Representative Jeb Hensarling, chairman of the House Committee on Financial Services, introduced the Financial CHOICE Act of 2017(H.R. 10) on April 26, 2017. The House Committee on Financial Services has scheduled a markup of H.R. 10 on May 2, 2017. The bill is a wide-ranging proposal with 12 titles that would alter many parts of the financial regulatory system. H.R. 10 is similar to, but has several major differences from, H.R. 5983 from the 114th Congress (called the Financial CHOICE Act of 2016).

The next section highlights major proposals included in the bill, as introduced. It is not a comprehensive summary.

Major Provisions

In general, the changes proposed by the FCA can be divided into two categories: (1) changes to financial policies and regulations and (2) changes to the regulatory structure and rulemaking process.

Major policy-related changes proposed by the FCA include the following:

H.R. 10 also includes structural and procedural changes that affect the balance between regulator independence from and accountability to Congress and the judiciary, including

FCA Changes to the Dodd-Frank Act

Much of H.R. 10 is in response to the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd-Frank Act; P.L. 111-203), a broad package of regulatory reform that initiated the largest change to the financial regulatory system since at least 1999. Many of the provisions of the FCA would modify or repeal provisions from the Dodd-Frank Act, although others would address long-standing or more recent issues.

Table 1 provides a brief overview of selected changes that H.R. 10 makes to the Dodd-Frank Act on a title-by-title basis for the 16 titles in the Dodd-Frank Act. For more information on the content of each Title of the Dodd-Frank Act, see CRS Report R41350, The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act: Background and Summary, coordinated by [author name scrubbed].

Table 1. Selected Changes to the Dodd-Frank Act in the Financial CHOICE Act of 2017

Title Number

Subject of Title

Selected Changes

I

Financial Stability

Repeals Office of Financial Research, SIFI designations; modifies FSOC authority, funding, procedures, and structure; exempts from enhanced regulation if 10% leverage ratio

II

Orderly Liquidation Authority

Repeals entire title

III

Office of Thrift Supervision

No changes

IV

Advisers to Hedge Funds

Repeals changes to definition of accredited investor

V

Insurance

Creates new office combining FSOC insurance expert and Federal Insurance Office

VI

Regulation of Depository Institutions

Repeals Volcker Rule, non-bank concentration limits

VII

Derivatives

Requires SEC-CFTC harmonization of rules; modifies requirements on swaps between affiliates

VIII

Payment, Clearing, and Settlement Supervision

Repeals entire title

IX

Investor Protections

Repeals SEC reserve fund, certain provisions affecting credit agencies, various executive compensation requirements. Exempts securities from risk retention rules that are not residential mortgages

X

Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection

Modifies CFPB authority, structure, and funding. Repeals Durbin Amendment

XI

Federal Reserve

Repeals FDIC authority to provide emergency guarantees, narrows Fed's emergency lending authority

XII

Access to Mainstream Financial Institutions

No changes

XIII

TARP funding

No changes

XIV

Mortgage Reform

Modifies mortgage rules, including manufactured housing, points and fees, and portfolio lending

XV

Miscellaneous Provisions

Repeals provisions on conflict minerals, mine safety, and resource extraction disclosure

XVI

Section 1256 Contracts

No Changes

Source: Created by CRS.