October 2025Transmittal 536
Effective: 10/1/2025
Holding and Nonbank Financial Companies
Regulation Y and CFPB’s Regulation Z
The Board,
the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the National
Credit Union Administration, and the Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency are adopting a final rule to implement the quality control
standards mandated by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act for the use of automated valuation models (AVMs) by
mortgage originators and secondary market issuers in determining the
collateral worth of a mortgage secured by a consumer’s principal dwelling.
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Under the final
rule, institutions that engage in certain credit decisions or securitization
determinations must adopt policies, practices, procedures, and control
systems to ensure that AVMs used in these transactions to determine
the value of mortgage collateral adhere to quality control standards
designed to ensure a high level of confidence in the estimates produced
by AVMs; protect against the manipulation of data; seek to avoid conflicts
of interest; require random sample testing and reviews; and comply
with applicable nondiscrimination laws. The final rule is effective
October 1, 2025 (Regulation Y and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Regulation Z, Docket R-1807) and was published in the Federal Register on August 7, 2024.Consumer and Community Affairs
CFPB’s
Regulation E and CFPB’s Regulation Z
The CFPB
is amending Regulations E and Z to update regulatory exceptions for
overdraft credit provided by very large financial institutions, thereby
ensuring that these extensions of overdraft credit adhere to consumer
protections required of similarly situated products, unless the overdraft
fee is a small amount that only recovers estimated costs and losses.
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The rule allows
consumers to better comparison shop across credit products and provides
substantive protections that apply to other consumer credit. The final
rule is effective October 1, 2025 (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Regulation E and Regulation Z, Docket CFPB-2024-0002) and was published in
the Federal Register on December 30, 2024.Proposed Rules
The U.S.
Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network
(FinCEN) is proposing to amend the Anti-Money Laundering/Countering
the Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) Program and Suspicious Activity
Report (SAR) Filing Requirements for Registered Investment Advisers
and Exempt Reporting Advisers (IA AML Rule) to delay the effective
date from January 1, 2026, to January 1, 2028. Comments on this notice
of proposed rulemaking must be received by October 22, 2025.