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Dodd-Frank Act's bureaucracy to kill hundreds of small banks "Change is coming," warns interim Consumer Financial Protection Bureau chief Elizabeth Warren. This summer, her potentially massive new agency will rewrite and enforce rules for the entire financial sector. "We will build a strong enforcement arm," she vowed in March. "More than half our budget will be committed to establishing supervision and meaningful enforcement." That has bankers petrified. The American Bankers Association predicts the Dodd-Frank Act, which created the CFPB, will help drive more than 1,000 banks out of business by the end of the decade. Bankers say the bureau is empowered to demand any information it wants from any bank at any time and in any form. That means spending more time and money filing reports and huddling with regulators vs. serving customers. Banks will be subject to some 20 new reporting mandates under the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, including data fields on loan pricing designed to help regulators police "predatory lending." For the first time, banks also must collect and report data to the bureau on credit applications made by minority-owned businesses. CFPB will analyze the data for discrimination, in consultation with an advisory board including inner-city activists. Small Banks' Big Headache The law creates an unparalleled disclosure headache, especially for smaller banks, which incur disproportionately higher costs for compliance. That is "bad news for community banks already collapsing under mountainous regulatory burdens," said ABA Chairman Stephen Wilson, who also heads Cincinnati-based LCNB National Bank. Some 42 mostly smaller banks have folded this year amid continued loan woes. Community banks make loans that big banks wouldn't touch. Fewer banks mean fewer sources of capital, as well as higher rates and fees for customers. "If we tie up our capital system, it's going to take money away from the people who need it to create jobs," warned U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donohue. The law also heightens litigation risk. Smaller banks can't afford the army of lawyers required to fend off federal redlining complaints and consumer lawsuits. Dodd-Frank makes it easier for borrowers to sue lenders to get out of mortgages that contain so-called "abusive" features banned by the bureau, including high interest charges and fees and prepayment penalties. The powerful credit cop also will enforce "fair-lending" rules outlawing credit discrimination. The Warren Court CFPB is set to launch July 21. As the only agency dedicated solely to consumer protection, it will need to grow massively to cover its broad jurisdiction — which includes banks, independent mortgage lenders, credit unions, credit cards and student loans. May 23, 2011 at 6:57 PM Posted by Mo Choumil |
-Julia Greenway
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