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The conference battle

May 24, 2010 | federal legislation, industry | Comments (1)

Consumer groups happy with the bill but want more.  From the story:

Travis Plunkett, the legislative director of the Consumer Federation of America, points to investor protections as the “big hole” remaining in the bill. “The House legislation is stronger on making sure that financial professionals are responsible for the advice they give,” he says. But the CFA is also focusing on ensuring a strong, independent CFPA comes from the conference committee process. He named a loophole in the Senate bill regarding the CFPA’s ability to monitor small non-bank lenders, like payday lenders, as problematic. “We’d like to see the House language triumph there,” he said, noting that the difference would amount to millions for low-income Americans.

The Center for Responsible Lending, a nonpartisan research group, cites whether auto lenders are under the CFPA’s oversight as an issue to watch. The Center estimates that consumers spend $20 billion more a year on their car loans because they borrow through dealerships — whose contracts can be usurious and difficult to understand — rather than banks or credit unions. Kathleen Day, a spokesperson for the organization, notes that the House bill exempts auto lenders from CFPA regulation and that car companies are lobbying hard to keep it that way in the final legislation.

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Comments»

1. iowaoperator - May 24, 2010

Basically the CRL won’t be happy until every lender in the country is lending for Free. Except for their “Self-Help,” credit unions of course!