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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 217 / Friday, November 9, 2007 / Rules and Regulations

■ b. In Section 213.7—Advertising,
under 7(b)(1) Amount Due at Lease
Signing or Delivery, paragraph 3 is
removed.
■ c. In Section 213.7—Advertising,
under 7(b)(2) Advertisement of a Lease
Rate, paragraph 1., the last two
sentences are removed.
■ d. In Section 213.7—Advertising,
under 7(c) Catalogs or Other Multipage
Advertisements; Electronic
Advertisements, paragraph 2. is revised.
The amendments read as follows:

SUPPLEMENT I TO PART 213—
OFFICIAL STAFF COMMENTARY TO
REGULATION M
*

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*

*

Section 213.7—Advertising

*

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*

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*

7(b)(2) Advertisement of a Lease Rate
7(c) * * *
2. Cross references. A catalog or other
multiple-page advertisement or an electronic
advertisement (such as an advertisement
appearing on an Internet Web site) is a single
advertisement (requiring only one set of lease
disclosures) if it contains a table, chart, or
schedule with the disclosures required under
§ 213.7(d)(2)(i) through (v). If one of the
triggering terms listed in § 213.7(d)(1)
appears in a catalog, or in a multiple-page or
electronic advertisement, it must clearly
direct the consumer to the page or location
where the table, chart, or schedule begins.
For example, in an electronic advertisement,
a term triggering additional disclosures may
be accompanied by a link that directly
connects the consumer to the additional
information.

*

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By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, October 31, 2007.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. E7–21699 Filed 11–8–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 226
[Regulation Z; Docket No. R–1284]

Truth in Lending
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Final rule; official staff
interpretation.

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AGENCY:

SUMMARY: The Board is amending
Regulation Z, which implements the
Truth in Lending Act, and the official
staff commentary to the regulation, to
withdraw portions of the interim final
rules for the electronic delivery of
disclosures issued March 30, 2001. The
2001 interim final rules addressed the

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timing and delivery of electronic
disclosures, consistent with the
requirements of the Electronic
Signatures in Global and National
Commerce Act (E-Sign Act). Because
compliance with the 2001 interim final
rules has not been mandatory,
withdrawal of these provisions from the
Code of Federal Regulations reduces
confusion about the status of the
provisions and simplifies the regulation.
In addition, the Board is adopting
final amendments to Regulation Z to
provide guidance on the electronic
delivery of disclosures. For example, the
final rules provide that when an
application for a credit card is accessed
by a consumer in electronic form,
disclosures may be provided to the
consumer in electronic form on or with
the application without regard to the
consumer consent and other provisions
of the E-Sign Act. Similar final rules are
being adopted under other consumer
fair lending and financial services
regulations administered by the Board.
DATES: The final rule is effective
December 10, 2007. The mandatory
compliance date is October 1, 2008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
C. Wood, Counsel, Division of
Consumer and Community Affairs, at
(202) 452–2412 or (202) 452–3667. For
users of Telecommunications Device for
the Deaf (TDD) only, contact (202) 263–
4869.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Statutory Background
The purpose of the Truth in Lending
Act (TILA), 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq., is to
promote the informed use of consumer
credit by requiring disclosures about its
terms and cost. The Board’s Regulation
Z (12 CFR part 226) implements the act.
The act requires creditors to disclose the
cost of credit as a dollar amount (the
finance charge) and as an annual
percentage rate (the APR). Uniformity in
creditors’ disclosures is intended to
promote the informed use of credit and
assist in shopping for credit. TILA
requires additional disclosures for loans
secured by consumers’ homes and
permits consumers to rescind certain
transactions that involve their principal
dwellings. TILA and Regulation Z
require a number of disclosures to be
provided in writing.
The Electronic Signatures in Global
and National Commerce Act (the E-Sign
Act), 15 U.S.C. 7001 et seq., was enacted
in 2000. The E-Sign Act provides that
electronic documents and electronic
signatures have the same validity as
paper documents and handwritten
signatures. The E-Sign Act contains
special rules for the use of electronic

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disclosures in consumer transactions.
Under the E-Sign Act, consumer
disclosures required by other laws or
regulations to be provided or made
available in writing may be provided or
made available, as applicable, in
electronic form if the consumer
affirmatively consents after receiving a
notice that contains certain information
specified in the statute, and if certain
other conditions are met.
The E-Sign Act, including the special
consumer notice and consent
provisions, became effective October 1,
2000, and did not require implementing
regulations. Thus, creditors are
currently permitted to provide in
electronic form any disclosures that are
required to be provided or made
available to the consumer in writing
under Regulation Z if the consumer
affirmatively consents to receipt of
electronic disclosures in the manner
required by section 101(c) of the E-Sign
Act.
II. Board Proposals and Interim Rules
Regarding Electronic Disclosures
On March 30, 2001, the Board
published for comment interim final
rules to establish uniform standards for
the electronic delivery of disclosures
required under Regulation Z (66 FR
17,329). Similar interim final rules for
Regulations B, E, M, and DD
(implementing the Equal Credit
Opportunity Act, the Electronic Fund
Transfer Act, the Consumer Leasing Act,
and the Truth in Savings Act,
respectively) were published on March
30, 2001 (66 FR 17,322) (Regulation M)
and April 4, 2001 (66 FR 17,779, 66 FR
17,786, and 66 FR 17,795) (Regulations
B, E, and DD, respectively). Each of the
interim final rules incorporated, but did
not interpret, the requirements of the ESign Act. Creditors and other persons,
as applicable, generally were required to
obtain consumers’ affirmative consent to
provide disclosures electronically,
consistent with the requirements of the
E-Sign Act. The interim final rules also
incorporated many of the provisions
that were part of earlier regulatory
proposals issued by the Board regarding
electronic disclosures.1
1 On May 2, 1996, the Board proposed to amend
Regulation E to permit financial institutions to
provide disclosures by sending them electronically
(61 FR 19696). Based on comments received, in
1998 the Board published an interim rule
permitting the electronic delivery of disclosures
under Regulation E (63 FR 14,528, March 25, 1998)
and similar proposals under Regulations B, M, Z,
and DD (63 FR 14,552, 14,538, 14,548, and 14,533,
respectively, March 25, 1998). Based on comments
received on the 1998 proposals, in 1999 the Board
published revised proposals under Regulations B, E,
M, Z, and DD (64 FR 49688, 49699, 49713, 49722
and 49740, respectively, September 14, 1999).

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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 217 / Friday, November 9, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
Under the 2001 interim final rules,
disclosures could be sent to an e-mail
address designated by the consumer, or
could be made available at another
location, such as an Internet Web site.
If the disclosures were not sent by email, creditors would have to provide a
notice to consumers (typically by email) alerting them to the availability of
the disclosures. Disclosures posted on a
Web site would have to be available for
at least 90 days to allow consumers
adequate time to access and retain the
information. Creditors also would be
required to make a good faith attempt to
redeliver electronic disclosures that
were returned undelivered, using the
address information available in their
files.
Commenters on the interim final rules
identified significant operational and
information security concerns with
respect to the requirement to send the
disclosure or an alert notice to an e-mail
address designated by the consumer.
For example, commenters stated that
some consumers who choose to receive
electronic disclosures do not have email addresses or may not want
personal financial information sent to
them by e-mail. Commenters also noted
that e-mail is not a secure medium for
delivering confidential information and
that consumers’ e-mail addresses
frequently change. The commenters also
opposed the requirement for redelivery
in the event a disclosure was returned
undelivered. In addition, many
commenters asserted that making the
disclosures available for at least 90 days,
as required by the interim final rule,
would increase costs and would not be
necessary for consumer protection.
In August 2001, in response to
comments received, the Board lifted the
previously established October 1, 2001
mandatory compliance date for all of the
interim final rules. (66 FR 41439,
August 8, 2001.) Thus, creditors are not
required to comply with the interim
final rules. Since that time, the Board
had not taken further action with
respect to the interim final rules on
electronic disclosures in order to allow
electronic commerce, including
electronic disclosure practices, to
continue to develop without regulatory
intervention and to allow the Board to
gather further information about such
practices.
In April 2007, the Board proposed to
amend Regulation Z and the official
staff commentary by (1) withdrawing
portions of the 2001 interim final rule
that restate or cross-reference provisions
of the E-Sign Act and accordingly are
unnecessary; (2) withdrawing other
portions of the interim final rule that the
Board now believes may impose undue

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burdens on electronic banking and
commerce and may be unnecessary for
consumer protection; and (3) retaining
the substance of certain provisions of
the interim final rule that provide
regulatory relief or guidance regarding
electronic disclosures. (72 FR 21141,
April 30, 2007.) Similar amendments
were also proposed by the Board under
Regulations B, E, M, and DD (72 FR
21125, 72 FR 21131, 72 FR 21135, and
72 FR 21155, respectively). In addition,
the Board proposed to amend
Regulation Z to implement certain
provisions of the Bankruptcy Abuse
Prevention and Consumer Protection
Act of 2005, Public Law 109–8, 119 Stat.
23 (the ‘‘Bankruptcy Act’’), that amend
TILA and relate to electronic credit card
disclosures.
III. Summary of the Final Rule
The Board received about 25
comments on the April 2007 proposal,
primarily from creditors and their
representatives. Most of the financial
industry commenters generally
supported the proposal, although some
provided suggestions for clarifications
or changes to particular elements of the
proposal. A comment letter was also
submitted on behalf of four consumer
groups. The consumer group
commenters suggested a number of
changes to strengthen consumer
protections. The comments are
discussed in more detail in the Sectionby-Section Analysis below.
For the reasons discussed below, the
Board is now adopting amendments to
Regulation Z in final form, largely as
proposed in April 2007. As stated in the
proposal, because compliance with the
2001 interim final rules has not been
mandatory, the final rule will reduce
confusion about the status of the
electronic disclosure provisions and
simplify the regulation. (Certain
provisions in the 2001 interim rules,
including provisions addressing foreign
language disclosures, were not affected
by the lifting of the mandatory
compliance date and became final in
2001; thus, those provisions are not
dealt with in this rulemaking.) The
Board is also adopting certain
provisions that are identical or similar
to provisions in the 2001 interim rules
in order to enhance the ability of
consumers to shop for credit online,
minimize the information-gathering
burdens on consumers, and provide
guidance or eliminate a substantial
burden on the use of electronic
disclosures, as discussed further below.
As stated above, the Board also
proposed to implement certain
provisions of the Bankruptcy Act that
amended TILA and relate to electronic

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disclosures. Action on the proposed
provisions to implement the Bankruptcy
Act is being deferred. The same
revisions are contained in the Board’s
proposed amendments to the Regulation
Z rules for open-end credit, which were
published for comment in June 2007 (72
FR 32,948, June 14, 2007). The Board
will consider the provisions relating to
the Bankruptcy Act in connection with
its final action on the rules for open-end
credit after considering the comments
submitted on the June 2007 proposal.
Since 2001, industry and consumers
have gained considerable experience
with electronic disclosures. During that
period, the Board has received no
indication that consumers have been
harmed by the fact that compliance with
the interim final rules is not mandatory.
The Board also has reconsidered certain
aspects of the interim final rules, such
as sending disclosures by e-mail, in
light of concerns about data security,
identity theft, and ‘‘phishing’’ (i.e.,
prompting consumers to reveal
confidential personal or financial
information through fraudulent e-mail
requests that appear to originate from a
creditor, government agency, or other
trusted entity) that have become more
pronounced since 2001. Finally, the
Board is eliminating certain aspects of
the 2001 interim final rule, such as
provisions regarding the availability and
retention of electronic disclosures, as
unnecessary in light of current industry
practices.
With regard to disclosures required to
be provided on or with a credit
application or solicitation (the
‘‘shopping disclosures’’) or in an
advertisement, the 2001 interim final
rule allowed creditors to provide these
disclosures electronically without
regard to the consumer consent or other
provisions of the E-Sign Act. The Board
reasoned that these disclosures, which
would be available to the general public
while shopping for credit, did not
necessarily ‘‘relate to a transaction,’’
which is a prerequisite for triggering the
E-Sign consumer consent provisions,
and thus were not subject to the consent
provisions. Some commenters on the
interim final rules agreed with the result
but did not agree with the Board’s
rationale.
In the April 2007 proposal, the Board
stated that, upon further consideration,
it did not believe it was necessary to
determine whether or not these
disclosures are related to a transaction.
Instead, pursuant to the Board’s
authority under section 105(a) of TILA,
as well as under section 104(d) of the

