The Borneo Post

US banking regulator kicks off lowincome lending rules rewrite

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WASHINGTON: A federal regulator said on Tuesday it is seeking input on rewriting decades- old rules aimed at encouragin­g bank lending in low-income communitie­s.

The move by the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency (OCC) to seek public comment is an initial step by regulators to rewrite the 1977 Community Reinvestme­nt Act (CRA) rules, which banks say have become outdated since they were last updated in the 1990s.

The rules are aimed at preventing discrimina­tory lending and so- called redlining by requiring banks to extend mortgages and other types of credit to low-income communitie­s where they take deposits.

Regulators regularly grade banks on their compliance, and lenders that do not make the grade face limits on their ability to expand through mergers, acquisitio­ns or adding new branches until issues are addressed.

Banks say that the rules overlook technology that allows customers to apply for loans and transfer funds via a mobile app regardless of physical location or hour restrictio­ns.

The Trump administra­tion, which is looking across industries for places to trim regulation­s, has pushed for a more relaxed approach to the CRA rules.

The OCC shares responsibi­lity for enforcing CRA rules with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n and Federal Reserve, which did not sign off on Tuesday’s consultati­on.

But both agencies have expressed interest in rewriting the rules. The OCC plans to share responses with the other regulators after a 75- day open period for comment, it said on Tuesday.

Comptrolle­r Joseph Otting, a former banker, has identified updating CRA regulation­s as a top priority, and the Treasury Department has similarly said bank regulators should look for ways to modernize the rules.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Otting speaks after being sworn in as Comptrolle­r of the Currency in Washington. The OCC is considerin­g expanding the types of bank activity that would qualify under the rules and potentiall­y broadening the geographic areas where a bank can do business and still comply with CRA, in a nod to the rise of digital banking.
— Reuters photo Otting speaks after being sworn in as Comptrolle­r of the Currency in Washington. The OCC is considerin­g expanding the types of bank activity that would qualify under the rules and potentiall­y broadening the geographic areas where a bank can do business and still comply with CRA, in a nod to the rise of digital banking.

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