The
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) said the measure
raises the transaction threshold at which companies may be
entirely exempted from providing exact figures from 100 to 500
or fewer remittances annually, reducing the burden on more than
400 banks and almost 250 credit unions.
International regulators have voiced concerns that U.S. banks
may not be offering overseas remittances due to the regulatory
burden, including anti-money laundering provisions.
Monday's rule comes after the agency asked for industry feedback
last year on the previous remittance regulation, which generally
required lenders to disclose to consumers the exact exchange
rate, fees and the amount of money expected to be delivered to
the recipient when making a global wire transfer.
It also codifies a temporary safe harbor, due to expire in July
2020, that allows banks and credit unions to estimate the total
cost to consumers rather than the exact amount when transferring
money abroad.
This came as part of a December 2019 proposal by the CFPB, which
last month said it expects that after the temporary exception
expires some insured institutions could face challenges
disclosing actual costs and may cease providing remittance
services without intervention.
The Washington-based National Association of Federally-Insured
Credit Unions (NAFCU) said that while "a step in the right
direction," the new remittance rule fell short of its
recommendations for an even higher threshold increase.
"A number of credit unions have effectively been prevented from
offering remittance transfer services because of the high
compliance costs and associated burdens," said Ann Kossachev,
the director of regulatory affairs at NAFCU.
Kossachev said she will continue to push for credit unions to be
exempted from compliance with the remittance rule all together.
(Reporting by Katanga Johnson, Editing by Franklin Paul and
Alexander Smith)
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