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E-Sign Act,2 the Board proposed to
specify the circumstances under which
certain disclosures may be provided to
a consumer in electronic form, rather
than in writing as generally required by
Regulation Z, without obtaining the
consumer’s consent under section
101(c) of the E-Sign Act.
Commenters supported the Board’s
approach with regard to this issue. This
final rule adopts the approach in the
April 2007 proposal. The Board
continues to believe that creditors
should not be required to obtain the
consumer’s consent in order to provide
shopping or advertising disclosures to
the consumer in electronic form if the
consumer accesses an application,
solicitation, or advertisement containing
those disclosures in electronic form,
such as at an Internet Web site. The
Board believes that when shopping for
credit or viewing credit advertising
online, consumers would not be harmed
if the E-Sign consent procedures do not
apply and would obtain significant
benefits by having timely access to
shopping and advertising disclosures in
electronic form. Conversely, consumers
who choose to apply for credit online
would be unduly burdened if they had
to consent in accordance with the
E-Sign Act in order to access application
forms that must be accompanied by
disclosures. The Board also believes that
consumers’ ability to shop for credit
online and compare the terms of various
credit offers could be substantially
diminished if consumers had to consent
in accordance with the E-Sign Act in
order to access solicitations and
advertisements that must be
accompanied by disclosures. Applying
the consumer consent provisions of the
E-Sign Act to these disclosures could
impose substantial burdens on
electronic commerce and make it more
difficult for consumers to gather
information and shop for credit.
At the same time, the Board
recognizes that consumers who shop or
2 Section 105(a) of TILA provides that regulations
prescribed by the Board under TILA ‘‘may provide
for such adjustments and exceptions * * * as in the
judgment of the Board, are necessary or proper to
effectuate the purposes of [TILA], * * * or to
facilitate compliance [with the requirements of
TILA].’’ Section 104(d) of the E-Sign Act authorizes
federal agencies to adopt exemptions for specified
categories of disclosures from the E-Sign notice and
consent requirements, ‘‘if such exemption is
necessary to eliminate a substantial burden on
electronic commerce and will not increase the
material risk of harm to consumers.’’ For the
reasons stated in this Federal Register notice, the
Board believes that these criteria are met in the case
of the application, solicitation, and advertising
disclosures. In addition, the Board believes TILA
section 105(a) authorizes the Board to permit
institutions to provide disclosures electronically,
rather than in paper form, independent of the
E-Sign Act.

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apply for credit online may not want to
receive other disclosures electronically.
Therefore, with respect to accountopening disclosures, periodic
statements, and change-in-terms notices,
creditors are required to obtain the
consumer’s consent, in accordance with
the E-Sign Act, to provide such
disclosures in electronic form, or else
provide written disclosures.
Finally, as proposed, certain
provisions that restate or cross-reference
the E-Sign Act’s general rules regarding
electronic disclosures (including the
consumer consent provisions) and
electronic signatures are being deleted
as unnecessary, because the E-Sign Act
is a self-effectuating statute. The
revisions to Regulation Z and the
official staff commentary are described
more fully below in the Section-bySection Analysis.
IV. Section-by-Section Analysis
12 CFR Part 226 (Regulation Z)
Subpart B—Open-end Credit
Section 226.5 General Disclosure
Requirements
Section 226.5(a) prescribes the form of
disclosures required for open-end credit
plans. Section 226.5(a)(1) generally
requires creditors to provide open-end
credit disclosures in writing and in a
form that the consumer may keep. As
proposed, the Board is revising
§ 226.5(a)(1) to clarify that creditors may
provide open-end credit disclosures to
consumers in electronic form, subject to
compliance with the consumer consent
and other applicable provisions of the ESign Act. Some creditors may provide
open-end credit disclosures to
consumers both in paper and electronic
form and rely on the paper form of the
disclosures to satisfy their compliance
obligations. For those creditors, the
duplicate electronic form of the openend credit disclosures may be provided
to consumers without regard to the
consumer consent or other provisions of
the E-Sign Act because the electronic
form of the disclosure is not used to
satisfy the regulation’s open-end credit
disclosure requirements.
Section 226.5(a)(1) is also revised, as
proposed, to provide that the open-end
credit disclosures required by §§ 226.5a
(credit card applications and
solicitations), 226.5b (home equity
credit line applications), and 226.16
(open-end credit advertising) may be
provided to the consumer in electronic
form, under the circumstances set forth
in those sections, without regard to the
consumer consent or other provisions of
the E-Sign Act. Commenters supported
this aspect of the proposal. The Board

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believes that this will eliminate a
potential significant burden on
electronic commerce without increasing
the risk of harm to consumers. This
approach will facilitate shopping for
credit by enabling consumers to receive
important disclosures online at the same
time they access an electronic
application, solicitation, or
advertisement without first having to
provide consent in accordance with the
requirements of the E-Sign Act.
Requiring consumers to follow the
consent procedures set forth in the ESign Act in order to access an online
application, solicitation, or
advertisement is potentially
burdensome and could discourage
consumers from shopping for credit
online. Moreover, because these
consumers are viewing the application,
solicitation, or advertisement online,
there appears to be little, if any, risk that
the consumer will be unable to view the
disclosures online as well.
Section 226.5(a)(5) in the 2001
interim final rule refers to § 226.36, the
section of the interim final rule setting
forth general rules for electronic
disclosures. Because the Board is
deleting § 226.36, as discussed below,
§ 226.5(a)(5) is also deleted, as
proposed.
The 2001 interim final rule revised
comment 5(b)(2)(ii)–3 to reference the ESign Act’s consumer consent
requirements. As proposed, this
language is being deleted as
unnecessary because the E-Sign Act is a
self-effectuating statute.
Section 226.5a Credit and Charge Card
Applications and Solicitations
5a(a)

General Rules

Section 226.5a(a)(2) prescribes the
form of disclosures required with credit
and charge card applications and
solicitations. The Board proposed to
amend § 226.5a(a)(2) by adding a new
paragraph (v) to provide that if a
consumer accesses an application or
solicitation for a credit or charge card in
electronic form, such as on a home
computer, the disclosures required on or
with the application or solicitation must
also be provided to the consumer in
electronic form. The Board proposed to
add comment 5a(a)(2)–9 to clarify this
point and also to make clear that if a
consumer is provided with a paper
application or solicitation, the required
disclosures must be provided in paper
form on or with the application or
solicitation (and not, for example, by
including a reference in the paper
application or solicitation to the Web
site where the disclosures are located).

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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 217 / Friday, November 9, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
Many creditor commenters urged the
Board to revise the regulation and
commentary to permit disclosures to be
given in paper form in appropriate
cases, even where an application or
solicitation is in electronic form. In
particular, commenters noted that
requiring electronic disclosures could
present problems for applications taken
in person using electronic means.
Commenters stated, for example, that a
consumer or creditor employee might
complete an electronic application by
entering information at a terminal or
kiosk in the creditor’s office. These
commenters noted that paper
disclosures would be more appropriate
in such cases, because the applicant
would be able to retain them. For
example, a loan officer could give the
disclosures to the consumer, or in the
case of an unattended kiosk, the kiosk
could have a printer to provide paper
disclosures. (Although the credit card
application and solicitation disclosures
are not required to be given in retainable
form, application-related disclosures for
other types of accounts raise the same
issue and are required to be in
retainable form.)
Some creditor commenters argued
that the proposed requirement would
contravene the E-Sign Act, based on the
provisions in E-Sign that state (1) that
the statute does not require any person
to accept or use electronic records in
place of paper, and (2) that any
regulations interpreting E-Sign may not
add to its requirements. Creditor
commenters suggested that, at a
minimum, the regulation should
provide an exception to allow paper
disclosures for in-person electronic
applications. Consumer group
commenters stated that the regulation
should not only permit, but should
require, paper disclosures in the case of
in-person electronic applications. For
example, the commenters noted, a doorto-door solicitor could otherwise simply
display certain disclosures to a
consumer on the screen of a laptop
computer, even though the consumer
would have no way to later access the
disclosures.
One creditor commenter suggested
that, in addition to permitting paper
disclosures for electronic applications,
the regulation should also permit
electronic disclosures for paper
applications without consumers’
consent in certain cases. For example,
the commenter suggested, a basic or
short-form disclosure could be provided
in paper form along with the paper
application, together with a Web site
where a more complete disclosure could
be obtained.

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In the final regulation, new
§ 226.5a(a)(2)(v) is revised to state that
if an application or solicitation is
accessed by the consumer in electronic
form, the required application- or
solicitation-related disclosures may
(rather than must) be provided in
electronic form. The proposal to require
electronic disclosures for credit card
applications and solicitations that are
accessed electronically was intended to
ensure that the disclosures are provided
‘‘on or with’’ the application or
solicitation in compliance with the
timing and delivery requirements of
Regulation Z. Section 226.5a(a)(2)
already requires that the credit card
application and solicitation disclosures
be provided on or with an application
or solicitation, and this requirement
applies to electronic as well as paper
applications; the only added
requirement under the proposal would
have been to require that, in the case of
an electronic application, the
disclosures be in electronic form.
Where a consumer accesses and
submits an application form using a
home computer via a card issuer’s Web
site, the card issuer must provide the
disclosures in electronic form with the
application form on the Web site in
order to meet the requirement to
provide disclosures in a timely manner
on or with the application. If the issuer
instead mailed paper disclosures to the
consumer, this requirement would not
be met. This guidance is stated in new
comment 5a(a)(2)–9.
In contrast, if a consumer is
physically present in the card issuer’s
office, and accesses and submits an
electronic application—such as via a
terminal or kiosk—the Board believes
the issuer could provide disclosures in
paper form and comply with the timing
and delivery (‘‘on or with’’)
requirements of the regulation. In
addition, as discussed by the
commenters, paper disclosures may be
preferable in this situation because they
can be retained by the consumer.
Therefore, paper disclosures are
permissible in the case of in-person
electronic applications in a card issuer’s
office, when the timing and delivery
requirements are met. This guidance is
also stated in new comment 5a(a)(2)–9.
The final regulation, however, does
not require paper disclosures for such
in-person electronic applications, as
suggested by the consumer group
commenters. Electronic disclosures
would comply with the regulation for
these applications in some cases. For
example, for an electronic in-person
credit card application in a card issuer’s
office, the issuer could display the
required disclosures to the consumer on

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a terminal or kiosk screen. The
requirement to provide disclosures in a
form the consumer may retain does not
apply to the credit card application
disclosures, so this procedure would
comply with the regulation. However,
the Board anticipates that card issuers
will provide disclosures in a retainable
form in this situation and would
consider further revisions to the
regulation to address this issue if
necessary. (In other cases—for example,
for some of the home equity line of
credit application disclosures, and all of
the adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM)
application disclosures, discussed
below—the retainability requirement
does apply, and therefore creditors
would likely have to provide paper
disclosures for in-person applications in
a creditor’s office for these types of
credit.)
New comment 5a(a)(2)–9 is modified
from the proposal to provide the
guidance discussed above. In addition,
the portion of the proposed comment
stating that paper applications must be
accompanied by paper disclosures has
been deleted as unnecessary. For
example, if a credit card application in
paper form did not contain all of the
required § 226.5a disclosures, but
instead referred the consumer to a Web
site where some or all of the disclosures
could be found, the application would
not be in compliance with the
Regulation Z requirement that the
disclosures be provided in a timely
manner on or with the application. In
addition, the provisions that state that
electronic disclosures may be provided
without regard to the consumer consent
or other provisions of the E-Sign Act are
limited to situations where the
application or solicitation itself is in
electronic form. Thus, if a card issuer
wanted to provide electronic disclosures
for a paper application or solicitation
(for example, where a paper application
is submitted in person at the issuer’s
office), the issuer would first have to
comply with the E-Sign notice and
consent requirements.
Comment 5a(a)(2)–8 of the 2001
interim final rule states that a consumer
must be able to access the electronic
disclosures at the time the application
form or solicitation reply form is made
available by electronic communication,
and lists a number of alternative
methods by which card issuers may
satisfy this requirement. The Board
proposed to revise this comment to
clarify that the listed methods are
intended to be examples, not an
exhaustive list. Proposed revised
comment 5a(a)(2)–8 also crossreferences comment 5a(a)(2)–2.ii.,
which was added in 2000 and specifies

