August 2025Transmittal 534
Effective: 8/1/2025
Consumer and Community Affairs
CFPB’s Regulation
B
In light of court orders in ongoing litigation,
the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is amending Regulation
B to extend the compliance dates set forth in its 2023 small business
lending rule, as amended by a 2024 interim final rule, and to make
other date-related conforming adjustments.
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The interim final rule is effective
July 18, 2025 (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Regulation B, Docket CFPB-2025-0017) and was published in
the Federal Register on June 18, 2025.CFPB’s Regulation X
The CFPB is rescinding
the final rule “Protections for Borrowers Affected by the COVID-19
Emergency Under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA),
Regulation X.”
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The interim final rule is effective July 15, 2025 (Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau, Regulation X, Docket CFPB-2025-0014) and was published in
the Federal Register on May 16, 2025.Proposed Rules
The Board, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and the Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency (OCC) are inviting public comment on a notice of proposed
rulemaking to modify the enhanced supplementary leverage ratio standards
applicable to U.S. bank holding companies identified as global systemically
important bank holding companies (G-SIBs) and their depository institution
subsidiaries.
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Specifically, the proposal would modify the enhanced supplementary
leverage ratio buffer standard applicable to G-SIBs to equal 50 percent
of the bank holding company’s method 1 surcharge as determined by
the Board’s G-SIB risk-based capital surcharge framework. The proposal
would also modify the enhanced supplementary leverage ratio standard
for depository institution subsidiaries of G-SIBs to have the same
form and calibration as the G-SIB parent level standard. The proposed
modifications would help ensure that the enhanced supplementary leverage
ratio standards serve as a backstop to risk-based capital requirements
rather than as a constraint that is frequently binding over time and
through most points in the economic and credit cycle, thus reducing
potential disincentives for G-SIBs and their depository institution
subsidiaries to participate in low-risk, low-return businesses. The
Board is also proposing to amend its total loss-absorbing capacity
and long-term debt requirements to maintain alignment between these
requirements and the enhanced supplementary leverage ratio standards.
The OCC is proposing to revise the methodology it uses to identify
which national banks and federal savings associations are subject
to the enhanced supplementary leverage ratio standards to better align
with the agencies’ regulatory tailoring framework for large banking
organizations and ensure that the standards apply only to those national
banks and federal savings associations that are subsidiaries of a
G-SIB. The Board is also proposing to make conforming amendments to
relevant regulatory reporting forms. The Board and the FDIC are also
proposing to make certain technical corrections to the capital rule.
Comments on this notice of proposed rulemaking must be received by
August 26, 2025 (Docket R-1867).The Board is
seeking comment on proposed revisions to its large financial institution
(LFI) rating system (LFI framework) and the rating system for depository
institution holding companies significantly engaged in insurance activities,
referred to as supervised insurance organizations (insurance supervisory
framework), which is modeled on the LFI framework.
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The proposal would revise the
component ratings that a firm must receive to be considered “well
managed” under the frameworks. The proposed revisions reflect experience
with the LFI framework since its introduction in 2018. Specifically,
the proposed changes aim to ensure that a firm’s “well managed” status
reflects that the firm has sufficient financial and operational strength
and resilience to maintain safe-and-sound operations through a range
of conditions, including stressful ones. The proposed revisions also
seek to further align the application of the frameworks with the operation
of other existing supervisory rating systems. The proposed revisions
would not change the scope of firms to which the frameworks apply.
Other changes to the frameworks and existing supervisory rating systems
will be considered in the future. Comments on this notice of proposed
revisions must be received by August 14, 2025 (Docket OP-1868).