Proposed Rule 22 Apr 2025 securities, banking, federal reserve, administrative practice and procedure, reporting and recordkeeping requirements, financial institutions, banks, banking compliance, holding companies, federal reserve system, stress testing, capital regulation

💰Proposed Changes to Capital Plan Rule and Stress Capital Buffer

The Board is inviting public comment on a notice of proposed rulemaking (the proposal) that would amend the calculation of the Board's stress capital buffer requirement applicable to certain large bank holding companies, savings and loan holding companies, U.S. intermediate holding companies of foreign banking organizations, and nonbank financial companies supervised by the Board to reduce the volatility of the stress capital buffer requirement. The proposal would use the average of the maximum common equity tier 1 capital declines projected in each of the Board's prior two annual supervisory stress tests to inform a firm's stress capital buffer requirement. The proposal would also extend the annual effective date of the stress capital buffer requirement by one quarter, to January 1, to provide additional time for firms to comply with the requirement. In addition, the proposal would make changes to the FR Y-14A/Q/M reports to collect additional net income data that would improve the accuracy of the stress capital buffer requirement calculation, as well as remove data items that are no longer needed to conduct the supervisory stress test. The changes in the proposal are not designed to materially affect overall capital requirements and would decrease regulatory reporting burden.

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Rule 15 Apr 2025 compliance, regulation, government contracts, securities, banking, financial services, business and industry, electronic filing, administrative practice and procedure, accounting, reporting and recordkeeping requirements, aliens, intergovernmental relations, penalties, law enforcement, investigations, conflict of interests, small businesses, indians, treasury, authority delegations (government agencies), brokers, terrorism, banks, savings associations, crime, investment companies, gambling, holding companies, indians-tribal government, indians-law, citizenship and naturalization, insurance companies, time, commodity futures, currency, foreign currencies, foreign banking, government securities

📉Treasury Direct Final Rule on Eliminating Unnecessary Regulations

Pursuant to an Executive order, the Department of the Treasury (Treasury) is conducting a review of existing regulations, with the goal of reducing regulatory burden by revoking or revising existing regulations that meet the criteria set forth in the Executive order. In support of that objective, this direct final rule streamlines titles 12 and 31 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) by removing regulations that are no longer necessary or no longer have any current or future applicability.

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Rule 26 Mar 2025 compliance, regulation, small business, securities, banking, business and industry, electronic filing, administrative practice and procedure, reporting and recordkeeping requirements, aliens, reporting requirements, intergovernmental relations, penalties, law enforcement, investigations, small businesses, indians, authority delegations (government agencies), brokers, terrorism, banks, savings associations, crime, investment companies, gambling, holding companies, indians-tribal government, indians-law, citizenship and naturalization, insurance companies, time, commodity futures, currency, foreign companies, foreign currencies, financial crimes enforcement, foreign banking, beneficial ownership

📄Update on Beneficial Ownership Reporting Requirements and Exemptions

FinCEN is adopting this interim final rule to narrow the existing beneficial ownership information (BOI) reporting requirements under the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) to require only entities previously defined as "foreign reporting companies" to report BOI. Under this interim final rule, entities previously defined as "domestic reporting companies" are exempted from the reporting requirements and do not have to report BOI to FinCEN, or update or correct BOI previously reported to FinCEN. With limited exceptions, the interim final rule does not change the existing requirement for foreign reporting companies to file BOI reports, but it extends the deadline to file initial BOI reports, and to update or correct previously filed BOI reports, to 30 days from the date of this publication to give foreign reporting companies additional time to comply. However, the interim final rule exempts foreign reporting companies from having to report the BOI of any U.S. persons who are beneficial owners of the foreign reporting company and exempts U.S. persons from having to provide such information to any foreign reporting company for which they are a beneficial owner. FinCEN is accepting comments on this interim final rule. FinCEN will assess the exemptions, as appropriate, in light of those comments and intends to issue a final rule this year.

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Compliance, Regulatory Changes 17 Jan 2025 regulatory compliance, securities, banking, business and industry, electronic filing, administrative practice and procedure, reporting and recordkeeping requirements, business operations, aliens, inflation adjustment, penalties, law enforcement, investigations, small businesses, indians, authority delegations (government agencies), brokers, terrorism, banks, savings associations, investment companies, holding companies, indians-tribal government, indians-law, citizenship and naturalization, insurance companies, fincen, time, commodity futures, currency, financial penalties

⚖️FinCEN Final Rule

FinCEN is publishing this final rule to reflect inflation adjustments to its civil monetary penalties as mandated by the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990, as amended. This rule adjusts certain maximum civil monetary penalties within the jurisdiction of FinCEN to the amounts required by that Act.

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Compliance, Financial Services 14 Jan 2025 regulation, consumer protection, banking, reporting and recordkeeping requirements, consumer financial protection, cfpb, privacy, banks, national banks, credit unions, savings associations, medical debt, credit reporting, holding companies

🚫New CFPB Rule Prohibits Medical Debt in Credit Decisions

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is issuing a final rule amending Regulation V, which implements the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), concerning medical information. The FCRA prohibits creditors from considering medical information in credit eligibility determinations. The CFPB is removing a regulatory exception that had permitted creditors to obtain and use information on medical debts notwithstanding this statutory limitation. The final rule also provides that a consumer reporting agency generally may not furnish to a creditor a consumer report containing information on medical debt that the creditor is prohibited from using.

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