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how the tabular disclosures required by
§ 226.5a can be ‘‘prominently located’’ if
provided on or with electronic
applications and solicitations.
Creditor commenters generally urged
that the ‘‘non-bypassable link’’ example
in the comment be deleted, or at least
that the final comment make clear that
the various methods of presenting
disclosures electronically are only
examples and not requirements. (In the
‘‘non-bypassable link’’ method, a card
issuer would provide, on the
application or solicitation web page, a
link to the required disclosures that
would require the consumer to access
the disclosures before submitting the
application or solicitation reply form.)
Comment 5a(a)(2)–8 has been
modified to clarify that the various
methods of presenting disclosures
electronically are not the exclusive
means of satisfying the disclosure
requirements, but examples. In addition,
another example has been added, and
other modifications have been made for
clarity. Of course, any method used
would have to ensure that the
disclosures are provided (not merely
made available) to the consumer, clearly
and conspicuously, in a timely manner
on or with the application or
solicitation.
The Bankruptcy Act amends Section
127(c) of TILA to require that credit card
application and solicitation disclosures
provided ‘‘using the Internet or other
interactive computer service’’ must be
‘‘readily accessible to consumers in
close proximity’’ to the solicitation. 15
U.S.C. 1637(c)(7). The April 2007
proposal contained a discussion of
whether the Board should retain the
existing guidance in comment 5a(a)(2)–
2.ii on ‘‘prominent location’’ to interpret
the ‘‘close proximity’’ standard of the
Bankruptcy Act. The same issue is
raised in the Board’s proposed
amendments to the Regulation Z rules
for open-end credit, which were
published for comment in June 2007 (72
FR 32,948, June 14, 2007). The Board
will consider this issue in connection
with its final action on the rules for
open-end credit after considering the
comments submitted on the June 2007
proposal.
5a(b) Required disclosures and 5a(c)
Direct-mail and electronic applications
and solicitations
The Bankruptcy Act provides that the
disclosures for electronic credit card
offers must be ‘‘updated regularly to
reflect the current policies, terms, and
fee amounts.’’ The April 2007 proposal
contained proposed amendments to
§§ 226.5a(b)(1), 226.5a(c), and 226.5a(e),
as well as the staff commentary, to
implement this requirement,

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particularly with regard to the accuracy
of variable-rate APR disclosures in
credit card applications and
solicitations. The same proposals are
also contained in the June 2007
proposal to revise the rules for open-end
credit under Regulation Z. As stated
above, the Board will consider revisions
related to the Bankruptcy Act in
connection with its final action on the
June 2007 proposal.
Section 226.5b Requirements for
Home-Equity Plans
Section 226.5b(a) sets forth
requirements for the form of disclosures
required to be made on or with
applications for home equity lines of
credit (HELOCs). The Board proposed to
amend § 226.5b(a) by adding a new
paragraph (3) to provide that if a
consumer accesses a HELOC application
in electronic form, such as on a home
computer, the disclosures required on or
with the application must also be
provided to the consumer in electronic
form. The Board proposed to add
comment 5b(a)(3)–1 to clarify this point
and also to make clear that if a
consumer is provided with a paper
application, the required disclosures
must be provided in paper form on or
with the application (and not, for
example, by including a reference in the
paper application to the Web site where
the disclosures are located).
As in the case of the credit card
application and solicitation disclosures
required under § 226.5a, discussed
above, many creditor commenters urged
the Board to revise the regulation and
commentary to permit disclosures to be
given in paper form in appropriate
cases, even where a HELOC application
is in electronic form. Commenters
mentioned the same reasons as for the
credit card disclosures, focusing in
particular on problems that might arise
in the context of in-person electronic
applications (involving, for example, a
consumer completing the application in
a creditor’s office by entering
information into a terminal or kiosk).
Consumer group commenters suggested
that the regulation not only should
permit, but should require, paper
disclosures in the case of in-person
electronic HELOC applications.
For the same reasons as discussed
above in connection with credit card
application and solicitation disclosures,
in the final regulation, new
§ 226.5b(a)(3) is revised to state that if
an application is accessed by the
consumer in electronic form, the
required disclosures may (rather than
must) be provided in electronic form.
New comment 5b(a)(3)–1 has been
modified from the proposal to provide

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guidance parallel to that in new
comment 5a(a)(2)–9 for credit card
applications and solicitations. Where a
consumer accesses an electronic HELOC
application in person in a creditor’s
office, the creditor could provide
disclosures in paper form and comply
with the timing and delivery
requirements of the regulation. In
addition, as discussed by the
commenters, paper disclosures may be
preferable in this situation because they
can be retained by the consumer.
Indeed, paper disclosures would likely
be necessary to comply with the timing
requirements and the requirement to
provide the home-equity brochure in a
form the consumer may retain under
§ 226.5b(e) in the case of an in-person
electronic application in the creditor’s
office. (The Board anticipates that
creditors will provide the other HELOC
application disclosures, under
§ 226.5b(d), in retainable form even
though not technically required, and
would consider further revisions to the
regulation to address this issue if
necessary.) In addition, the portion of
the proposed comment stating that
paper applications must be
accompanied by paper disclosures has
been deleted as unnecessary, parallel to
comment 5a(a)(2)–9.
Section 226.5b(c) states that persons,
other than the creditor, that provide
HELOC applications to consumers must
provide the required home equity
disclosures in certain cases. The 2001
interim final rule added a new
§ 226.5b(c)(2) to clarify that such third
parties may use electronic disclosures.
As proposed, this provision is being
deleted as unnecessary, because the ESign Act is a self-effectuating statute
and permits any person to use electronic
records subject to the conditions set
forth in the Act.
Comment 5b(b)–7 of the 2001 interim
final rule states that a consumer must be
able to access the electronic disclosures
at the time the application form is made
available by electronic communication.
This comment is substantially similar to
comment 5a(a)(2)–8 of the 2001 interim
final rule, discussed above.
The Board proposed to delete
comment 5b(b)–7 and substitute a new
comment 5b(a)(1)–5 in its place, which
generally would parallel the content of
proposed revised comment 5a(a)(2)–8.
The new comment would describe
alternative methods for presenting
electronic disclosures, which are
examples rather than an exhaustive list.
As in the case of proposed revised
comment 5a(a)(2)–8, discussed above,
creditor commenters addressing the
proposed comment generally urged that
the ‘‘non-bypassable link’’ example in

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the comment be deleted, or at least that
the final comment make clear that the
various methods of presenting
disclosures electronically are only
examples and not requirements. The
comment has been modified to clarify
that the methods are not the exclusive
means of satisfying the disclosure
requirements, but examples. In addition,
another example has been added, and
other modifications have been made for
clarity. Of course, similarly to electronic
credit card applications, any method
used for providing disclosures for
electronic HELOC applications would
have to ensure that the disclosures are
provided (not merely made available) to
the consumer, clearly and
conspicuously, in a timely manner on or
with the application.
Section 226.15 Right of Rescission
Section 226.15 gives consumers the
right to rescind certain open-end credit
plans secured by their principal
dwelling. Under § 226.15(b), creditors
must provide two copies of a notice of
this right to each consumer entitled to
rescind. For written (paper) disclosures,
this allows consumers to return one
copy to the creditor if they exercise the
right of rescission and retain the second
copy. The 2001 interim final rule added
language permitting creditors to provide
only one copy of the rescission notice to
each consumer when the notice is
provided in electronic form in
accordance with the consumer consent
and other applicable provisions of the ESign Act. The April 2007 proposal
retained this provision from the 2001
interim final rule. The few commenters
that addressed this proposal supported
it. The final rule adopts this provision
as proposed with minor wording
changes for clarification. It does not
appear that consumers would benefit by
receiving two electronic copies of
rescission notices.
In the 2001 interim final rule,
comment 15(b)–1 was revised to state
that if there is more than one property
owner, a single rescission notice may be
sent to each property owner if electronic
communication is used, that each coowner must consent to electronic
disclosures, and that each must
designate an electronic (e-mail) address
to be used for this purpose. In the April
2007 proposal, the Board proposed to
modify comment 15(b)–1 by deleting the
requirement to use e-mail. The
statement that each co-owner must
consent to electronic disclosures was
also proposed to be deleted.
A few commenters expressed concern
about the proposed deletion of the
statement that each co-owner must
consent to electronic disclosures, and

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suggested that the Board clarify this
issue. The E-Sign Act clearly states that
any consumer to whom written
disclosures are required to be given
must affirmatively consent to the use of
electronic disclosures before such
disclosures may be used in place of
paper disclosures; accordingly, the
Board believes that it is unnecessary to
address this issue in Regulation Z. In
addition, a commenter suggested that
creditors should be able to provide a
single electronic rescission notice to coowners who have the same e-mail
address or other electronic point of
contact, and also that a creditor may
require that consumers who wish to
receive disclosures electronically
provide such a single contact point. The
Board believes that these suggestions
might not be consistent with the Truth
in Lending Act, which requires delivery
of the rescission notice and disclosures
to each consumer entitled to rescind.
Accordingly, the revisions to comment
15(b)–1 are adopted as proposed.
Section 226.16 Advertising
Section 226.16 contains requirements
for advertisements for open-end credit,
and in particular requires that if an
advertisement includes certain ‘‘trigger
terms’’ (such as an APR), the
advertisement must also include certain
required disclosures (such as the
minimum finance charge and
transaction charges and annual fees).
Section 226.16(c) relates to catalogs
and other multiple-page advertisements
and to electronic advertisements. The
Board proposed to add a new paragraph
(3) to § 226.16(c) to provide that if a
consumer accesses an advertisement for
open-end credit in electronic form, such
as on a home computer, the disclosures
required on or with the advertisement
must also be provided to the consumer
in electronic form on or with the
advertisement. The Board proposed to
add comment 16(c)(3)–1 to clarify this
point and also to make clear that if a
consumer accesses a paper
advertisement, the required disclosures
must be provided in paper form on or
with the advertisement (and not, for
example, by including a reference in the
paper advertisement to the Web site
where the disclosures are located).
Commenters did not address this aspect
of the proposal.
In the final regulation, new
§ 226.16(c)(3) and comment 16(c)(3)–1
are not being adopted. Section 226.16(b)
requires that if an advertisement
includes trigger terms, the
advertisement itself must ‘‘clearly and
conspicuously set forth’’ the required
disclosures. Therefore, under the
existing regulation, providing paper

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disclosures for an advertisement in
electronic form, or vice versa, would not
comply because the disclosures would
not be set forth in the advertisement
itself.
Section 226.16(c) provides that in a
catalog or other multiple-page
advertisement, the required disclosures
need not be shown on each page where
a ‘‘trigger term’’ appears, as long as each
such page includes a cross-reference to
the page where the required disclosures
appear. The 2001 interim final rule (in
§ 226.16(c)(1) and (2), and comments
16(c)(1)–1 and –2) clarified that this
multiple-page rule also applies to credit
advertisements in electronic form. For
example, if a ‘‘trigger term’’ appears on
a particular web page, the additional
disclosures may appear in a table or
schedule on another web page and still
be considered part of a single
advertisement if there is a clear
reference to the page or location where
the table or schedule begins (which may
be accomplished, for example, by
including a link). In April 2007, the
Board proposed to retain this provision.
Only one commenter addressed the
provision and expressed concern that
consumers may not receive clear
product information from online
advertisements (noting, for example,
that in one online advertisement the
commenter was aware of, details were
disclosed several linked pages away
from the initial credit advertisement).
The final rule retains this provision as
proposed.
Subpart C—Closed-end Credit
Section 226.17
Requirements

General Disclosure

Section 226.17(a) prescribes the form
of disclosures required for closed-end
credit. Section 226.17(a)(1) requires
creditors to provide closed-end credit
disclosures in writing and in a form that
the consumer may keep. As proposed,
§ 226.17(a)(1) is revised to clarify that
creditors may provide the closed-end
credit disclosures to consumers in
electronic form, subject to compliance
with the consumer consent and other
applicable provisions of the E-Sign Act.
Some creditors may provide closed-end
credit disclosures to consumers both in
paper and electronic form and rely on
the paper form of the disclosures to
satisfy their compliance obligations. For
those creditors, the duplicate electronic
form of the closed-end credit
disclosures may be provided to
consumers without regard to the
consumer consent and other provisions
of the E-Sign Act because the electronic
form of the disclosure is not used to

