Uncategorised
Cadwalader's Reg-tracker for the second half of December

Our Regulatory Tracker is a list of effective dates, comment deadlines, compliance dates and expiration dates for the United States of America.
Comment deadlines
December 22: FTC - Duties of creditors
regarding the Risk-Based Pricing Rule. The Federal Trade
Commission is asking for comments from the public about its
Duties of Creditors Regarding Risk-Based Pricing Rule as part of
a systematic review of all its regulations and guidelines. It is
also proposing to amend the rule to correspond to changes made to
the Fair Credit Reporting Act by the Dodd- Frank Act.
December 28: NCUA - Derivatives rule.
The National Credit Union Administration [one of two federal
agencies that provide deposit insurance to depositors in US
depository institutions, the other being the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation] is updating this rule to make it more
principles-based. It wants to give federal credit unions or FCUs
more leeway to manage their interest rate risks (IRRs) through
the use of derivatives.
Effective dates
December 24: CFPB - Amendments Relating to
Disclosure of Records and Information. This final rule,
issued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau which protects
consumers in the financial sector from sharp practice, concerns
the confidentiality of information that it obtains from persons
in the course of its duties.
December 28: SEC - Publication or submission
of quotations without specified information. The Securities
and Exchange Commission is changing Rule 15c2-11 that it issued
in accordance with the Securities Exchange Act 1934, which
governs the publication of quotations for securities in a
quotation medium other than a national securities exchange, i.e.,
over-the-counter (OTC) securities. The amendments are designed
to: require information about issuers to be current and publicly
available "for broker-dealers to quote their securities in the
OTC market"; make firms rely less on certain exceptions from the
rule, including the "piggyback exception"; and add new exceptions
for the quotations of securities that might make them less
susceptible to fraud and manipulation.
December 28: OCC, FRB and FDIC - Certain
emergency facilities in the Regulatory Capital Rule and the
Liquidity Coverage Ratio Rule. The Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation are adopting
revisions to the regulatory capital rule and the liquidity
coverage ratio (LCR) rule made by three "interim final rules"
published in the Federal Register on March 23, April 13 and May
6. The agencies are adopting these rules as 'final' with no
changes.
December 29: Comptroller - National banks
and Federal Savings Associations as lenders. The Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) is issuing this final rule
to determine when a national bank or federal savings association
(also a bank) makes a loan and is the “true lender,” not least in
the context of a partnership between a bank and a third party
such as a marketplace lender. Under this rule, a bank makes a
loan if, as of the date of origination, it is named as the lender
in the loan agreement or funds the loan.
December 30: CFTC - Swap clearing
requirement exemptions. The Commodity Futures Trading
Commission or CFTC is amending the regulations that exempt
various swaps from the clearing requirement set forth in
applicable provisions of the Commodity Exchange Act.
Expiration dates
December 31: NCUA - Real-estate
appraisals. This is the end of an interim final rule that
defers the requirement to obtain an appraisal or written estimate
of market value for up to 120 days after the closing of a
transaction for certain residential and commercial real-estate
transactions, excluding transactions for the acquisition,
development and construction of real estate.
December 31: NCUA - Temporary regulatory
relief in response to COVID-19. The NCUA is temporarily
modifying certain regulatory requirements to keep federally
insured credit unions (FICUs) operational and 'liquid' during
this pandemic. It is issuing two temporary changes to its prompt
corrective action (PCA) regulations. The first amends its
regulations to enable it temporarily to issue an order applicable
to all FICUs to waive the earnings retention requirement for any
FICU that it has classified as adequately capitalised. The second
modifies its regulations with respect to the documents required
for net worth restoration plans (NWRPs) for FICUs that become
undercapitalised. These temporary modifications will be in place
until 31 December.
December 31: SEC - Limited exemptive relief
from Regulation SHO due to COVID-19, The SEC provided
limited exemptive relief from the “locate” and "close-out"
requirements under its short sale regulations (Regulation SHO).
It did so because of the COVID-19-related intermittent suspension
of physical securities processing by the Depository Trust Company
or DTC. The relief applies to the sales of equity securities that
the seller is "deemed to own" and for which the settlement is
contingent on the delivery of physical certificates
(to-be-delivered physical securities).
December 31: OCC, FRB and FDIC - Real estate
appraisals. This is the end of a final rule that allows
financial institutions an additional 120 days after a real-estate
closing transaction to obtain an appraisal or evaluation of the
property. It came into force on October 16 and will end
shortly.
December 31: NCUA - Temporary regulatory
relief in response to COVID-19. This is the end (unless
extended at the last minute) of measures to keep federally
insured credit unions (FICUs) operational and 'liquid' during the
pandemic. The NCUA temporarily raised the maximum aggregate
amount of loan participations that an FICU may purchase from a
single originating lender to either $5 million or 200% of the
FICU's net worth, whichever is the greater. It also temporarily
suspended limitations on the eligible obligations that a federal
credit union (FCU) may purchase and hold.
Reporting deadline
December 31: FinCEN - Relief to firms that submit FBARs that fall victim to natural disasters. This is the end of some 'relief' provided by the US Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network for submitters of Reports of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBARs) that have suffered from the California wildfires, the Iowa derecho, Hurricane Laura, the Oregon wildfires and Hurricane Sally. FinCEN extended the FBAR reporting deadline for them from October 15 until December 31.