U.S. securities regulators adopted new rules on Thursday that aim to give investors better information before they decide to invest in asset-backed securities, a market still struggling to recover from the financial crisis.
Reuters reports the two rules, required under last year's Dodd-Frank financial reform law, are designed to address issues that arose in the financial crisis when investors lost money on securities backed by subprime mortgage loans.
The news service says the first rule, which was approved unanimously by the Securities and Exchange Commission, aims to give investors a way to review the track record of asset-backed issuers like Bank of America.
Specifically, the rules would let investors see how often the issuers were asked to buy back assets such as those linked to toxic mortgages because they failed to meet the underwriting criteria laid out in the prospectus. Issuers would also need to disclose how often they fulfilled the repurchase requests from investors.
The second rule approved by the SEC on Thursday would require issuers of asset-backed securities to conduct a review of the loans underlying the securities and disclose it to investors, according to Reuters.
That rule was approved in a 3-2 vote, with both Republican commissioners dissenting.