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satisfy the regulation’s closed-end credit
disclosure requirements.
Section 226.17(a)(1) is also revised, as
proposed, to provide that the closed-end
credit disclosures required by
§§ 226.19(b) (adjustable-rate mortgage
loan applications) and 226.24 (closedend credit advertising) may be provided
to the consumer in electronic form, and
that the disclosures required by
§ 226.17(g) (delay in disclosures for mail
or telephone transactions) may be made
available to the consumer or to the
public in electronic form, under the
circumstances set forth in those
sections, without regard to the
consumer consent or other provisions of
the E-Sign Act. Commenters supported
this provision. The Board believes that
this will eliminate a potential
significant burden on electronic
commerce without increasing the risk of
harm to consumers. This approach will
assist consumers in shopping for credit
by enabling them to receive important
disclosures online at the same time they
access an application or advertisement
without first having to provide consent
in accordance with the requirements of
the E-Sign Act. Requiring consumers to
follow the consent procedures set forth
in the E-Sign Act in order to access an
online application or advertisement is
potentially burdensome and could
discourage consumers from shopping
for credit online. Moreover, because
these consumers are viewing the
application or advertisement online,
there appears to be little, if any, risk that
the consumer will be unable to view the
disclosures online as well.
Section 226.17(a)(3) in the interim
final rule cross-references § 226.36, the
section of the interim final rule setting
forth general rules for electronic
disclosures. Because the Board is
deleting § 226.36, as discussed below,
§ 226.17(a)(3) is also being deleted.
Section 227.17(g) applies where a
creditor receives a request for credit by
mail, telephone, or electronic
communication without face-to-face or
direct telephone solicitation. In these
circumstances, the creditor may delay
making the TILA disclosures for the
credit transaction until the due date of
the first payment, provided certain
disclosures (specified in § 226.17(g)(1)–
(5)) have been made available to the
consumer or to the public generally
(such as in a catalog or advertisement).
For example, a retailer may mail
catalogs to consumers, or provide
advertising inserts in newspapers,
containing information for ordering
merchandise by telephone or mail. If a
consumer calls the retailer, orders an
item, and agrees to pay for the item by
obtaining a closed-end extension of

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credit from the retailer, the TILA closedend disclosures would normally be
required to be provided to the consumer
before the consummation of the
transaction. Since this is impracticable
where the transaction is consummated
by telephone, however, § 226.17(g)
permits the retailer to delay providing
the specific disclosures for the
transaction, as long as the disclosures in
§ 226.17(g)(1)–(5), for representative
amounts or ranges of credit, are
included in the catalog or newspaper
insert.
In the 2001 interim final rule, the
Board replaced the term ‘‘electronic
communication’’ in § 226.17(g) with
‘‘facsimile machine.’’ The Board
explained that the rule in § 226.17(g)
predated Internet commerce, and the
term ‘‘electronic communication’’ was
intended to cover credit requests by
facsimile or telegram. The rationale
underlying the rule was that creditors
are unable to provide written
transaction-specific disclosures at the
time of the consumer’s credit request
where the request is made by facsimile
or telegram, no less than in the case of
requests made by telephone or mail.
That practical problem does not exist,
however, where a consumer requests
credit at a Web site. Therefore, the
Board believes it would be
inappropriate to extend the application
of § 226.17(g) to electronic requests for
credit made at an Internet Web site. In
the April 2007 proposal, the Board
proposed to retain the amendment to
§ 226.17(g) from the 2001 interim final
rule.
A few commenters discussed this
provision, as well as other provisions of
Regulation Z permitting delayed
disclosures where an application is
submitted by telephone. These
commenters contended that the same
reasons permitting disclosures to be
delayed in the case of a telephone
application might also apply in other
situations, such as where applications
are conducted through mobile handheld electronic devices, ATMs, or
computers not owned by the consumer
(such as an employer’s computer). The
Board has determined not to extend the
telephone provisions to additional
situations; refer to the discussion below
under ‘‘Delayed Disclosures.’’
Accordingly, § 226.17(g) remains
unchanged in this regard.
Where § 226.17(g) does apply, i.e.,
where the consumer requests credit by
telephone, mail, or facsimile machine,
the regulation requires the creditor (as a
condition of delaying the transactionspecific TILA disclosures) to make
available in written form to the
consumer or the public the disclosures

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set forth in § 226.17(g)(1)–(5) before the
actual purchase order or request. The
Board believes that these disclosures
can appropriately be made available to
the consumer or to the public either in
electronic form (for example, on the
creditor’s Web site) or in paper form. In
the April 2007 proposal, the Board
proposed to amend § 226.17(g) to
provide that the requirement to make
available the § 226.17(g)(1)–(5)
disclosures in written form to the
consumer or to the public may be
satisfied by making the disclosures
available in electronic form, such as at
a creditor’s Web site. Thus, for example,
a consumer might see information about
a product on a retailer’s Web site and
order the product by telephone using
closed-end credit; the transactionspecific disclosures could be delayed,
provided the § 226.17(g)(1)–(5)
disclosures are set forth on the Web site.
In this situation, the E-Sign consent
procedures would not have to be
followed in order for the § 226.17(g)(1)–
(5) disclosures to be provided in
electronic form. On the other hand, if
the consumer ordered the product via
the Web site itself, the transactionspecific disclosures could not be
delayed and would be required to be
provided before consummation of the
transaction. For the disclosures to be
provided in electronic form in this
situation, the E-Sign consent procedures
would have to be followed. The
amendment to § 226.17(g) is adopted as
proposed.
Section 226.19 Certain Residential
Mortgage and Variable-Rate
Transactions
Section 226.19(b) requires creditors to
provide certain disclosures relating to
adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) loans
secured by the consumer’s principal
dwelling. These disclosures must be
provided when an application form is
provided to the consumer or before the
consumer pays a nonrefundable fee,
whichever is earlier. The Board
proposed to amend § 226.19 by adding
a new paragraph (c) to provide that if a
consumer accesses an ARM application
in electronic form, the disclosures
required on or with an application for
an ARM must be provided to the
consumer in electronic form. The Board
also proposed to add comment 19(c)–1
to clarify this point, and to make clear
that if a consumer is provided with a
paper ARM application, the required
disclosures must be provided in paper
form on or with the application (and
not, for example, by including a
reference in the application to the Web
site where the disclosures are located).

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As in the case of the credit card
application and solicitation disclosures
required under § 226.5a and the HELOC
application disclosures under § 226.5b,
discussed above, many creditor
commenters urged the Board to revise
§ 226.19(c) in the final regulation and
the accompanying commentary
provisions to permit disclosures to be
given in paper form even where an ARM
application is provided in electronic
form. These commenters focused in
particular on problems that might arise
in the context of in-person electronic
applications (involving, for example, a
consumer in a creditor’s office entering
information at an electronic terminal to
complete an application). Consumer
group commenters suggested that the
regulation should not only permit, but
should require, paper disclosures in the
case of in-person ARM applications
made electronically.
For the same reasons as discussed
above in connection with credit card
application and solicitation disclosures
and HELOC application disclosures,
new § 226.19(c) is revised to state that
if an application is accessed by the
consumer in electronic form, the
required disclosures may (rather than
must) be provided in electronic form.
New comment 19(c)–1 has been
modified from the proposal to provide
guidance parallel to that in new
comments 5a(a)(2)–9 and 5b(a)(3)–1 for
credit card applications and
solicitations and for HELOC
applications, respectively. Where a
consumer accesses an electronic ARM
application in person in a creditor’s
office, the creditor could provide
disclosures in paper form and comply
with the timing and delivery
requirements of the regulation. Indeed,
in the case of an in-person electronic
application in a creditor’s office, paper
disclosures would likely be necessary to
comply with the timing requirements
and the requirement to provide the
ARM disclosures in a form the
consumer may retain. The portion of the
proposed comment stating that paper
applications must be accompanied by
paper disclosures has been deleted as
unnecessary, to parallel new comments
5a(a)(2)–9 and 5b(a)(3)–1.
Comment 19(b)–2 of the 2001 interim
final rule states that a consumer must be
able to access the electronic disclosures
at the time the blank application form
for ARMs is made available by
electronic communication. The Board
proposed to revise comment 19(b)–2 in
a manner substantially similar to
proposed comments 5b(a)(1)–5 and
5a(a)(2)–8, discussed above. The
proposed revised comment described
alternative methods for presenting

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electronic disclosures, which are
examples rather than an exhaustive list.
As in the case of proposed revised
comments 5b(a)(1)–5 and 5a(a)(2)–8,
discussed above, creditor commenters
addressing the proposed comment
generally urged that the ‘‘nonbypassable link’’ example in the
comment be deleted, or at least that the
final comment make clear that the
various methods of presenting
disclosures electronically are only
examples and not requirements. The
comment has been modified to clarify
that the methods are not the exclusive
means of satisfying the disclosure
requirements, but rather examples. In
addition, another example has been
added, and other modifications have
been made for clarity. Of course, any
method used for providing disclosures
for electronic ARM applications would
have to ensure that the disclosures are
provided (not merely made available) to
the consumer, clearly and
conspicuously, in a timely manner.
Section 226.23 Right of Rescission
Section 226.23 gives consumers the
right to rescind certain closed-end
mortgage loans secured by their
principal dwelling. Under § 226.23(b),
creditors must provide two copies of a
notice of this right to each consumer
entitled to rescind. For written (paper)
disclosures, this allows consumers to
return one copy to the creditor if they
exercise the right of rescission and
retain the second copy. The 2001
interim final rule added language
permitting creditors to provide only one
copy of the rescission notice to each
consumer when the notice is provided
in electronic form in accordance with
the consumer consent and other
applicable provisions of the E-Sign Act.
The April 2007 proposal retained this
provision from the 2001 interim final
rule. The few commenters that
addressed this proposal supported it.
The final rule adopts this provision as
proposed with minor wording changes.
It does not appear that consumers
would benefit by receiving two
electronic copies of rescission notices.
In the 2001 interim final rule,
comment 23(b)–1 was revised to state
that if there is more than one property
owner, a single rescission notice may be
sent to each property owner if electronic
communication is used, that each coowner must consent to electronic
disclosures, and that each must
designate an electronic (e-mail) address
to be used for this purpose. In the April
2007 proposal, the Board proposed to
modify comment 23(b)–1 by deleting the
requirement to use e-mail. The
statement that each co-owner must

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consent to electronic disclosures was
also proposed to be deleted, as consent
requirements are already set forth in the
E-Sign Act.
The comments received by the Board
on the proposed revisions to comment
15(b)–1 relating to rescission in the
open-end context, discussed above,
apply to closed-end rescission as well.
See the discussion under § 226.15
above. Accordingly, the revisions to
comment 23(b)–1 are adopted as
proposed.
Section 226.24 Advertising
Section 226.24 contains requirements
for advertisements for closed-end credit
and requires that if an advertisement
includes certain ‘‘trigger terms’’ (such as
the payment amount), the advertisement
must also include certain required
disclosures (such as the APR, the
amount or percentage of any
downpayment, and the terms of
repayment, as applicable).
Section 226.24(d) relates to catalogs
and other multiple-page advertisements
and to electronic advertisements. The
Board proposed to add a new paragraph
(3) to § 226.24(d) (comparable to
proposed new paragraph (3) to
§ 226.16(c) for open-end credit
advertising) to clarify that if a consumer
accesses an advertisement for closedend credit in electronic form, the
disclosures required on or with the
closed-end credit advertisement must be
provided to the consumer in electronic
form on or with the advertisement. The
Board proposed to add comment 24(d)–
5 to clarify this point, and also to make
clear that if a consumer accesses a paper
advertisement, the required disclosures
must be provided in paper form on or
with the advertisement (and not, for
example, by including a reference in the
advertisement to the Web site where the
disclosures are located). Commenters
did not address this provision.
In the final regulation, new
§ 226.24(d)(3) and comment 24(d)–5 are
not being adopted. Section 226.24(c)
requires that if an advertisement
includes trigger terms, the
advertisement itself must ‘‘state’’ the
required disclosures. Therefore, under
the existing regulation, providing paper
disclosures for an advertisement in
electronic form, or vice versa, would not
comply because the disclosures would
not be stated in the advertisement itself.
Section 226.24(d) provides that in a
catalog or other multiple-page
advertisement, the required disclosures
need not be shown on each page where
a ‘‘trigger term’’ appears, as long as each
such page includes a cross-reference to
the page where the required disclosures
appear. The 2001 interim final rule

