HR 2056 · 112th Congress · Finance and Financial Sector

To instruct the Inspector General of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to study the impact of insured depository institution failures, and for other purposes.

Introduced 2011-05-31· Sponsored by Rep. Westmoreland, Lynn A. [R-GA-3]· House

Bill Progress

1
Introduced
Committee
House Vote
Senate
Enacted
Latest: Became Public Law No: 112-88.(2012-01-03)

Plain Language Summary

[AI summary unavailable — showing source text] Instructs the Inspector General of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to study the impact of the failure of insured depository institutions. Requires the study to detail: (1) the impact of loss-sharing agreements (LSAs) on the insured depository institutions that survive and the borrowers of insured depository institutions that fail; (2) the effect of FDIC policies and procedures regarding maturing LSAs; (3) the methods of ensuring the orderly end of expiring LSAs to prevent any adverse impact on borrowing, the real estate industry, and the Depositors Insurance Fund; (4) the significance of certain paper losses; (5) the success of FDIC field examiners in implementing specified FDIC guidelines regarding workouts of commercial real estate loans; (6) the application and impact of consent orders and cease and desist orders; (7) the application and impact of FDIC policies; and (8) the FDIC's handling of potential investment from private equity companies in insured depository institutions.…

Summarized by Claude AI · Non-partisan · For informational purposes only

CBO Cost Estimate

Congressional Budget Office

H.R. 2056, a bil to instruct the Inspector General of the Federal Deposit Insurance corporation to study the impact of insured depository institution failures, and for other purposes

Jul 26, 2011

Cost estimate for the bill as ordered reported by the House Committee on Financial Services on July 20, 2011

Full CBO report ↗

Official non-partisan budget analysis by the Congressional Budget Office

Cosponsors (13)

4 Democrats9 Republicans