AFR Statement on CFPB Mortgage Lending Rule
“[P]ortions of today’s rule should have been stronger, and the CFPB has put one very important question on the table for further comment, creating a risk of further slippage.”
“[P]ortions of today’s rule should have been stronger, and the CFPB has put one very important question on the table for further comment, creating a risk of further slippage.”
The rules… are “likely to resemble” an October draft that “extended a legal safe harbor to loans issued at prime interest rates to borrowers whose total debt-to-income ratio doesn’t exceed 43 percent.”
With new rules for mortgage lending and servicing due to be issued soon, the Bureau faces an important opportunity to make the housing market work better for families and communities.
More specificity and disclosure are needed in the big banks’ “living wills.”
International regulators have “effectively gutted” a requirement that was supposed to provide a crucial protection against financial instability.
Fund backed by physical copper “effectively creates a corner on the market,” AFR’s Marcus Stanley tells The New Republic.
“These actions run far too deep and are much too extensive to be written off as the behavior of a few ‘rogue traders.'”
As speculative interest increases, this vital industrial commodity will be withdrawn from the market, and prices for real-economy businesses and consumers will increase.
AFR tele-conference explores a major threat to Dodd-Frank derivatives reforms.
In a statement submitted to the House Agriculture Committee, AFR explains why U.S. oversight agencies must regulate international derivatives transactions in order to protect the U.S. economy.