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clarified (in § 226.24(d)(1) and (2), and
comments 24(d)–2 and 24(d)–4), as in
the case of open-end credit advertising,
that the multiple-page rule for closedend credit advertising also applies to
credit advertisements in electronic form.
For example, if a ‘‘trigger term’’ appears
on a particular web page, the additional
disclosures may appear in a table or
schedule on another web page and still
be considered part of a single
advertisement if there is a clear
reference to the page or location where
the table or schedule begins (which may
be accomplished, for example, by
including a link). In April 2007, the
Board proposed to retain this provision.
Only one commenter addressed this
provision and expressed concern that
consumers may not receive clear
product information (see discussion
under open-end advertising above). The
final rule retains this provision as
proposed.
Section 226.24(b) permits creditors to
state a simple annual rate of interest or
periodic rate in addition to the APR, as
long as the rate is stated in conjunction
with, but not more conspicuously than,
the APR. In the 2001 interim final rule,
comment 24(b)–6 was added to state
that in an advertisement using
electronic communication, the
consumer must be able to view both
rates simultaneously, and that this
requirement is not satisfied if the
consumer can view the APR only by use
of a link that takes the consumer to
another web location. In the April 2007
proposal, the Board proposed to delete
comment 24(b)–6 as unnecessary,
because the requirement to state the
simple annual rate or periodic rate in
conjunction with, and not more
conspicuously than, the APR, applies to
electronic advertisements no less than
to advertisements in other media. In the
supplementary information, the Board
stated that requiring the consumer to
scroll to another part of the page, or
access a link, in order to view the APR
would likely not satisfy this
requirement.
Some commenters were concerned by
the foregoing discussion in the April
2007 proposal, and contended that in
the case of small hand-held electronic
devices (such as Internet-enabled
cellphones or personal digital assistants)
that a consumer might use to view a
credit advertisement, the small size of
the screen might necessitate scrolling or
the use of links for viewing the APR.
Commenters also said the proposal was
confusing in that comment 24(b)–6,
stating that the use of links would not
comply, was proposed to be deleted, yet
the supplementary information
appeared to impose the same restriction.

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Comment 24(b)–6 is being deleted as
proposed. As stated in the proposal, the
existing regulatory requirement is to
state the APR no less conspicuously
than the simple rate of interest, and this
rule applies in the electronic context.
However, the Board believes that the
rule can be applied with some degree of
flexibility, to account for variations in
devices consumers may use to view
electronic advertisements. Therefore,
the use of scrolling or links would not
necessarily fail to comply with the
regulation in all cases; however,
creditors should ensure that electronic
advertisements comply with the equal
conspicuousness requirement.
Subpart E—Special Rules for Certain
Home Mortgage Transactions
Section 226.31

General Rules

Subpart E implements the Home
Ownership and Equity Protection Act
(HOEPA) and sets forth special rules,
including disclosure requirements, for
certain mortgage loans with rates or fees
above specified thresholds (HOEPA
loans) and for reverse mortgage loans.
Section 226.31(b) prescribes the form of
disclosures required under Subpart E.
Section 226.31(b)(1) requires creditors
to provide the HOEPA and reverse
mortgage disclosures in writing and in
a form that the consumer may keep. As
proposed, § 226.31(b)(1) is renumbered
as § 226.31(b) and revised to clarify that
the HOEPA and reverse mortgage
disclosures may be provided to the
consumer in electronic form, subject to
compliance with the consumer consent
and other applicable provisions of the ESign Act. Some creditors may provide
the HOEPA and reverse mortgage
disclosures to consumers both in paper
and electronic form and rely on the
paper form of the disclosures to satisfy
their compliance obligations. For those
creditors, the duplicate electronic form
of the HOEPA and reverse mortgage
disclosures may be provided to
consumers without regard to the
consumer consent and other provisions
of the E-Sign Act because the electronic
form of the disclosure is not used to
satisfy the regulation’s HOEPA and
reverse mortgage disclosure
requirements.
Section 226.31(b)(2) in the interim
final rule cross-references § 226.36, the
section of the interim final rule setting
forth general rules for electronic
disclosures. Because the Board is
deleting § 226.36, as discussed below,
§ 226.31(b)(2) is also being deleted in
the final rule.

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Subpart F—Electronic Communication
Section 226.36 Requirements for
Electronic Communication
Section 226.36 was added by the 2001
interim final rule to address the general
requirements for electronic
communications. In the April 2007
proposal, the Board proposed to delete
§ 226.36 (which constitutes all of
Subpart F) from Regulation Z and the
accompanying sections of the staff
commentary. Creditor commenters
largely supported the proposed deletion,
and § 226.36 and the accompanying
commentary are deleted in the final
rule.
In the interim rule, § 226.36(a)
defined the term ‘‘electronic
communication’’ to mean a message
transmitted electronically that can be
displayed on equipment as visual text,
such as a message displayed on a
personal computer monitor screen. The
deletion of § 226.36(a) does not change
applicable legal requirements under the
E-Sign Act.
Sections 226.36(b), (c) and (f)
incorporated by reference provisions of
the E-Sign Act, such as the provision
allowing disclosures to be provided in
electronic form, the requirement to
obtain the consumer’s affirmative
consent before providing such
disclosures, and the provision allowing
electronic signatures. The deletion of
these provisions has no impact on the
general applicability of the E-Sign Act to
Regulation Z disclosures.
Sections 226.36(d) and (e) addressed
specific timing and delivery
requirements for electronic disclosures
under Regulation Z, such as the
requirement to send disclosures to a
consumer’s e-mail address (or post the
disclosures on a Web site and send a
notice alerting the consumer to the
disclosures). The Board stated in the
proposal that it no longer believed that
these additional provisions were
necessary or appropriate. The Board
noted that electronic disclosures have
evolved since 2001, as industry and
consumers have gained experience with
them, and also noted concerns about email related to data security, identity
theft, and phishing.
The consumer group commenters
urged the Board to require the use of email to provide required disclosures in
electronic form, arguing that e-mail is
the only reliable way to ensure that
consumers are able to actually access,
receive, and retain disclosures. The
consumer groups also disagreed with
the statement that concerns relating to
phishing, identity theft, and data
security are a valid reason for not
requiring the use of e-mail, noting that

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phishing involves gathering information
from the consumer, while disclosures
would be provided to the consumer, and
need not include sensitive information.
While the consumer’s receipt of an email message that is actually from the
consumer’s creditor would not in
general pose a security risk, consumers
might ignore or delete e-mails from
creditors (real or purported), in order to
avoid falling victim to fraud schemes.
Thus, disclosures sent by consumers’
creditors may not receive the attention
they should. Consequently, some
creditors may be reluctant to
communicate by e-mail. To the extent
consumers are instructed not to ignore
electronic mail messages from their
creditors, the risk of consumers being
victimized by fraudulent e-mail might
be increased. In any event, the Board
believes it is preferable not to mandate
the use of any particular means of
electronic delivery of disclosures, but
instead to allow flexibility for creditors
to use whatever method may be best
suited to particular types of disclosure
(for example, account-opening, periodic
statements, or change in terms).
With regard to the requirement to
attempt to redeliver returned electronic
disclosures, creditors would be required
to search their files for an additional email address to use, and might be
required to use a postal mail address for
redelivery if no additional e-mail
address was available. As stated in the
April 2007 proposal, the Board
continues to believe that both
requirements would likely be unduly
burdensome.
Under the April 2007 proposed rule,
the requirement in the 2001 interim
final rule for creditors to maintain
disclosures posted on a Web site for at
least 90 days would be deleted. Creditor
commenters supported the proposed
deletion; consumer group commenters
expressed concern about its impact on
consumers. As stated in the proposal,
based on a review of industry practices,
it appears that many creditors maintain
disclosures posted on an Internet Web
site for several months, and, in a
number of cases, for more than a year.
For example, it appears that credit card
issuers that offer online periodic
statements to consumers typically make
those statements available without
charge for six months or longer in
electronic form. This practice has
developed even though Regulation Z
does not currently require creditors to
maintain disclosures for any specific
period of time. In addition, the Board
continues to believe that an appropriate
time period consumers may want
electronic disclosures to be available
may vary depending upon the type of

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disclosure, and is reluctant to establish
specific time periods that would vary
depending on the disclosures, which
would increase the compliance burden.
Therefore, the 90-day retention
provision is deleted as proposed.
Nevertheless, while the Board is not
requiring disclosures to be maintained
on an Internet Web site for any specific
time period, the general requirements of
Regulation Z continue to apply to
electronic disclosures, such as the
requirement to provide disclosures to
consumers at certain specified times
and in a form that the consumer may
keep. The Board expects creditors to
maintain disclosures on Web sites for a
reasonable period of time (which may
vary depending upon the particular
disclosure) so that consumers have an
opportunity to access, view, and retain
the disclosures. As stated in the April
2007 proposal, the Board will monitor
creditors’ electronic disclosure practices
with regard to the ability of consumers
to retain Regulation Z disclosures and
would consider further revisions to the
regulation to address this issue if
necessary.
V. Other Issues Raised by Commenters
Clear and Conspicuous Disclosures
An issue raised in the comments on
the April 2007 proposal related to small
hand-held electronic devices through
which consumers may conduct financial
transactions using the Internet or other
electronic means (for example, personal
digital assistants, Internet-enabled
cellphones, and similar devices). One
commenter requested clarification on
whether creditors would be deemed to
comply with the requirement to provide
disclosures in a clear and conspicuous
form, even when the consumer views
them on a small screen of a hand-held
electronic device. The commenter noted
that the creditor has no control over
what devices consumers choose to use,
for example, to view disclosures on a
web page. The Board believes that
disclosures comply with the ‘‘clear and
conspicuous’’ requirement as long as
they are provided in a manner such that
they would be clear and conspicuous
when viewed on a typical home
personal computer monitor. In addition,
with regard to disclosures subject to
specific font size requirements, the
disclosures must be provided such that
the required size requirement would be
met when viewed on a typical home
personal computer monitor.
Retainable Form
Several industry commenters
requested guidance on how creditors
can be sure of meeting the requirement

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63471

to provide disclosures in a form that the
consumer can keep. Commenters noted
that some of the disclosures that are
exempted from the E-Sign requirements
regarding notice and consent are
nevertheless required to be given in
retainable form (for example, the
HELOC brochure under § 226.5b(e) and
the ARM application disclosures under
§ 226.19(b)). Commenters pointed out
that the E-Sign Act requires, with regard
to consumer disclosures generally, that
a creditor disclose ‘‘the hardware and
software requirements for access to and
retention of the electronic records’’ and
that the consumer consent to electronic
disclosures ‘‘in a manner that
reasonably demonstrates that the
consumer can access’’ the disclosures
electronically. A commenter noted that
if the E-Sign procedures are followed, a
creditor has some degree of comfort that
the retainability requirement has been
met; however, with regard to disclosures
that are exempted from the E-Sign
notice and consent provisions (such as
those under §§ 226.5b(e) and 226.19(b)),
it is not clear how the creditor can
demonstrate compliance with the
retainability requirement.
The consumer group commenters
were concerned about retainability of
disclosures in light of the deletion of the
requirement to maintain disclosures on
a Web site for at least 90 days. They
urged that the final regulations require
that disclosures be delivered in a format
that is both downloadable and printable.
The Board believes that creditors
satisfy the requirement for providing
electronic disclosures in a form the
consumer can retain if they are provided
in a standard electronic format that can
be downloaded and saved or printed on
a typical home personal computer.
Typically, any document that can be
downloaded by the consumer can also
be printed. The Board will, however,
monitor creditors’ practices to evaluate
whether further guidance is needed on
this issue. In a situation where the
consumer is provided electronic
disclosures through equipment under
the creditor’s control—such as a
terminal or kiosk in the creditor’s
offices—the creditor could, for example,
provide a printer that automatically
prints the disclosures.
Delayed Disclosures
A number of creditor commenters
suggested that, in the case of
transactions involving small hand-held
electronic devices, creditors should be
permitted to treat the transactions as
though they were conducted by
telephone and thus delay disclosures.
For example, for telephone credit card
applications and solicitations, § 226.5a

