Consumer Financial Services Law Report covers litigation, regulation, and legislation at both federal and state levels involving mortgage lending, debt collection, and consumer credit. CFSLR includes news, summaries, and in-depth commentary from leading experts – many of them from CFSLR’s unique editorial board – on the latest court decisions wherever they occur, as well as regulatory trends and litigatory strategies across the entire consumer financial services industry. Timely topics include:
- Insight into the changes going on at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the easing of regulatory policy across most federal agencies
- The concurrent growth of states’ consumer financial protection laws and regulations
- The growing impact and emphasis on consumer privacy and security issues at state and federal levels
Every issue brings you:
- Guidance from attorneys in significant consumer financial services litigation, detailing their winning tactics
- Expert commentary on unique causes of action and defenses to help you fine-tune your strategies
- Alerts you to trends in consumer financial services so that you can anticipate what’s coming down the pike
- Concise summaries of recent legal opinions that highlight judges’ decision-making rationales to help you anticipate how they might rule in specific areas of law and regulation – and save your staff research time
- Analysis of the impact of new state and federal legislation so you can help clients avoid compliance mistakes
- Includes a special consumer financial privacy and security section covering developments at federal, state, and local levels in identity theft, enforcement, information-sharing, and privacy protection technologies
- The latest personnel moves at law firms, regulatory agencies, and top federal administration offices
- Up-to-date research that tracks industry developments in the mortgage, credit, debt collection, and allied consumer financial services industries
- Developments at major banks, other financial institutions, and consumer financial services entities that might impact your practice