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l l★K

Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas

July 16, 2002

DALLAS, TEXAS
75265-5906

Notice 02-35

TO: The Chief Executive Officer of each
financial institution and others concerned
in the Eleventh Federal Reserve District
SUBJECT
Final Amendments to Regulation C
(Home Mortgage Disclosure)
DETAILS
The Board has published technical amendments to Regulation C (Home Mortgage
Disclosure). The amendments require lenders to ask applicants their race or national origin and
sex in applications taken by telephone, conforming the telephone application rule to the rule
applicable to mail and Internet applications. The technical amendments will become effective
January 1, 2003.
Also, the Board has established thresholds for determining the loans for which financial institutions must report loan pricing data (the spread between the annual percentage rate on a
loan and the yield on comparable Treasury securities) as required under a final rule approved in
January 2002 (67 FR 7222, February 15, 2002). The thresholds are a spread of 3 percentage
points for first-lien loans and 5 percentage points for subordinate-lien loans. The amendments,
which become effective January 1, 2004, require lenders to report the lien status of a loan or
application.
ATTACHMENTS
Copies of the Board’s notices as they appear on pages 43217–24, Vol. 67, No. 124 of
the Federal Register dated June 27, 2002, are attached.
MORE INFORMATION
For more information, please contact Eugene Coy, Banking Supervision Department,
at (214) 922-6201. Paper copies of this notice or previous Federal Reserve Bank notices can be
printed from our web site at http://www.dallasfed.org/banking/notices/index.html.

For additional copies, bankers and others are encouraged to use one of the following toll-free numbers in contacting the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas: Dallas Office (800) 333-4460; El Paso Branch Intrastate (800) 592-1631, Interstate (800) 351-1012;
Houston Branch Intrastate (800) 392-4162, Interstate (800) 221-0363; San Antonio Branch Intrastate (800) 292-5810.

43217

Rules and Regulations

Federal Register
Vol. 67, No. 124
Thursday, June 27, 2002

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 203
[Regulation C; Docket No. R–1120]

Home Mortgage Disclosure
AGENCY: Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Final rule; technical
amendment.

The Board is publishing
amendments to Regulation C (Home
Mortgage Disclosure). The amendments
require lenders to ask applicants their
race or national origin and sex in
applications taken by telephone,
conforming the telephone application
rule to the rule applicable to mail and
Internet applications.
DATES: The amendments are effective
January 1, 2003.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
C. Wood, Counsel, Kathleen C. Ryan,
Senior Attorney, or Dan S. Sokolov,
Attorney, Division of Consumer and
Community Affairs, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System,
Washington, DC 20551, at (202) 452–
3667 or (202) 452–2412. For users of
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf
(TDD) only, contact (202) 263–4869.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:

I. Background
The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act
(HMDA) requires certain depository and
for-profit nondepository institutions to
collect, report, and publicly disclose
data about originations and purchases of
home mortgage and home improvement
loans. Institutions must also report data
about applications that do not result in
originations. The Board’s Regulation C
implements HMDA.
On January 23, 2002, the Board
approved a final rule amending
Regulation C, effective January 1, 2003.
67 FR 7222, February 15, 2002. The

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Board subsequently delayed the
effective date of the amendments from
January 1, 2003, until January 1, 2004.
67 FR 30771, May 8, 2002.
At the same time that the final rule
was published, the Board issued a
proposed rule for comment on three
items related to the final rule: (1) The
appropriate thresholds for purposes of
reporting pricing data on loan
originations; (2) whether lenders should
report lien status; and (3) whether
lenders should be required to ask
applicants for monitoring information
on ethnicity, race, and sex in
applications taken entirely by
telephone. 67 FR 7252, February 15,
2002.
The Board has issued a final rule,
adopting the three proposed items, in a
notice published elsewhere in today’s
Federal Register. For reasons discussed
in that notice, the revised rule regarding
the collection of monitoring information
about ethnicity, race, and sex is effective
as of January 1, 2003. Because the final
rule published today amends the
revised regulation—which does not take
effect until January 1, 2004—the Board
is publishing a rule with respect to
monitoring information, set forth in this
notice, to cover the period from January
1, 2003, to December 31, 2003. The rule
amends the portions of the current
Appendices A and B to Regulation C
that set forth instructions for collecting
monitoring information in telephone
applications.
Thus, for applications taken
beginning January 1, 2003, lenders must
ask telephone applicants for monitoring
information under Appendix A,
Paragraph V.D.2, and Appendix B,
Paragraph I.B.4., as revised by the Board
in this notice. For these applications,
lenders must use the race or national
origin categories in current Appendix A,
Paragraph V.D.3., and in the sample
data collection form in current
Appendix B. For applications taken on
or after January 1, 2004, lenders are
required to ask telephone applicants for
monitoring information under
Appendix A, Paragraph I.D.2., and
Appendix B, Paragraph II.A., as revised
in the notice published elsewhere in
today’s Federal Register, using the
revised ethnicity and race categories in
Appendix A, Paragraphs I.D.3. and 4.,
and the sample data collection form in
Appendix B approved by the Board on
January 23, 2002.

