Episode
CFPB Finalizes Sweeping ECOA Rule Changes: What Lenders Need to Know About Disparate Impact, Discouragement, and SPCPs
- Podcast
- Consumer Finance Monitor
- Published
- May 14, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 4221
- Processing state
not_requested
Actions
POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/consumer-finance-monitor-71869/episodes/cfpb-finalizes-sweeping-ecoa-rule-changes-what-lenders-need-to-know-about-disparate-impact-discouragement-and-spcps/transcription-requests
Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode.GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/consumer-finance-monitor-71869/cfpb-finalizes-sweeping-ecoa-rule-changes-what-lenders-need-to-know-about-disparate-impact-discouragement-and-spcps.md
Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource.
Summary
Today's episode of the Consumer Finance Monitor Podcast features a wide-ranging and timely discussion about one of the most consequential fair lending developments in years: the CFPB's final rule fundamentally reshaping enforcement under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) and Regulation B. Hosted by Alan Kaplinsky (the Founder, Chair for 25 years and now Senior Counsel of the Consumer Financial Services Group at Ballard Spahr, LLP), the episode brings together an exceptional panel of fair lending authorities: our special guest Bradley Blower (the Principal and Founder of Inclusive-Partners LLC) along with John Culhane, Jr., and Richard Andreano, Jr., Senior Counsel in the Consumer Financial Services Group at Ballard Spahr LLP. The discussion revisits a proposal first examined on the podcast last year when the CFPB under Acting Director Russell Vought proposed sweeping revisions to ECOA enforcement principles (you can find more on that episode here ). Now, the Bureau has finalized the rule largely as proposed, marking a dramatic shift in federal fair lending policy. The CFPB's Three Major Changes As discussed during the podcast, the final rule makes three major changes from the former Regulation B: · Eliminates the use of disparate impact analysis under ECOA and Regulation B. · Narrows discouragement liability by focusing primarily on spoken, written, or visual statements rather than broader conduct. · Revises the framework governing Special Purpose Credit Programs (SPCPs), particularly for for-profit lenders. The Bureau's stated rationale is that ECOA does not authorize disparate impact liability and that fair lending enforcement should focus on intentional discrimination rather than statistical disparities alone. Supporters of the rule argue that the changes prov…