Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 53— - WALL STREET REFORM AND CONSUMER PROTECTION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION › Part Part B— - General Powers of the Bureau › § 5514
The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection must supervise certain nonbank companies that deal with consumer loans and other consumer financial services. That includes firms that make, broker, or service home loans for people, offer loan fixes or help with foreclosures, big players in other consumer finance markets (as the Bureau will define), companies the Bureau finds after notice are risky to consumers, private student lenders, and payday lenders. The Bureau must consult the Federal Trade Commission before it defines “big players” and must make its first rule about that within 1 year after the designated transfer date. The rule does not apply to people covered by sections 5515(a) or 5516(a). When counting activity levels, the Bureau must add together the activities of related companies except insured banks and insured credit unions. The Bureau can require regular reports and do periodic exams of these companies to check law compliance, learn about their systems, and spot risks to consumers and markets. The Bureau must focus its work based on risk and may consider size, transaction volume, consumer harm, state oversight, and other relevant factors. It must coordinate exams and information sharing with other federal and state regulators to avoid duplicate burdens, use reports already given to other agencies or public reports when possible, and still may require information even if it is stored or processed by someone else. The Bureau must give the IRS exam reports that suggest tax problems. The Bureau can make rules to help supervise these firms, require recordkeeping, and set checks like background checks or bonding. If another federal agency can also enforce the same consumer laws, the Bureau generally has exclusive enforcement and rulemaking authority, though other agencies may ask the Bureau in writing to act. The Bureau and the FTC must agree on how to coordinate enforcement within 6 months after the designated transfer date. Service providers to these firms are also subject to the Bureau’s authority, and nothing here limits the Farm Credit Administration’s authority.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 5514
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73