|
MEDIA RELEASE / March 11, 2009
Conference of State Bank
Supervisors
1155 Connecticut Avenue NW, 5th Floor,
Washington, DC 20036
CSBS Says Future Mortgage Reform
Legislation Should Build On States’ Initiatives in Mortgage
Supervision
WASHINGTON D.C. — In testimony
today before the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Financial
Institutions and Consumer Credit, Massachusetts Commissioner of Banks
Steven L. Antonakes said that states are leading the fight to reign in
abusive lending through predatory lending laws, licensing and
supervision of mortgage lenders and brokers, and through tough
enforcement of consumer protection laws.
Testifying on behalf of the Conference of
State Bank Supervisors (CSBS) at a hearing on Mortgage Lending Reform,
Antonakes saidstates have been active in mortgage regulation since the
1980s, when the first states passed mortgage broker licensing
laws.
“All 50 states, plus the District
of Columbia, have now adopted some form of regulatory oversight of the
residential mortgage industry,” he said.
Antonakes said that CSBS actively supported the Mortgage Reform and
Anti-Predatory Lending Act that was introduced in the last
Congress. CSBS supports a national anti-predatory lending act, but
only if the legislation establishes a federal minimum predatory lending
standard that allows the states to further address predatory practices
as they evolve.
“The federal standard must be a
floor for all lenders that does not stifle a state’s authority to
protect its citizens through state legislation that builds on the
federal standard.
CSBS also supported the Housing and
Economic Recovery Act of 2008, which included the S.A.F.E. Mortgage
Licensing Act, which created a state-federal model for regulation and
supervision.
Antonakes cited a number of state
initiatives that have been undertaken over the past several years to
enhance mortgage supervision, including the development of the
Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System (NMLS), which serves as the
foundation of modern mortgage supervision. Only 15 months after its
launch on Jan. 2, 2008, 23 states are now using the System for mortgage
licensing. CSBS expects 40 states to be using NMLS by January
2010.
Since the passage of S.A.F.E., the
states, through CSBS, drafted the Model State Law for uniform
implementation of the S.A.F.E. Act. CSBS expects all 50 states will
adopt the model law by its deadline, Aug. 1, 2009,
“Much progress has been made towards enhancing supervision of
the residential mortgage industry, as federal and state regulators have
engaged in an unprecedented number of cooperative initiatives and
agreements, including guidelines, best practices, and regulations to
prevent abusive lending in the mortgage industry.
He pointed to a pilot program initiated late in 2007, where CSBS, the
Federal Reserve System, the Federal Trade Commission, and the Office of
Thrift Supervision engaged in a pilot program to examine the mortgage
industry.
Other programs undertaken by the states, through CSBS and the
American Association of Residential Mortgage Regulators (AARMR),
include:
- Issuance of CSBS-AARMR Guidance on Nontraditional Mortgage Product
Risks that paralleled the federal agencies’ Interagency Guidance
on Nontraditional Mortgage Product Risks
- Establishment of state Model Examination Guidelines for field
implementation of the aforementioned guidance
- Development of a Nationwide Cooperative Protocol and Agreement for
Mortgage Supervision setting forth a basic framework for supervising
multi-state mortgage entities
- Development and implementation of Reverse Mortgage Examination
Guidelines
“While much is being done to enhance supervision of the
mortgage market, more progress must be made towards the development of a
coordinated and cooperative system of state-federal supervision,”
Antonakes added,
He urged Congress to implement a recommendation made by the
Congressional Oversight Panel in its “Special Report on Regulatory
Reform” to eliminate federal preemption of the application of
state consumer protection laws to national banks.
He also recommended Congress must address systemic risk, but not
enact measures that would place community banks at a disadvantage.
Antonakes emphasized that states must remain active in mortgage
supervision “because of our knowledge of local economies and our
ability to react quickly and decisively to protect consumers.”
# # #
Antonakes’s testimony may be found
at http://www.house.gov/apps/list/hearing/financialsvcs_dem/antonakes031109.pdf
The Conference of State Bank Supervisors
is the nationwide regulatory organization for state banking,
representing the bank regulators of the 50 states, the District of
Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. The CSBS is
responsible for defending state authority to determine banking structure
and the products and services state-chartered institutions can offer and
for improving the quality of state bank supervision by providing
department performance evaluation and accreditation programs and
supervisory education/training programs for state banking department
personnel.
CSBS Information Contact: John Ryan, CSBS
Executive Vice President, jryan@csbs.org (202)
728-5724
|