S.1592 - Federal Board of Certification Act of 2009
A bill to establish a Federal Board of Certification to enhance the transparency, credibility, and stability of financial markets, and for other purposes. view all titles (2)
All Bill Titles
- Short: Federal Board of Certification Act of 2009 as introduced.
- Official: A bill to establish a Federal Board of Certification to enhance the transparency, credibility, and stability of financial markets, and for other purposes. as introduced.
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Committees
Official Summary
8/6/2009--Introduced.Federal Board of Certification Act of 2009 - Establishes a Federal Board of Certification to certify that the mortgages within a security instrument meet the underlying standards they claim to meet with regards to such mortgage characteristics as: (1) documentation; (2Official Summary
8/6/2009--Introduced.Federal Board of Certification Act of 2009 - Establishes a Federal Board of Certification to certify that the mortgages within a security instrument meet the underlying standards they claim to meet with regards to such mortgage characteristics as:(1) documentation;
(2) loan to value ratios;
(3) debt service to income ratios; and
(4) borrower credit standards and geographic concentration. States that the purpose of this certification process is to increase the transparency, predictability, and reliability of securitized mortgage products. Authorizes market participants, including firms that package mortgage loans into mortgage securities, to elect to have their mortgage securities evaluated by the Board. Authorizes the Board to:
(1) promulgate regulations establishing enumerated security standards to use in certifying mortgage securities;
(2) establish uniform principles and standards and report forms for the regular examination of such securities; and
(3) develop uniform reporting systems for ascertaining mortgage security risk. Grants the Board access to all books, accounts, records, reports, files, memorandums, papers, things, and property belonging to or in use by federal financial institutions regulatory agencies. Requires any publication, transmission, or webpage containing an advertisement for or invitation to buy a mortgage security to carry a disclaimer that certification by the Federal Board of Certification can in no way be considered a guarantee of the mortgage security, but is merely a judgment of the degree of risk offered by the security in question.
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U.S. Congress - S.1592 Federal Board of Certification Act of 2009



