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Legal Update: NY Enacts TILA-Like Disclosure Law for Business Loans and Purchases of Receivables (Factors, MCA Providers, Fintechs, Commercial Lenders—Take Note)

By Krista Cooley, Jeffrey P. Taft & Daniel Pearson on January 20, 2021
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In late December 2020, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo signed S.B. 5470 into law, which will impose a range of Truth in Lending Act-like disclosure requirements on providers of commercial financing in amounts of $500,000 or less. The law will have a significant impact on providers beyond traditional commercial lenders, as it broadly defines “commercial financing” to include the providers, and third-party solicitors, of sales-based financing, closed-end commercial financing, open-end commercial financing, factoring transactions and other forms of commercial financing as the New York Department of Financial Services may provide. S.B. 5470 will impact a broad range of nonbank and fintech companies offering smaller balance commercial financing, following in the footsteps of a similar law enacted in California in 2018.

 

Read more in Mayer Brown’s Legal Update.

Photo of Jeffrey P. Taft Jeffrey P. Taft

Jeffrey Taft is a partner in the Firm’s Financial Services Regulatory & Enforcement group and the Cybersecurity and Data Privacy practice. His practice focuses primarily on bank regulation, bank receivership and insolvency issues, payment systems, consumer financial services and cybersecurity/privacy issues. He has…

Jeffrey Taft is a partner in the Firm’s Financial Services Regulatory & Enforcement group and the Cybersecurity and Data Privacy practice. His practice focuses primarily on bank regulation, bank receivership and insolvency issues, payment systems, consumer financial services and cybersecurity/privacy issues. He has extensive experience counseling financial institutions, merchants, technology companies and other entities on various federal and state banking and consumer credit issues, including compliance with the Bank Holding Company Act, National Bank Act, International Banking Act, Consumer Financial Protection Act, Truth-in-Lending Act, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, the Electronic Fund Transfer Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, state unfair or deceptive acts or practices statutes, CFPB’s UDAAP authority and the development and implementation of privacy, cybersecurity and information security programs under the Gramm-Leach Bliley Act, the NYDFS cybersecurity regulation and industry standards, such as PCI DSS and NIST.

Read Jeff’s full bio.

Read more about Jeffrey P. TaftEmail
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  • Posted in:
    Business and Commercial
  • Blog:
    Retained Interest
  • Organization:
    Mayer Brown

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