First federal agency poised to take up FDTA rulemaking notice
2 min readControversial new data standards for municipal issuers may advance Tuesday when the Federal Deposit Insurance Agency board is expected to vote on a notice of proposed rulemaking at an open meeting.
The FDIC is one of seven federal agencies that, with the Securities and Exchange Commission, will play a role in the complex, joint rulemaking process that will craft final guidelines for the Financial Data Transparency Act. Signed into law on Dec. 23, 2022, the FDTA requires that municipal securities disclosures be converted into a machine-readable format. Since then, the market has been grappling with how that is going to happen.
The FDIC’s
Each agency involved in the rulemaking will have its own approval process, some with open meetings and others with closed meetings, said a source familiar with the process. There is no clear sequence or calendar of agency votes. The notice may change as it moves through the process, with the slight chance that some agencies would have to return to the notice for a fresh vote if it is significantly altered.
FDTA rules are set to be in place by the end of 2024, though
In May, a group of senior House and Senate lawmakers, including Rep. Patrick Henry, R-N.C., chair of the House Financial Services Committee, sent a
The timeline calls for final rulemaking to be released in December, with the SEC publishing proposed muni market-specific standards in 2026, followed by the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board’s proposal and call for comments. By the end of 2026, the SEC is expected to issue its final rule for municipal market standards with the effective dates coming in 2027 or after.