NCUA's Examiner's Guide: Useful Charts; Elizabeth Warren
Posted by Anthony Demangone
I've written a bunch about NCUA's Examiner's Guide.  This is a must-read, go-to resource for compliance officers.  For example, NCUA has created a number of useful charts that are found within the guide.Â
Conflicts. Â Certain individuals cannot serve in certain positions at a credit union. Â For example, an employee of the credit union may not serve on the credit union's supervisory committee. Â That makes sense, right? Â You don't want an employee covering up his or her shenanigans. Â Certain prohibitions like this are clearly laid out in regulation. Â But NCUA also feels that other prohibitions are implied by sound internal controls. Â Go to appendix 4A of the Internal Controls chapter of the guide, and you'll find a useful chart that highlights the prohibitions, both those found in regulation, and those that NCUA feels are required by sound internal controls. Â Remember - if you have a hard time opening that link from the blog's daily email, click on the title of today's blog. Â That will take you directly to the blog, and you should be able to download the document there.Â
Risk Management.  Chapter 2 of NCUA's Examiner's Guide, titled "Scope Development," contains a chart that examiners can use to gauge the risk of your credit unions.  It is attachment 2.1 of the chapter.  It may be worth a quick scan or two.Â
These are just two examples. Â If you are researching a subject, I'd see if NCUA's examiner's guide addresses it. Â If so, give it a quick review. Â I've found it to be very useful over the years.
Elizabeth Warren.  If you have some spare time, check out this episode of The Daily Show.   (Here's part 2 of the interview.)  (Here's part 3.) Elizabeth Warren was a guest on the show, and she vowed to protect consumers from "word-barf" - the legalese that is found in many lending contracts.  (Her words, not mine.)  She talked about a number of issues, and it really is worth your time if you are a compliance officer.  Here are my take-aways.Â
- She's very effective. I'm sure she'll be able to get on this show, and others, whenever she wants. Â If a problem bothers her, she can shine A LOT of light on it, very quickly.Â
- She continues to believe that consumers cannot currently determine the cost of financial products, even with the Credit CARD Act and RESPA reform.Â
- There wasn't that much discussion on managing compliance burdens for credit unions and community banks. Â In fact, it never came up.Â
- I'm not trying to beat up Ms. Warren. Whether one agrees or disagrees about the existence of the CFPB is irrelevant. Â It exists. The CFPB will do its job. I'm simply trying to highlight the fact that this agency will increase compliance risks for all credit unions. Â Credit unions just need to be prepared.Â
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Have a great weekend, everyone!