When the U.S. real estate market went into its most recent tailspin, the finger-pointing inevitably started, and many suggested that securitization was to blame. Regulators reacted by proposing rules to address those issues that they determined helped create, and deflate, the real estate bubble.

Among them was the Credit Risk Retention Rule (rule) that was issued jointly on March 29, 2011, pursuant to a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPR)1 by several federal agencies.2

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