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Home > News & Events > Press Releases

Joint Press Release
October 22, 2013

Federal regulators provide guidance on
Qualified Mortgage fair lending risks
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
National Credit Union Administration
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
For immediate release
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Five federal regulatory agencies today issued a statement to address
industry questions about fair lending risks associated with offering only
Qualified Mortgages. Creditors have asked for clarity regarding whether
the disparate impact doctrine of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act
(ECOA) and its implementing regulation, Regulation B, allows them to
originate only Qualified Mortgages. For the reasons described in the
statement, the five agencies do not anticipate that a creditor's decision
to offer only Qualified Mortgages would, absent other factors, elevate a
supervised institution's fair lending risk.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's Ability-to-Repay Rule
implements provisions of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act that require creditors to make a reasonable,
good faith determination that a consumer has the ability to repay a
mortgage loan before extending credit to the consumer. Lenders are
presumed to have complied with the Ability-to-Repay Rule if they issue
Qualified Mortgages, which must satisfy requirements that prohibit or
limit risky features that harmed consumers in the recent crisis.

The ECOA makes it illegal for a creditor to discriminate in any aspect of
a credit transaction based on characteristics including race, religion,
marital status, color, national origin, sex, and age.
The agencies note the decisions creditors will make about product
offerings in response to the Ability-to-Repay Rule are similar to
decisions creditors have made with regard to other significant regulatory
changes affecting particular types of loans. The statement counsels that
creditors should continue to evaluate fair lending risk as they would for
other types of product selections, including by carefully monitoring
policies and practices and implementing effective compliance
management systems.
The agencies issuing the statement with supervisory authority for the
Fair Housing Act (FHA) believe that the same principles apply in
determining compliance with the FHA and its implementing regulation.
The statement is being issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the National Credit Union
Administration, and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.
Attachment (32 KB PDF)
Media Contacts:
Federal Reserve Susan Stawick
CFPB
Sam Gilford
FDIC
Andrew Gray
NCUA
Ben Hardaway
OCC
Stephanie Collins

202-452-2955
202-435-7673
202-898-7192
703-518-6333
202-649-6870

Last Update: October 22, 2013

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