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permits the disclosures to be provided
within 30 days after the consumer
requests the credit card (but no later
than the delivery of the card). For
telephone HELOC applications and
ARM loan applications, §§ 226.5b and
226.19(b), respectively, permit the
disclosures to be provided within three
business days after the creditor receives
the application. For telephone
applications for closed-end credit in
general, § 226.17(g) allows the § 226.18
loan (or retail sale) disclosures to be
provided no later than the due date of
the first payment, if certain generic
disclosures have been made available to
the consumer or to the public generally
(for example, in a catalog). Since small
hand-held electronic devices may not be
well suited to displaying or retaining
disclosures, commenters argued that
creditors should be permitted to mail
paper disclosures to consumers within
the timeframes specified in the
regulations applicable to telephone
transactions, instead of providing
electronic disclosures that consumers
might view using a small hand-held
device. Commenters contended that
such devices are more like telephones
than home computers. Some
commenters suggested that such a
delayed disclosure provision should
apply to other situations as well, such
as ‘‘enhanced ATMs’’ and computers
not owned by the consumer (e.g., a
computer in an employer’s office or a
public library). However, it does not
appear that at present, use of such
devices for financial transactions has
advanced to the point where the relief
suggested by the commenters is
necessary to avoid burdens on
electronic commerce.
Expansion of Exception From E-Sign
Notice and Consent Requirements
One commenter suggested that the
Board adopt additional exemptions from
the E-Sign notice and consent
requirements. For example, if a
consumer applied for a credit card or
mortgage online, the commenter
suggested that the creditor should be
able to provide the account-opening
disclosures under § 226.6, or loan
closing disclosures under § 226.18 (in
addition to the application-related
disclosures already permitted under this
final rule) online, without notice and
consent under the E-Sign Act. The
commenter argued that, since Internet
commerce has expanded greatly over
the past few years, when consumers
choose to conduct financial transactions
online, they presume that they will
receive related disclosures online as
well. The Board believes that, at this
time, there is insufficient evidence that

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the consent requirements are a burden
on electronic commerce in this
situation; and that consumers who shop
for credit online may not necessarily
want to receive account-opening or loan
closing disclosures online.
VI. Use of ‘‘Plain Language’’
Section 722 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act of 1999 requires the Board to
use ‘‘plain language’’ in all proposed
and final rules published after January
1, 2000. In the proposed rule, the Board
invited comments on whether the
proposed rules are clearly stated and
effectively organized, and how the
Board might make the proposed text
easier to understand. A few commenters
made suggestions for clarifying the
regulatory language. These comments
are discussed above, under ‘‘IV. Sectionby-Section Analysis.’’ The Board has
attempted to clarify the language in the
final rule as suggested by commenters.
VII. Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis
The Board prepared an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis as
required by the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) in
connection with the April 2007
proposal. The Board received no
comments on its initial regulatory
flexibility analysis.
The RFA generally requires an agency
to perform an assessment of the impact
a rule is expected to have on small
entities. However, under section 605(b)
of the RFA, 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the
regulatory flexibility analysis otherwise
required under section 604 of the RFA
is not required if an agency certifies,
along with a statement providing the
factual basis for such certification, that
the rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Based on its
analysis and for the reasons stated
below, the Board certifies that the rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
1. Statement of the need for, and
objectives of, the final rule. The Board
is adopting revisions to Regulation Z to
withdraw the 2001 interim final rule on
electronic communication and to allow
creditors to provide certain disclosures
to consumers in electronic form on or
with an application, solicitation, or
advertisement that is accessed by the
consumer in electronic form without
regard to the consumer consent and
other provisions of the E-Sign Act. The
Board is also clarifying that other
Regulation Z disclosures may be
provided to consumers in electronic
form in accordance with the consumer

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consent and other applicable provisions
of the E-Sign Act.
TILA was enacted to enhance
economic stabilization and competition
for credit by strengthening the informed
use of credit, including an awareness of
the cost of credit by consumers. The
purpose of TILA is to assure a
meaningful disclosure of credit terms so
that the consumer can compare the
various credit terms available and avoid
the uninformed use of credit, and to
protect the consumer against inaccurate
and unfair credit billing and credit card
practices. 15 U.S.C. 1601. TILA
authorizes the Board to prescribe
regulations to carry out the purposes of
the statute. 15 U.S.C. 1604(a). The Act
expressly states that the Board’s
regulations may contain ‘‘such
classifications, differentiations, or other
provisions, * * * , as in the judgment
of the Board are necessary or proper to
effectuate the purposes of [the Act], to
prevent circumvention or evasion of
[the Act], or to facilitate compliance
with [the Act].’’ 15 U.S.C. 1604(a). The
Board believes that the revisions to
Regulation Z discussed above are within
Congress’s broad grant of authority to
the Board to adopt provisions that carry
out the purposes of the statute. These
revisions facilitate the informed use of
credit by consumers in circumstances
where a consumer accesses a credit
application, solicitation, or
advertisement in electronic form.
2. Issues raised by comments in
response to the initial regulatory
flexibility analysis. In accordance with
section 603(a) of the RFA, the Board
conducted an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis in connection with
the proposed rule. The Board did not
receive any comments on its initial
regulatory flexibility analysis.
3. Small entities affected by the final
rule. The ability to provide shopping
and advertising disclosures in electronic
form on or with an application,
solicitation, or advertisement that is
accessed by the consumer in electronic
form applies to all creditors, regardless
of their size. Accordingly, the final rule
would reduce burden and compliance
costs for small entities by providing
relief, to the extent the E-Sign Act
applies in these circumstances. The
number of small entities affected by this
final rule is unknown.
4. Other federal rules. The Board
believes no federal rules duplicate,
overlap, or conflict with the final
revisions to Regulation Z.
5. Significant alternatives to the
proposed revisions. The Board solicited
comment on any significant alternatives
that could provide additional ways to
reduce regulatory burden associated

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with the proposed rule. Commenters
suggested that in certain circumstances
where a consumer accesses a credit
application or solicitation in electronic
form, creditors should be permitted to
provide the required disclosures in
paper form (rather than electronic form
as would be required under the
proposed rule). The final rule permits
paper disclosures in certain
circumstances as suggested by the
commenters. A commenter also
suggested that in certain cases where a
consumer receives a credit application
or solicitation in paper form, creditors
should be permitted to provide the
required disclosures in electronic form
without the consumer’s consent. The
final rule allows electronic disclosures
in the case of applications or
solicitations in paper form, but only if
the consumer consents in accordance
with the E-Sign Act.
VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C.
3506; 5 CFR 1320 Appendix A.1), the
Board reviewed the rule under the
authority delegated to the Board by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). The collection of information
that is subject to the PRA by this final
rulemaking is found in 12 CFR 226. The
Federal Reserve may not conduct or
sponsor, and an organization is not
required to respond to, this information
collection unless it displays a currently
valid OMB control number. The OMB
control number is 7100–0199.
Title I of the Consumer Credit
Protection Act authorizes the Federal
Reserve to issue regulations to carry out
the provisions of that Act. 15 U.S.C.
1601, 1604(a). This information
collection is mandatory. Since the
Federal Reserve does not collect any
information, no issue of confidentiality
normally arises. However, in the event
the Board were to retain records during
the course of an examination, the
information may be protected from
disclosure under the exemptions (b)(4),
(6), and (8) of the Freedom of
Information Act (5 U.S.C. 522 (b)).
Transaction- or account-specific
disclosures and billing error allegations
are not publicly available and are
confidential between the creditor and
the consumer. General disclosures of
credit terms that appear in
advertisements or take-one applications
are available to the public.
TILA and Regulation Z ensure
adequate disclosure of the costs and
terms of credit to consumers. For openend credit, creditors are required to
disclose information about the initial
costs and terms and to provide periodic

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statements of account activity, notices of
changes in terms, and statements of
rights concerning billing error
procedures. The regulation also requires
specific types of disclosures for credit
and charge card accounts and homeequity plans. For closed-end loans, such
as mortgage and installment loans, cost
disclosures are required to be provided
prior to consummation. Special
disclosures are required of certain
products, such as reverse mortgages,
certain variable-rate loans, and certain
mortgages with rates and fees above
specified thresholds. TILA and
Regulation Z also contain rules
concerning credit advertising. To ease
the burden and cost of complying with
Regulation Z (particularly for small
entities), the Federal Reserve provides
model forms, which are appended to the
regulation. Creditors are required to
retain evidence of compliance for
twenty-four months (subpart D, section
226.25), but the regulation does not
specify the types of records that must be
retained.
Under the PRA, the Federal Reserve
accounts for the paperwork burden
associated with Regulation Z for the
state member banks and other creditors
supervised by the Federal Reserve that
engage in lending covered by Regulation
Z and, therefore, are respondents under
the PRA. Appendix I of Regulation Z
defines the Federal Reserve-supervised
institutions as: State member banks,
branches and agencies of foreign banks
(other than federal branches, federal
agencies, and insured state branches of
foreign banks), commercial lending
companies owned or controlled by
foreign banks, and organizations
operating under section 25 or 25A of the
Federal Reserve Act. Other federal
agencies account for the paperwork
burden on other creditors. The annual
burden is estimated to be 552,398 hours
for the 1,172 Federal Reserve-supervised
institutions that are deemed to be
respondents for the purposes of the
PRA.
As mentioned in the Preamble, on
April 30, 2007, a notice of proposed
rulemaking was published in the
Federal Register (72 FR 21141). No
comments specifically addressing the
burden estimate were received.
The Federal Reserve has a continuing
interest in the public’s opinions of our
collections of information. At any time,
comments regarding the burden
estimate, or any other aspect of this
collection of information, including
suggestions for reducing the burden,
may be sent to: Secretary, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, 20th and C Streets, NW.,
Washington, DC 20551; and to the

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Office of Management and Budget,
Paperwork Reduction Project (7100–
0199), Washington, DC 20503.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 226
Advertising, Federal Reserve System,
Mortgages, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Truth in Lending.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Board amends 12 CFR
part 226 as set forth below:

■

PART 226—TRUTH IN LENDING
(REGULATION Z)
1. The authority citation for part 226
continues to read as follows:

■

Authority: 12 U.S.C. 3806; 15 U.S.C. 1604
and 1637(c)(5).

Subpart B—Open-end Credit
2. Section 226.5 is amended by
revising paragraph (a)(1), to read as
follows, and removing paragraph (a)(5):

■

§ 226.5

General disclosure requirements.

(a) Form of disclosures. (1) The
creditor shall make the disclosures
required by this subpart clearly and
conspicuously in writing,7 in a form
that the consumer may keep.8 The
disclosures required by this subpart may
be provided to the consumer in
electronic form, subject to compliance
with the consumer consent and other
applicable provisions of the Electronic
Signatures in Global and National
Commerce Act (E-Sign Act) (15 U.S.C.
§ 7001 et seq.). The disclosures required
by §§ 226.5a, 226.5b, and 226.16 may be
provided to the consumer in electronic
form without regard to the consumer
consent or other provisions of the ESign Act in the circumstances set forth
in those sections.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Section 226.5a is amended by
adding a new paragraph (a)(2)(v), to read
as follows:
§ 226.5a Credit and charge card
applications and solicitations.

(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(v) For an application or a solicitation
that is accessed by the consumer in
electronic form, the disclosures required
under this section may be provided to
the consumer in electronic form on or
with the application or solicitation.
*
*
*
*
*
7 The disclosure required by section 226.9(d)
when a finance charge is imposed at the time of a
transaction need not be written.
8 The disclosures required under § 226.5a for
credit and charge card applications and
solicitations, the home equity disclosures required

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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 217 / Friday, November 9, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
higher-priced property or services
offered.
*
*
*
*
*

4. Section 226.5b is amended by
adding a new paragraph (a)(3), to read
as follows, removing the heading for
paragraph (c)(1), redesignating
paragraph (c)(1) as paragraph (c), and
removing paragraph (c)(2):

■

§ 226.5b
plans.

Subpart C—Closed-end Credit

*

*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(3) For an application that is accessed
by the consumer in electronic form, the
disclosures required under this section
may be provided to the consumer in
electronic form on or with the
application.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. Section 226.15 is amended by
revising the first sentence of the
introductory text of paragraph (b), to
read as follows:
§ 226.15

Right of rescission.

*

*
*
*
*
(b) Notice of right to rescind. In any
transaction or occurrence subject to
rescission, a creditor shall deliver two
copies of the notice of the right to
rescind to each consumer entitled to
rescind (one copy to each if the notice
is delivered in electronic form in
accordance with the consumer consent
and other applicable provisions of the ESign Act). * * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 6. Section 226.16 is amended by
revising paragraph (c) to read as follows:
§ 226.16

Advertising.

