Chopra said Monday. He called out five big banks by name for repeatedly crossing legal lines.
March 28 -
Lawmakers also asked officials to include more perspectives from Veterans Affairs and USDA representatives and increase focus on manufactured home valuations.
March 24 -
Banking and credit union regulators are expected to respond to a White House call to root out discrimination in the predominantly white appraisal business. They will likely step up enforcement and data collection, reclaiming authority long ceded to the industry's governing body.
March 24 -
The actions involved are based on findings by an interagency task force first convened last year by Marcia Fudge, secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
March 23 -
Banking executives and analysts worry that the Federal Reserve's aggressive plan to raise interest rates will be insufficient to tame inflation and overcome economic fallout from the war in Ukraine.
March 21 -
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the central bank will take the “necessary steps” to get inflation down even if that means increasing interest rates more rapidly than currently anticipated and eventually to levels that slow the broader economy.
March 21 -
An audit found that mostly wealthy, white homeowners in urban counties were benefiting from the century-old policy.
March 21



















