FHFA Seeks Comment on Revised Amendments to Suspended Counterparty Program

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The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) has revised its proposal to amend the Suspended Counterparty Program (SCP), which requires a regulated entity to report to FHFA if an individual or institution that it does business with has committed certain types of misconduct within the prior three years.

It also authorizes FHFA to order its regulated entities to cease doing business or refrain from entering into new business with certain counterparties.

Final suspension orders are published on FHFA’s website.

The revised the proposal after considering industry feedback on the original proposed rule, issued in July 2023.

This includes distinguishing between misconduct that poses material risk to the safety and soundness of the regulated entities from behavior with de minimis impact.

”Amending the Suspended Counterparty Program will help strengthen FHFA’s ability to protect its regulated entities from risks presented by other businesses that engage in misconduct,” says Sandra L. Thompson, director of the FHFA, in a statement. “FHFA has carefully reviewed the feedback from stakeholders in developing this re-proposal, which will better ensure the regulated entities’ safety and soundness so they continue to serve as a reliable and stable source of liquidity for the U.S. housing finance system.”

The newly revised proposal would authorize the suspension of business between a regulated entity and a counterparty whose misconduct resulted in a federal prohibition order or a civil money penalty above a specific threshold.

It also would authorize the suspension of business between a regulated entity and a counterparty that has committed criminal or civil misconduct related to the management or ownership of real property.

FHFA invites comments on the re-proposed rule within 60 days of its publication in the Federal Register.

Bob Broeksmit, president and CEO of the Mortgage Bankers Association, called the re-proposal “a smart move, and we commend FHFA for its receptiveness to our strong opposition to the initial proposal, which would have punished counterparties for potentially minor civil or administrative sanctions.”

“The re-proposal appears to address some of MBA’s significant concerns outlined in our joint comment letter,” Broeksmit says in a statement. “We are pleased to see the elimination of the proposed immediate suspension order, refinements that preserve due process, and a narrowing of the application of the SCP to violations of a certain magnitude or gravity.”

“MBA and its single-family and multifamily members will review the re-proposal in greater detail and our forthcoming response will focus on any necessary improvements to the SCP regulation that strike an appropriate balance.” 

Photo: Bill Oxford

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