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*

*
*
*
*
(c) Catalogs or other multiple-page
advertisements; electronic
advertisements. (1) If a catalog or other
multiple-page advertisement, or an
electronic advertisement (such as an
advertisement appearing on an Internet
Web site), gives information in a table
or schedule in sufficient detail to permit
determination of the disclosures
required by paragraph (b) of this section,
it shall be considered a single
advertisement if:
(i) The table or schedule is clearly and
conspicuously set forth; and
(ii) Any statement of terms set forth in
§ 226.6 appearing anywhere else in the
catalog or advertisement clearly refers to
the page or location where the table or
schedule begins.
(2) A catalog or other multiple-page
advertisement or an electronic
advertisement (such as an advertisement
appearing on an Internet Web site)
complies with this paragraph if the table
or schedule of terms includes all
appropriate disclosures for a
representative scale of amounts up to
the level of the more commonly sold

VerDate Aug<31>2005

18:07 Nov 08, 2007

Jkt 214001

7. Section 226.17 is amended by
revising paragraph (a)(1), removing
paragraph (a)(3), and revising paragraph
(g), to read as follows:

■

Requirements for home equity

§ 226.17

General disclosure requirements.

(a) Form of disclosures. (1) The
creditor shall make the disclosures
required by this subpart clearly and
conspicuously in writing, in a form that
the consumer may keep. The disclosures
required by this subpart may be
provided to the consumer in electronic
form, subject to compliance with the
consumer consent and other applicable
provisions of the Electronic Signatures
in Global and National Commerce Act
(E-Sign Act) (15 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.).
The disclosures required by
§§ 226.17(g), 226.19(b), and 226.24 may
be provided to the consumer in
electronic form without regard to the
consumer consent or other provisions of
the E-Sign Act in the circumstances set
forth in those sections. The disclosures
shall be grouped together, shall be
segregated from everything else, and
shall not contain any information not
directly related 37 to the disclosures
required under § 226.18.38 The
itemization of the amount financed
under § 226.18(c)(1) must be separate
from the other disclosures under that
section.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Mail or telephone orders—delay in
disclosures. If a creditor receives a
purchase order or a request for an
extension of credit by mail, telephone,
or facsimile machine without face-toface or direct telephone solicitation, the
creditor may delay the disclosures until
the due date of the first payment, if the
following information for representative
amounts or ranges of credit is made
available in written form or in electronic
form to the consumer or to the public
before the actual purchase order or
request:
(1) The cash price or the principal
loan amount.
(2) The total sale price.
(3) The finance charge.
37 The disclosures may include an
acknowledgment of receipt, the date of the
transaction, and the consumer’s name, address, and
account number.
38 The following disclosures may be made
together with or separately from other required
disclosures: the creditor’s identity under
§ 226.18(a), the variable rate example under
§ 226.18(f)(1)(iv), insurance or debt cancellation
under § 226.18(n), and certain security interest
charges under § 226.18(o).

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(4) The annual percentage rate, and if
the rate may increase after
consummation, the following
disclosures:
(i) The circumstances under which
the rate may increase.
(ii) Any limitations on the increase.
(iii) The effect of an increase.
(5) The terms of repayment.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. Section 226.19 is amended by
adding a new paragraph (c), to read as
follows:
§ 226.19 Certain residential mortgage and
variable-rate transactions.

*

*
*
*
*
(c) Electronic disclosures. For an
application that is accessed by the
consumer in electronic form, the
disclosures required by paragraph (b) of
this section may be provided to the
consumer in electronic form on or with
the application.
■ 9. Section 226.23 is amended by
revising the first sentence of paragraph
(b)(1), to read as follows:
§ 226.23

Right of rescission.

*

*
*
*
*
(b)(1) Notice of right to rescind. In a
transaction subject to rescission, a
creditor shall deliver two copies of the
notice of the right to rescind to each
consumer entitled to rescind (one copy
to each if the notice is delivered in
electronic form in accordance with the
consumer consent and other applicable
provisions of the E-Sign Act). * * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. Section 226.24 is amended by
revising paragraph (d) to read as
follows:
§ 226.24

Advertising.

*

*
*
*
*
(d) Catalogs or other multiple-page
advertisements; electronic
advertisements. (1) If a catalog or other
multiple-page advertisement, or an
electronic advertisement (such as an
advertisement appearing on an Internet
Web site), gives information in a table
or schedule in sufficient detail to permit
determination of the disclosures
required by paragraph (c)(2) of this
section, it shall be considered a single
advertisement if:
(i) The table or schedule is clearly and
conspicuously set forth; and
(ii) Any statement of terms of the
credit terms in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section appearing anywhere else in the
catalog or advertisement clearly refers to
the page or location where the table or
schedule begins.
(2) A catalog or other multiple-page
advertisement or an electronic

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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 217 / Friday, November 9, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
advertisement (such as an advertisement
appearing on an Internet Web site)
complies with paragraph (c)(2) of this
section if the table or schedule of terms
includes all appropriate disclosures for
a representative scale of amounts up to
the level of the more commonly sold
higher-priced property or services
offered.
Subpart E—Special Rules for Certain
Home Mortgage Transactions
11. Section 226.31 is amended by
revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:

■

§ 226.31

General rules.

*

*
*
*
*
(b) Form of disclosures. The creditor
shall make the disclosures required by
this subpart clearly and conspicuously
in writing, in a form that the consumer
may keep. The disclosures required by
this subpart may be provided to the
consumer in electronic form, subject to
compliance with the consumer consent
and other applicable provisions of the
Electronic Signatures in Global and
National Commerce Act (E-Sign Act) (15
U.S.C. § 7001 et seq.).
*
*
*
*
*

12. Subpart F, consisting of § 226.36,
is removed.
■ 13. In Supplement I to Part 226, the
following amendments are made:
■ a. In Section 226.5—General
Disclosure Requirements, under
Paragraph 5(b)(2)(ii), paragraph 3. is
revised.
■ b. In Section 226.5a—Credit and
Charge Card Applications and
Solicitations, under 5a(a)(2) Form of
Disclosures, paragraph 8. is revised and
new paragraph 9. is added.
■ c. In Section 226.5b—Requirements
for Home Equity Plans, under 5b(a)
Form of Disclosures, under 5b(a)(1)
General, new paragraph 5. is added.
■ d. In Section 226.5b—Requirements
for Home Equity Plans, under 5b(a)
Form of Disclosures, new heading
Paragraph 5b(a)(3) is added, and under
the new heading new paragraph 1. is
added.
■ e. In Section 226.5b—Requirements
for Home Equity Plans, under 5b(b)
Time of Disclosures, paragraph 7. is
removed.
■ f. In Section 226.15—Right of
Rescission, under 15(b) Notice of Right
to Rescind., paragraph 1. is revised.
■ g. In Section 226.16—Advertising,
under Paragraph 16(c)(1), paragraphs 1.
and 2. are revised.
■ h. In Section 226.19—Certain
Residential Mortgage and Variable-Rate

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■

18:07 Nov 08, 2007

SUPPLEMENT I TO PART 226—
OFFICIAL STAFF INTERPRETATIONS
*

*

*

*

*

Subpart B—Open-End Credit
Section 226.5—General Disclosure
Requirements

Subpart F—[Removed]

VerDate Aug<31>2005

Transactions, under 19(b) Certain
variable-rate transactions, paragraph
2.v. is revised.
■ i. In Section 226.19—Certain
Residential Mortgage and Variable-Rate
Transactions, new heading 19(c)
Electronic disclosures is added, and
under the new heading new paragraph
1. is added.
■ j. In Section 226.23—Right of
Rescission, under 23(b) Notice of Right
to Rescind., paragraph 1. is revised.
■ k. In Section 226.24—Advertising,
under 24(b) Advertisement of Rate of
Finance Charge, paragraph 6. is
removed.
■ l. In Section 226.24—Advertising,
under 24(d) Catalogs or other multiplepage advertisements; electronic
advertisements, paragraphs 2. and 4. are
revised.
■ m. Subpart F, section 226.36—
Requirements for Electronic
Communications, is removed.
The amendments read as follows:

Jkt 214001

*

*
5(b)(2)

*

*

*

*

*

Periodic statements.

*

*

*

Paragraph 5(b)(2)(ii).

*

*

*

*

*

3. Calling for periodic statements. When
the consumer initiates a request, the creditor
may permit, but may not require, consumers
to pick up their periodic statements. If the
consumer wishes to pick up the statement
and the plan has a free-ride period, the
statement must be made available in
accordance with the 14-day rule.

*

*

*

*

*

Section 226.5a—Credit and Charge Card
Applications and Solicitations

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

Frm 00031

Fmt 4700

Sfmt 4700

*

*

*

*

8. Form of electronic disclosures provided
on or with electronic applications or
solicitations. Card issuers must provide the
disclosures required by this section on or
with a blank application or reply form that
is made available to the consumer in
electronic form, such as on a card issuer’s
Internet Web site. Card issuers have
flexibility in satisfying this requirement.
Methods card issuers could use to satisfy the
requirement include, but are not limited to,
the following examples:
i. The disclosures could automatically
appear on the screen when the application or
reply form appears;
ii. The disclosures could be located on the
same Web page as the application or reply

PO 00000

form (whether or not they appear on the
initial screen), if the application or reply
form contains a clear and conspicuous
reference to the location of the disclosures
and indicates that the disclosures contain
rate, fee, and other cost information, as
applicable;
iii. Card issuers could provide a link to the
electronic disclosures on or with the
application (or reply form) as long as
consumers cannot bypass the disclosures
before submitting the application or reply
form. The link would take the consumer to
the disclosures, but the consumer need not
be required to scroll completely through the
disclosures; or
iv. The disclosures could be located on the
same web page as the application or reply
form without necessarily appearing on the
initial screen, immediately preceding the
button that the consumer will click to submit
the application or reply.
Whatever method is used, a card issuer
need not confirm that the consumer has read
the disclosures. For disclosures required to
be provided in tabular form, card issuers
must satisfy the requirements with respect to
electronic disclosures set forth in comment
5a(a)(2)–2(ii).
9. Form of disclosures. Whether
disclosures must be in electronic form
depends upon the following:
i. If a consumer accesses a credit card
application or solicitation electronically
other than in-person in a card issuer’s office
(covered under ii. below), such as online at
a home computer, the card issuer must
provide the disclosures in electronic form
(such as with the application or solicitation
on its Web site) in order to meet the
requirement to provide disclosures in a
timely manner on or with the application or
solicitation. If the issuer instead mailed
paper disclosures to the consumer, this
requirement would not be met.
ii. In contrast, if a consumer is physically
present in the card issuer’s office, and
accesses a credit card application or
solicitation electronically, such as via a
terminal or kiosk, the issuer may provide
disclosures in either electronic or paper form,
provided the issuer complies with the timing
and delivery (‘‘on or with’’) requirements of
the regulation.

*

*

*

Section 226.5b—Requirements for Home
Equity Plans

5a(a) General rules.
5a(a)(2) Form of disclosures.

*

63475

*

*

*

*

5b(a) Form of disclosures.
5b(a)(1) General

*

*

*

*

*

5. Form of electronic disclosures provided
on or with electronic applications. Creditors
must provide the disclosures required by this
section (including the brochure) on or with
a blank application that is made available to
the consumer in electronic form, such as on
a creditor’s Internet Web site. Creditors have
flexibility in satisfying this requirement.
Methods creditors could use to satisfy the
requirement include, but are not limited to,
the following examples:
i. The disclosures could automatically
appear on the screen when the application
appears;

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ii. The disclosures could be located on the
same web page as the application (whether
or not they appear on the initial screen), if
the application contains a clear and
conspicuous reference to the location of the
disclosures and indicates that the disclosures
contain rate, fee, and other cost information,
as applicable;
iii. Creditors could provide a link to the
electronic disclosures on or with the
application as long as consumers cannot
bypass the disclosures before submitting the
application. The link would take the
consumer to the disclosures, but the
consumer need not be required to scroll
completely through the disclosures; or
iv. The disclosures could be located on the
same web page as the application without
necessarily appearing on the initial screen,
immediately preceding the button that the
consumer will click to submit the
application.
Whatever method is used, a creditor need
not confirm that the consumer has read the
disclosures.

