HFS Advances Fraud-Prevention Legislation

"The same tools that help banks detect fraud and serve customers more efficiently can also be weaponized by bad actors to carry out scams at unprecedented scale and speed. ... The United States must have a coordinated approach to detect, prevent, and respond to AI-enabled financial crime.
French Hill, Chair, House Financial Services Committee
"The same tools that help banks detect fraud and serve customers more efficiently can also be weaponized by bad actors to carry out scams at unprecedented scale and speed. ... The United States must have a coordinated approach to detect, prevent, and respond to AI-enabled financial crime.
French Hill, Chair, House Financial Services Committee

The House Financial Services Committee advanced a legislative package focused on curbing technology-accelerated financial fraud. The full House of Representatives passed bills providing regulatory relief to smaller banks. 

At the markup hearing, HFS Chair French Hill described a series of bills as a coordinated response to fraud schemes that increasingly use technology to operate at scale and evade detection.   

The Committee advanced:

Separately, by voice vote, the House of Representatives passed bills aimed at providing relief to smaller and community banks. They included:

  • the Supervisory Modifications for Appropriate Risk-Based Testing ("SMART Act,") which would "tailor supervisory requirements for smaller institutions that are well managed and well capitalized, allowing community financial institutions to focus more resources on serving customers and local economies." Mr. Hill stated: "the SMART Act makes further improvements to bank and credit union examinations, including requiring federal regulators to improve examination practices by assigning experienced examiners, minimizing unnecessary on-site disruptions, and ensuring that exams are conducted in a more efficient and predictable manner;" and 
  • the Tailored Regulatory Updates for Supervisory Testing ("TRUST Act,") which "allows smaller banks that are well managed and well capitalized to be examined less frequently, which reduces unnecessary compliance costs, increases their time serving customers, and maintains strong oversight and financial stability." Specifically, the bill would "permit Federal banking agencies to examine qualifying insured depository institutions with under $6 billion in total assets not less than once during each 18-month period, and for other purposes."

 

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