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Tuesday, March 09, 2021

CFPB: Discrimination by lenders on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity is illegal

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau today issued an interpretive rule clarifying that the prohibition against sex discrimination under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act and Regulation B includes sexual orientation discrimination and gender identity discrimination. This prohibition also covers discrimination based on actual or perceived nonconformity with traditional sex- or gender-based stereotypes, and discrimination based on an applicant’s social or other associations. The rule follows a request for public comment issued by the CFPB last July.

The rule is here. The CFPB's press release is here.

Posted by Allison Zieve on Tuesday, March 09, 2021 at 07:40 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Monday, March 08, 2021

CFPB report: More than 11 million families at risk of losing housing

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau last week issued a report warning that, without additional action, widespread evictions and foreclosures will occur after federal, state, and local pandemic protections come to an end. The report finds that more than 11 million families are behind on their rent or mortgage payments: 2.1 million families are behind at least three months on mortgage payments, and 8.8 million are behind on rent. Homeowners are estimated to owe almost $90 billion in missed payments. 

The report is here.

Posted by Allison Zieve on Monday, March 08, 2021 at 02:19 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Friday, March 05, 2021

Blast from the past: post on Barney Frank's autobiography

by Jeff Sovern

Barney Frank is speaking today at the Berkeley Consumer Law Scholars Conference. Here's something I posted in 2015 on his autobiography:

I just finished listening to the audio version of Barney Frank's autobiography, Frank: A Life in Politics from the Great Society to Same-Sex Marriage, which Frank reads himself. I listened to it to learn more about consumer law--Frank was so involved in creating the CFPB that the statute doing so carries his name--but the book doesn't actually add much to what I have encountered elsewhere on the subject (though it adds a little, as noted below).  Nevertheless, the book is well worth listening to. Frank is an entertaining and informative writer and I loved his volume.  Regular readers of the blog will probably care about many of the issues Frank discusses and will likely enjoy learning more about Frank's insights into Congress and the electoral process. 

Despite what I just wrote, the book has a few interesting items on consumer protection issues.  Critics of the Dodd-Frank Act and other consumer protection laws often charge that government regulation led to the Great Recession in that lenders were forced to make unwise loans by laws supported by Democrats (see below).  This, of course, is hard to reconcile with the fact that at the time the Great Recession hit, we had had a Republican president for nearly eight years, and Congress had been in Republican control for much of that time. Yet somehow, the minority party ruled banking.  In fact, as Frank points out, Republicans opposed efforts to restrain subprime lending.  Here are a couple of memorable quotes Frank includes in an appendix:

In 2007, Jeb Hensarling, now chair of the House Committee on Financial Services, said the following during a Committee hearing to consider a bill to limit subprime lending:

We still have to remember that millions of people have homeownership opportunities due to a subprime market. I am very leery of any legislation that could under cut that market.

And from the Wall Street Journal, a November 6, 2007 editorial about the same bill, titled A Sarbox for Housing: 

Throughout the 1980s and '90s, Congress prodded, even strong-armed, banks into making more mortgage loans to low-income and minority families. Washington enacted anti-discrimination and community lending laws with penalties against lenders for failing to issue riskier mortgages to homebuyers living in poor neighborhoods or with low downpayments and subpar credit ratings. And so it was that the modern subprime mortgage market was born.

* * *

But for all the demonizing [of subprime lenders], about 80% of even subprime loans are being repaid on time and another 10% are only 30 days behind. Most of these new homeowners are low-income families, often minorities, who would otherwise not have qualified for a mortgage. In the name of consumer protection, Mr. Frank's legislation will ensure that far fewer of these loans are issued in the future.

In other words, even though bad government regulation created the subprime market, that market is so wonderful that we shouldn't regulate it. Of course, we all know what happened because that market was insufficiently regulated.  Oh, and just to make clear, I don't agree that bad regulation created the subprime market. 

Posted by Jeff Sovern on Friday, March 05, 2021 at 10:13 AM in Book & Movie Reviews, Consumer History, Foreclosure Crisis | Permalink | Comments (0)

Monday, March 01, 2021

Senate Banking Committee hearing on nomination of Rohit Chopra to lead CFPB tomorrow, Tuesday, at 10 Eastern

by Jeff Sovern

You should be able to listen here. The American Banker's Kate Berry has a story here, behind a paywall, unfortunately, but if you have Lexis, you can read it there. Excerpt:

[Chopra's] aggressive past statements coupled with the power and high profile that comes with the CFPB job could lead to some pointed questions from GOP lawmakers at his hearing, and potential opposition from some members on the Senate floor. Democrats hold a razor thin majority, with Vice President Kamala Harris casting a tiebreaking vote.

Some critics may bristle at Chopra’s use of more inflammatory language about business malfeasance than the tone set by Kraninger.

To some observers, Chopra is reminiscent of former CFPB Director Richard Cordray, who issued press releases creating headline risk for large public companies. Chopra’s chief of staff at the FTC, Jen Howard, had been the CFPB’s assistant communications director under Cordray. If Chopra is confirmed, she is expected to become the CFPB’s chief of staff, sources said.

“He will be at least as aggressive as former Director Cordray, if not more so,” said Lucy Morris, a partner at Hudson Cook and a former CFPB deputy enforcement director who worked with Chopra in the CFPB’s early years. “His statements are very hard-hitting and the language is quite charged.”

His public comments and tweets provide a road map for how he would govern as the nation’s top cop for enforcing consumer financial laws.

“He has a very lengthy consumer protection record,” said Linda Jun, senior policy counsel at the Americans for Financial Reform Education Fund. “He believes in meaningful accountability. When people are harmed and companies break the law, he thinks there needs to be consequences.”

Ballard Spahr held a very informative webinar about what to expect from Chopra, with guest Richard Cordray. If you missed the webinar, you can listen to the last two episodes of their Consumer Financial Monitor Podcast, which recycled much, if not all, of the webinar's content. The Ballard podcast is one of my favorites consumer law podcasts, by the way.

Posted by Jeff Sovern on Monday, March 01, 2021 at 11:10 AM in Consumer Financial Protection Bureau | Permalink | Comments (0)

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