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List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 203
Banks, banking, Mortgages, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Board amends 12 CFR
Part 203 as follows:
PART 203—HOME MORTGAGE
DISCLOSURE (REGULATION C)
1. The authority citation for part 203
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 2801–2810.

2. Appendix A is amended by revising
Paragraph V.D.2. to read as follows:
Appendix A to Part 203—Form and
Instructions for Completion of HMDA
Loan/Application Register
*

*

*

*

*

V. Instructions for Completion of Loan/
Application Register

*

*

*

*

*

D. Applicant Information—Race or
National Origin, Sex, and Income

*

*

*

*

*

2. Mail, Internet, or Telephone
Applications. All loan applications,
including applications taken by mail,
Internet, or telephone, must use a collection
form similar to that shown in appendix B
regarding race or national origin and sex. For
applications taken by telephone, the
information in the collection form must be
stated orally by the lender, except for
information that pertains uniquely to
applications taken in writing. If the applicant
does not provide these data in an application
taken by mail, Internet or telephone, enter
the code for ‘‘information not provided by
applicant in mail or telephone application’’
specified in paragraphs V.D.3. and 4. of this
appendix. (See appendix B for complete
information on the collection of these data in
mail, Internet, or telephone applications.)

*

*
*
*
*
3. Appendix B is amended by revising
paragraph I.B.4. to read as follows:
Appendix B to Part 203—Form and
Instructions for Data Collection on Race
or National Origin and Sex
*

*

*

*

*

I. Instructions on collection of data on race
or national origin and sex

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

B. Procedures

*

*

*

4. You must ask the applicant for this
information (but you cannot require the
applicant to provide it) whether the
application is taken in person, by mail or
telephone, or on the Internet. For

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Federal Register / Vol. 67, No. 124 / Thursday, June 27, 2002 / Rules and Regulations

applications taken by telephone, the
information in the collection form must be
stated orally by the lender, except for that
information which pertains uniquely to
applications taken in writing. You need not
provide the data when you take an
application by mail or telephone or on the
Internet, if the applicant fails to answer. You
should indicate whether an application was
received by mail, telephone, or the Internet,
if it is not otherwise evident on the face of
the application.

*

*

*

*

*

By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, acting through the
Secretary of the Board under delegated
authority, June 21, 2002.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 02–16189 Filed 6–26–02; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 203
[Regulation C; Docket No. R–1120]

Home Mortgage Disclosure
AGENCY: Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Final rule; staff interpretation.
SUMMARY: The Board is publishing
amendments to Regulation C (Home
Mortgage Disclosure). The amendments
establish the thresholds for determining
the loans for which financial
institutions must report loan pricing
data (the spread between the annual
percentage rate on a loan and the yield
on comparable Treasury securities) as
required under a final rule approved in
January 2002; the thresholds are a
spread of 3 percentage points for firstlien loans and 5 percentage points for
subordinate-lien loans. The
amendments require lenders to report
the lien status of a loan or application.
The amendments also require that
lenders ask applicants their ethnicity,
race, and sex in applications taken by
telephone; this monitoring requirement
is made applicable as of January 1, 2003,
through a rule published elsewhere in
today’s Federal Register.
DATES: The amendments are effective
January 1, 2004.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
C. Wood, Counsel, Kathleen C. Ryan,
Senior Attorney, or Dan S. Sokolov,
Attorney, Division of Consumer and
Community Affairs, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System,
Washington, DC 20551, at (202) 452–
3667 or (202) 452–2412. For users of
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf
(TDD) only, contact (202) 263–4869.

