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December, 2012

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ยป VISIT US ONLINE @ DSNEWS.COM CFPB FINDS VIOLATIONS OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL LAWS AMONG LENDERS The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) released a Supervisory Highlights report, providing an overview of actions between July 2011 and September 2012. The report shows the agency found several instances in which financial institutions did not adhere to federal consumer financial laws. CFPB's supervisory reach extends over banks holding in excess of $10 billion in assets, as well as their affiliates; nonbanks that offer mortgagerelated services, private education loans, or payday loans; and other "larger participants" and nonbanks designated by the bureau. With regard to mortgage providers and originators, the CFPB pointed out a few specific areas of concern, adding that its examiners "noted instances of significant non-compliance." With regard to the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, the CFPB noted instances in which institutions did not properly disclose transaction costs and did not properly complete good faith estimates and HUD-1 settlement statements. The CFPB also noted violations of the Truth in Lending Act, including failure to provide consumers with accurate interest rates, payment amounts and schedules, late payments, security interests, and assumption policies. Some mortgage originators also did not comply with the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA), which requires them to report certain information to regulators and the public. The CFPB relies on HMDA data to determine whether credit is being provided fairly. Across all regulated entities, the CFPB found cases of "deficient compliance management systems" and failure to "effectively manage service providers acting on [their] behalf." The CFPB has requested institutions in violation of federal consumer compliance laws take corrective action. The agency has also required payment of $435 million to about 5.7 million consumers who were harmed by violations. Along with the release of its Supervisory Highlights report, the CFPB announced a new appeals process for financial institutions that do not agree with the CFPB's assessment and a new manual for the examiners acting on behalf of the agency. KNOW THIS Median household income fell 5.7% from June 2009, the official end of the recession, to August 2012, Sentier Research reports. 43

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