16(c) Catalogs or other multiple-page
advertisements; electronic advertisements.

*

*

*

*

*

*

Paragraph 5b(a)(3)
1. Form of disclosures. Whether
disclosures must be in electronic form
depends upon the following:
i. If a consumer accesses a home equity
credit line application electronically other
than in-person in a creditor’s office (covered
under ii. below), such as online at a home
computer, the creditor must provide the
disclosures in electronic form (such as with
the application form on its Web site) in order
to meet the requirement to provide
disclosures in a timely manner on or with the
application. If the creditor instead mailed
paper disclosures to the consumer, this
requirement would not be met.
ii. In contrast, if a consumer is physically
present in the creditor’s office, and accesses
a home equity credit line application
electronically, such as via a terminal or
kiosk, the creditor may provide disclosures
in either electronic or paper form, provided
the creditor complies with the timing,
delivery, and retainability requirements of
the regulation.

*

*

*

*

*

Section 226.15—Right of Rescission

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*

*

*

*

*

15(b) Notice of right to rescind.
1. Who receives notice. Each consumer
entitled to rescind must be given:
• Two copies of the rescission notice.
• The material disclosures.
In a transaction involving joint owners,
both of whom are entitled to rescind, both
must receive the notice of the right to rescind
and disclosures. For example, if both spouses
are entitled to rescind a transaction, each
must receive two copies of the rescission
notice (one copy to each if the notice is
provided in electronic form in accordance
with the consumer consent and other
applicable provisions of the E-Sign Act) and
one copy of the disclosures.

*

*

*

*

*

Section 226.16—Advertising

*

*

*

VerDate Aug<31>2005

*

*

*

*

*

Paragraph 16(c)(1).
1. General. Section 226.16(c)(1) permits
creditors to put credit information together in
one place in a catalog or other multiple-page
advertisement or an electronic advertisement
(such as an advertisement appearing on an
Internet Web site). The rule applies only if
the advertisement contains one or more of
the triggering terms from § 226.16(b).
2. Electronic advertisement. If an electronic
advertisement (such as an advertisement
appearing on an Internet Web site) contains
the table or schedule permitted under
§ 226.16(c)(1), any statement of terms set
forth in § 226.6 appearing anywhere else in
the advertisement must clearly direct the
consumer to the location where the table or
schedule begins. For example, a term
triggering additional disclosures may be
accompanied by a link that directly takes the
consumer to the additional information.

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

19(b) Certain variable-rate transactions.

*

*

*

*

*

2. * * *
v. Form of electronic disclosures provided
on or with electronic applications. Creditors
must provide the disclosures required by this
section (including the brochure) on or with
a blank application that is made available to
the consumer in electronic form, such as on
a creditor’s Internet Web site. Creditors have
flexibility in satisfying this requirement.
Methods creditors could use to satisfy the
requirement include, but are not limited to,
the following examples:
A. The disclosures could automatically
appear on the screen when the application
appears;
B. The disclosures could be located on the
same web page as the application (whether
or not they appear on the initial screen), if
the application contains a clear and
conspicuous reference to the location of the
disclosures and indicates that the disclosures
contain rate, fee, and other cost information,
as applicable;
C. Creditors could provide a link to the
electronic disclosures on or with the
application as long as consumers cannot
bypass the disclosures before submitting the
application. The link would take the
consumer to the disclosures, but the
consumer need not be required to scroll
completely through the disclosures; or
D. The disclosures could be located on the
same web page as the application without
necessarily appearing on the initial screen,
immediately preceding the button that the
consumer will click to submit the
application.
Whatever method is used, a creditor need
not confirm that the consumer has read the
disclosures.

*

*

*

*

19(c) Electronic disclosures.

Jkt 214001

*

Section 226.19—Certain Residential
Mortgage and Variable-Rate Transactions

*

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*

*

*

*

*

Section 226.23—Right of Rescission

*

Subpart C—Closed-End Credit

*

*

18:07 Nov 08, 2007

*

1. Form of disclosures. Whether
disclosures must be in electronic form
depends upon the following:
i. If a consumer accesses an ARM loan
application electronically other than inperson in a creditor’s office (covered under
ii. below), such as online at a home
computer, the creditor must provide the
disclosures in electronic form (such as with
the application form on its Web site) in order
to meet the requirement to provide
disclosures in a timely manner on or with the
application. If the creditor instead mailed
paper disclosures to the consumer, this
requirement would not be met.
ii. In contrast, if a consumer is physically
present in the creditor’s office, and accesses
an ARM loan application electronically, such
as via a terminal or kiosk, the creditor may
provide disclosures in either electronic or
paper form, provided the issuer complies
with the timing, delivery, and retainability
requirements of the regulation.

*

*

*

*

23(b) Notice of right to rescind.
1. Who receives notice. Each consumer
entitled to rescind must be given:
• Two copies of the rescission notice.
• The material disclosures.
In a transaction involving joint owners,
both of whom are entitled to rescind, both
must receive the notice of the right to rescind
and disclosures. For example, if both spouses
are entitled to rescind a transaction, each
must receive two copies of the rescission
notice (one copy to each if the notice is
provided in electronic form in accordance
with the consumer consent and other
applicable provisions of the E-Sign Act) and
one copy of the disclosures.

*

*

*

*

*

Section 226.24—Advertising

*

*

*

*

*

24(d) Catalogs or other multiple-page
advertisements; electronic advertisements.

*

*

*

*

*

2. General. Section 226.24(d) permits
creditors to put credit information together in
one place in a catalog or other multiple-page
advertisement, or in an electronic
advertisement (such as an advertisement
appearing on an Internet Web site). The rule
applies only if the advertisement contains
one or more of the triggering terms from
§ 226.24(c)(1). A list of different annual
percentage rates applicable to different
balances, for example, does not trigger
further disclosures under § 226.24(c)(2) and
so is not covered by § 226.24(d).

*

*

*

*

*

4. Electronic advertisement. If an electronic
advertisement (such as an advertisement
appearing on an Internet Web site) contains
the table or schedule permitted under
§ 226.24(d)(1), any statement of terms set
forth in § 226.24(c)(1) appearing anywhere
else in the advertisement must clearly direct
the consumer to the location where the table
or schedule begins. For example, a term
triggering additional disclosures may be
accompanied by a link that directly takes the
consumer to the additional information.

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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 217 / Friday, November 9, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, October 31, 2007.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. E7–21700 Filed 11–8–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 230
[Regulation DD; Docket No. R–1285]

Truth in Savings
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Final rule; official staff
interpretation.

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AGENCY:

SUMMARY: The Board is amending
Regulation DD, which implements the
Truth in Savings Act, and the official
staff commentary to the regulation, to
withdraw portions of the interim final
rules for the electronic delivery of
disclosures issued March 30, 2001. The
interim final rules addressed the timing
and delivery of electronic disclosures,
consistent with the requirements of the
Electronic Signatures in Global and
National Commerce Act (E-Sign Act).
Because compliance with the 2001
interim final rules has not been
mandatory, withdrawal of these
provisions from the Code of Federal
Regulations reduces confusion about the
status of the provisions and simplifies
the regulation.
In addition, the Board is adopting
final amendments to Regulation DD to
provide guidance on the electronic
delivery of disclosures. For example, the
final rules provide that when a deposit
account advertisement is accessed by a
consumer in electronic form,
disclosures may be provided to the
consumer in electronic form in the
advertisement without regard to the
consumer consent and other provisions
of the E-Sign Act. Similar final rules are
being adopted under other consumer
fair lending and financial services
regulations administered by the Board.
DATES: The final rule is effective
December 10, 2007. The mandatory
compliance date is October 1, 2008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
C. Wood, Counsel, Division of
Consumer and Community Affairs, at
(202) 452–2412 or (202) 452–3667. For
users of Telecommunications Device for
the Deaf (TDD) only, contact (202) 263–
4869.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Statutory Background
The purpose of the Truth in Savings
Act (TISA), 12 U.S.C. 4301 et seq., is to

VerDate Aug<31>2005

18:07 Nov 08, 2007

Jkt 214001

enable consumers to make informed
decisions about accounts at depository
institutions. The act requires depository
institutions to disclose yields, fees, and
other terms concerning deposit accounts
to consumers at account opening, upon
request, when changes in terms occur,
and in periodic statements. It also
includes rules about advertising for
deposit accounts. The Board’s
Regulation DD (12 CFR part 230)
implements the act. Credit unions are
governed by a substantially similar
regulation issued by the National Credit
Union Administration. TISA and
Regulation DD require a number of
disclosures to be provided in writing.
The Electronic Signatures in Global
and National Commerce Act (the E-Sign
Act), 15 U.S.C. 7001 et seq., was enacted
in 2000. The E-Sign Act provides that
electronic documents and electronic
signatures have the same validity as
paper documents and handwritten
signatures. The E-Sign Act contains
special rules for the use of electronic
disclosures in consumer transactions.
Under the E-Sign Act, consumer
disclosures required by other laws or
regulations to be provided or made
available in writing may be provided or
made available, as applicable, in
electronic form if the consumer
affirmatively consents after receiving a
notice that contains certain information
specified in the statute, and if certain
other conditions are met.
The E-Sign Act, including the special
consumer notice and consent
provisions, became effective October 1,
2000, and did not require implementing
regulations. Thus, depository
institutions are currently permitted to
provide in electronic form any
disclosures that are required to be
provided or made available to the
consumer in writing under Regulation
DD if the consumer affirmatively
consents to receipt of electronic
disclosures in the manner required by
section 101(c) of the E-Sign Act.
II. Board Proposals and Interim Rules
Regarding Electronic Disclosures
On April 4, 2001, the Board published
for comment interim final rules to
establish uniform standards for the
electronic delivery of disclosures
required under Regulation DD (66 FR
17,795). Similar interim final rules for
Regulations B, E, M, and Z,
(implementing the Equal Credit
Opportunity Act, the Electronic Fund
Transfer Act, the Consumer Leasing Act,
and the Truth in Lending Act,
respectively) were published on March
30, 2001 (66 FR 17,322 and 66 FR
17,329) (Regulations M and Z,
respectively) and April 4, 2001 (66 FR

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17,779 and 66 FR 17,786) (Regulations
B and E, respectively). Each of the
interim final rules incorporated, but did
not interpret, the requirements of the ESign Act. Depository institutions,
creditors, and other persons, as
applicable, generally were required to
obtain consumers’ affirmative consent to
provide disclosures electronically,
consistent with the requirements of the
E-Sign Act. The interim final rules also
incorporated many of the provisions
that were part of earlier regulatory
proposals issued by the Board regarding
electronic disclosures.1
Under the 2001 interim final rules,
disclosures could be sent to an e-mail
address designated by the consumer, or
could be made available at another
location, such as an Internet Web site.
If the disclosures were not sent by email, institutions would have to provide
a notice to consumers (typically by email) alerting them to the availability of
the disclosures. Disclosures posted on a
Web site would have to be available for
at least 90 days to allow consumers
adequate time to access and retain the
information. Institutions also would be
required to make a good faith attempt to
redeliver electronic disclosures that
were returned undelivered, using the
address information available in their
files.
Commenters on the interim final rules
identified significant operational and
information security concerns with
respect to the requirement to send the
disclosure or an alert notice to an e-mail
address designated by the consumer.
For example, commenters stated that
some consumers who choose to receive
electronic disclosures do not have email addresses or may not want
personal financial information sent to
them by e-mail. Commenters also noted
that e-mail is not a secure medium for
delivering confidential information and
that consumers’ e-mail addresses
frequently change. The commenters also
opposed the requirement for redelivery
in the event a disclosure was returned
undelivered. In addition, many
commenters asserted that making the
disclosures available for at least 90 days,
as required by the interim final rule,
1 On May 2, 1996, the Board proposed to amend
Regulation E to permit financial institutions to
provide disclosures by sending them electronically
(61 FR 19696). Based on comments received, in
1998 the Board published an interim rule
permitting the electronic delivery of disclosures
under Regulation E (63 FR 14,528, March 25, 1998)
and similar proposals under Regulations B, M, Z,
and DD (63 FR 14,552, 14,538, 14,548, and 14,533,
respectively, March 25, 1998). Based on comments
received on the 1998 proposals, in 1999 the Board
published revised proposals under Regulations B, E,
M, Z, and DD (64 FR 49688, 49699, 49713, 49722
and 49740, respectively, September 14, 1999).

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