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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Background
The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act
(HMDA) (12 U.S.C. 2801–2810) has
three purposes. One is to provide the
public and government officials with
data that will help show whether
lenders are serving the housing needs of
the neighborhoods and communities in
which they are located. A second
purpose is to help public officials target
public investment to promote private
investment where it is needed. A third
purpose is to provide data that assist in
identifying possible discriminatory
lending patterns and enforcing
antidiscrimination statutes.
HMDA accordingly requires certain
depository and for-profit nondepository
lenders to collect, report, and publicly
disclose data about originations and
purchases of loans secured by
residential real property and of home
improvement loans. Lenders must also
report data about applications that did
not result in originations.
The Board’s Regulation C implements
HMDA. Regulation C generally requires
that lenders report data about:
• Each application or loan, including
the application date; the action taken
and the date of that action; the loan
amount; the loan type and purpose; and,
if the loan is sold, the type of purchaser;
• Each applicant or borrower,
including ethnicity, race, sex, and
income; and
• Each property, including location
and occupancy status.
Lenders report this information to
their supervisory agencies on an
application-by-application basis using a
loan application register format (HMDA/
LAR). Lenders must make their HMDA/
LARs—with certain fields redacted to
preserve applicants’ privacy—available
to the public. The Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
(FFIEC), acting on behalf of the
supervisory agencies, compiles the
reported information and prepares an
individual disclosure statement for each
institution. The FFIEC also aggregates
data and prepares reports for all lenders
in each metropolitan area and for the
nation. These disclosure statements and
reports are available to the public.
On January 23, 2002, the Board
approved amendments to Regulation C
after a comprehensive review of the
regulation. 67 FR 7222, February 15,
2002. Among other things, the final rule
requires lenders to report the spread
between the APR on loans and the yield
on Treasury securities with comparable
maturity periods, if the spread meets or
exceeds certain thresholds specified by
the Board.

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At the same time that the final rule
was published, the Board issued a
proposed rule for comment on whether
thresholds of 3 percentage points above
the yield on comparable Treasury
securities for first-lien loans and 5
percentage points for subordinate-lien
loans (which generally have a higher
APR) are appropriate thresholds for
identifying the loans for which financial
institutions must report loan pricing
data. 67 FR 7252, February 15, 2002.
The Board also proposed to require
lenders (1) to report the lien status on
loans and applications and (2) to ask
telephone applicants their ethnicity,
race, and sex.
The Board received approximately
250 comments on the proposed rule;
commenters were generally divided on
the issues. Industry commenters
provided differing views on the
appropriate thresholds for reporting
pricing data and on the burden
associated with reporting lien status.
They were generally opposed to the
proposed collection of applicants’
ethnicity, race, and sex in telephone
applications.
Commenters representing community
groups, researchers, and state, local and
tribal officials generally urged the Board
to require lenders to report pricing
information on all loans. These
commenters supported the reporting of
lien status for originations and
applications, and argued for extending
the requirement to purchased loans.
They believed that lenders should be
required to ask for applicants’ ethnicity,
race, and sex in telephone applications.
Many industry commenters, in
addition to commenting on the
proposed rule, also requested a delay in
the effective date of the final rule
published on February 15, 2002. On
May 2, 2002, the Board delayed the
effective date of the final rule to January
1, 2004. Lenders must, however, use the
census tract numbers and corresponding
geographic areas from the 2000 Census
for all applications and loans recorded
on their 2003 HMDA/LAR and reported
to the supervisory agencies by March 1,
2004. 67 FR 30771, May 8, 2002.
Industry commenters also requested
guidance on how to collect and report
data when an application is received
before—and final action is taken after—
January 1, 2004, the effective date of the
revised rule. In some instances, several
months may elapse between application
and final action, and applications taken
in 2003 may not be acted upon until
2004.
Lenders generally must comply with
the revised rules for all applications
upon which final action is taken on and
after January 1, 2004. The Board plans

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Federal Register / Vol. 67, No. 124 / Thursday, June 27, 2002 / Rules and Regulations
to issue guidance later this year to
alleviate the burden on lenders to ‘‘look
back’’ at all applications taken in 2003
but acted on in 2004. For example, the
Board could establish that for
applications taken before a certain
date—such as November 1, 2003—a
lender would not be required to use the
revised rules.
II. Section-by-Section Analysis of the
Final Rule
The following discussion generally
tracks the regulation (including
appendices) as amended by the Board.
Revisions to the staff commentary are
addressed under the sections of the
regulation that they interpret.
Section 203.2—Definitions
2(i) Manufactured Home
Commenters asked whether the
definition of a manufactured home in
§ 203.2(i) includes modular, panelized,
and pre-cut homes. The definition in
§ 203.2 refers to the federal building
code for factory-built housing
established by the Department of
Housing and Urban Development
(HUD). The HUD code requires
generally that housing be essentially
ready for occupancy upon leaving the
factory and being transported to a
building site. Modular homes that meet
all of the HUD code standards are
included in the definition because they
are ready for occupancy upon leaving
the factory. Other factory-built homes,
such as panelized and pre-cut homes,
generally do not meet the HUD code
because they require a significant
amount of construction on site before
they are ready for occupancy. Loans and
applications relating to manufactured
homes that do not meet the HUD code
should not be identified as
manufactured housing under HMDA.
Comment 203.2(i)–1 contains this
guidance.
Section 203.4—Compilation of Loan
Data
4(a)(12) Rate Spread Information
The Board proposed a reporting
threshold of 3 percentage points above
the yield on Treasury securities of
comparable maturity for first-lien loans
and 5 percentage points for subordinatelien loans (which generally have a
higher APR). The thresholds are
intended to ensure, to the extent
possible, that pricing data for highercost loans are collected and disclosed.
The data available to the Board when it
proposed the thresholds indicated that
these thresholds would exclude the vast
majority of prime loans and include the
vast majority of other loans. The Board

