Title 12 › Chapter 53— WALL STREET REFORM AND CONSUMER PROTECTION › Subchapter V— BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION › Part B— General Powers of the Bureau › § 5515
The Bureau must supervise any bank or credit union with more than $10,000,000,000 in assets and their affiliates. It alone can require reports and do regular exams of those firms to check if they follow federal consumer finance laws, learn about their activities and compliance systems, and find risks to consumers and markets. The Bureau must work with other bank regulators and state supervisors to avoid duplicate work, use reports already given to other agencies or public information when possible, and it must give the IRS any exam reports that show possible tax problems. Service providers to these big firms are also subject to the Bureau’s authority, and the Bureau must coordinate exams of them with the bank regulators. When both the Bureau and another federal agency can enforce a consumer finance law, the Bureau has the main enforcement role for these large firms. Other federal agencies (except the FTC) can ask the Bureau in writing to start enforcement. If the Bureau does not start enforcement within 120 days after a written recommendation, that other agency may begin enforcement. The Bureau and the prudential regulator must coordinate exam timing, generally do exams at the same time unless the institution asks for separate exams, share draft exam reports and give at least 30 days to comment, and consider those comments before final action. If the agencies’ proposed actions conflict, the institution can ask for a joint statement within 30 days. If still unresolved, the institution can appeal to a governing panel within 30 days after the joint-statement deadline. The panel will have two noninvolved agency representatives and one rotating outside member, may get more information, must issue a written decision within 30 days after a complete filing, publish the decision with needed redactions, and agencies must protect against retaliation. The appeal rules do not apply to appointing a conservator or receiver, liquidating an insured credit union, or actions under sections 1831o or 1790a. Nothing here reduces the Bureau’s or prudential regulators’ enforcement powers.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
12 U.S.C. § 5515
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60