Connecticut Issues “true Lender” guidance
The Connecticut Banking Department has issued guidance on the recent amendments to the Connecticut Small Loan Lending and Related Activities Act under P.A. 23-126. See our ALERT of April 28, 2023. Read More
The Connecticut Banking Department has issued guidance on the recent amendments to the Connecticut Small Loan Lending and Related Activities Act under P.A. 23-126. See our ALERT of April 28, 2023. Read More
Since California and New York passed disclosure requirements for commercial financing in 2021, similar laws have been introduced and enacted in several state legislatures.Read More
Consumer-like protections continue to invade business finance. The latest example is a new rule expanding the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation’s authority to regulate unfair, deceptive and abusive acts and practices (“UDAAP”) in “commercial financing transactions”, defined to mean consummated commercial financing transactions for which California disclosures are required. Read More
In the absence of federal action, states keep marching forward with their own comprehensive consumer data privacy laws with mixed results. Oregon joins California, Colorado, Connecticut, Indiana, Iowa, Montana, Tennessee, Texas, Utah and Virginia in enacting a non-uniform privacy law. See S.B. 619 (signed by governor July 18, 2023, effective July 1, 2024).Read More
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) has issued a cease and desist letter to Unbanked, Inc. concerning potential violations of Section 18(a)(4) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Ac (12 U.S.C. § 1828(a)(4)) for deceptive statements suggesting that various crypto-related products may be covered by FDIC deposit insurance. Unbanked, a nonbank, maintains relationships with insured banks.Read More
The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas has ruled on a motion for preliminary injunction, granting an injunction to members of two trade groups and a private bank that filed suit challenging the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (CFPB) final rule implementing the “Small Business Lending Rule Under the Equal Opportunity Act (Regulation B)” pursuant to Section 1071 of the Consumer Financial Protection Act (“Rule”). See Texas Bankers Association vs. CFPB, No. 7:23-cv-00144 (S.D. Tex., order filed July 31, 2023); see our Alerts of Mar. 28 and Apr. 28, 2023. The plaintiffs...
A federal judge has delivered a split-decision on the Ripple Labs XRP token, providing some mixed clarity on the question of whether digital tokens are or can be securities. SEC v. Ripple Labs, Inc., No. 1:20-cv-10832-AT-SN (S.D. N.Y., filed July 13, 2023). Judge Torres concluded that an XRP token is a security when sold by Ripple directly to sophisticated institutional investors capable of understanding that such tokens are “speculative value propositions,” meeting the test for an “investment contract,” but not a security when sold to “programmatic investors” (the broader public) on...
On June 26, 2023, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis vetoed HB 1267, which would have amended the Consumer Finance Act to allow licensed lenders to charge a greater rate of interest on consumer loans, among other changes. See our ALERT of May 26, 2023. In his veto transmittal letter, Governor DeSantis stated that while the bill included provisions modernizing the licensing process and increasing transparency requirements, the increase in the interest rate for loans of $25,000 or less caused him concern, as he believes the increase in rates “may result in additional consumer indebtedness and could...
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency issued guidance on managing risks associated with third-party relationships on June 6, 2023. The new guidance replaces prior guidance by the banking agencies on thirdparty relationships identified in the release. The agencies describe the guidance as a broad, principles-based approach in response to comments on the prior draft guidance released in July of 2021 requesting that the guidance address specific topics or types of relationships. Read More
Indiana, Montana and Tennessee joined six other states in enacting consumer data privacy laws. The other states with consumer data privacy laws are California (effective Jan. 1, 2020), Virginia (effective Jan. 1, 2023), Colorado (effective July 1, 2023), Connecticut (effective July 1, 2023), Utah (effective Dec. 31, 2023) and Iowa (effective Jan. 1, 2025). With the exception of the California consumer data privacy law, all the recently enacted privacy data laws are very similar. Importantly, all the state consumer date privacy laws except California include an exemption for financial...