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solicited comment on the appropriate
thresholds before finalizing them.
Information on the following specific
issues and questions was also solicited:
• Whether the rule for determining
coverage under the Home Ownership
and Equity Protection Act (HOEPA)
should be used to determine whether
rate spread information must be
reported under HMDA—specifically,
whether the 15th day of the month
preceding the month in which the
application for the loan was received
should be used for determining the APR
spread.
• The proportion of loan originations
(by number of loans) reported under
HMDA that would fall above and below
various thresholds, segregated by risk
class (for example, A, A-minus, and B)
and lien status.
• Circumstances or special credit
products that might be particularly
subject to misclassification, as loans
associated with a higher credit risk than
prime loans, should the proposed
thresholds be implemented. For
example, are there product lines in
which loans with very little credit risk
nonetheless have high APRs?
Alternatively, are there product lines in
which loans with relatively high credit
risk nonetheless have low APRs?
• Is the 2-percentage point difference
between the proposed thresholds for
first- and subordinate-lien loans
appropriate?
Some industry commenters supported
the thresholds of 3 and 5 percentage
points, although they objected to
reporting any pricing data. These
commenters stated that, based on their
experience, the tentative thresholds
would exclude nearly all prime loans
from the pricing-data reporting. Nearly
all industry commenters—whether or
not they supported thresholds of 3 and
5 percentage points—indicated that a 2percentage point difference between
thresholds is appropriate.
Many industry commenters argued
that the proposed thresholds were too
low, based on a belief that the
thresholds would capture a significant
number of prime loans. Some
commenters stated that the proposed
thresholds would include loans that
they believe are not higher-priced loans,
for example, short-term loans with
balloon payments, loans involving
manufactured homes, and FHA-insured
and VA-guaranteed loans. These
commenters did not, however, provide
data to support their views. Industry
commenters also expressed concern that
stigma would attach to loans that meet
the pricing thresholds and that
responsible subprime lending would
consequently be curtailed.

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43219

Some commenters urged the Board to
adopt the thresholds for HOEPA
coverage (8 percentage points for firstlien loans and 10 percentage points for
subordinate-lien loans) for reporting
pricing information under Regulation C.
Others suggested thresholds of 5
percentage points and 7 percentage
points for first- and subordinate-lien
loans, respectively, so as to capture only
what they believe to be higher-priced
loans.
In addition to commenting on the
proposed thresholds, many industry
commenters urged the Board to reverse
its decision to require lenders to report
pricing information under HMDA. Some
of these commenters stated that, in the
alternative, the Board should allow
lenders the option of reporting the APR
on a loan and having the Board
calculate the spread. They said that
reporting the spread would be more
burdensome than reporting the APR,
because lenders do not track the yield
on Treasury securities and may have
difficulty obtaining the correct
information to use in calculating the
spread. Commenters were concerned
that lenders could make inadvertent
errors in calculating the spread and, if
the errors were pervasive, could incur
the costs of resubmission of HMDA data
or civil money penalties.
A few industry commenters urged the
Board not to use the yield on Treasury
securities for calculating the spread.
They suggested that lenders be
permitted to use other indices for
calculating the spread, such as the
LIBOR (London Inter-Bank Offered Rate)
index, that they said play a more direct
role in their pricing.
Still others—community groups,
researchers, and state, local, and tribal
officials—urged the Board to require
pricing information on all loans
reported under HMDA, and not just
those that meet or exceed certain
thresholds. These commenters believed
that requiring pricing information only
on higher-priced loans would allow
discrimination and other abusive
lending practices to go undetected in
the prime market. Some of these
commenters also argued that the APR,
and not the spread, should be reported
to facilitate fair lending enforcement.
Some community groups, while
preferring pricing information on all
loans, stated that the thresholds of 3 and
5 percentage points were appropriate.
The Board is adopting the proposed
thresholds of 3 and 5 percentage points
for first- and subordinate-lien loans,
respectively. In January 2002, the Board
adopted the requirement to report the
spread only for loans over specific
thresholds in order to adjust pricing

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data for changes in market conditions
over time, focus on higher-cost loans,
and limit reporting burden (because
fewer loans would be subject to the
reporting requirement). The data
supplied by commenters tended to
confirm the data available to the Board
indicating that the proposed thresholds
would avoid capturing the vast majority
of prime loans while capturing the vast
majority of other loans.
The Board believes that the thresholds
will not result in misclassification of the
products mentioned by some
commenters—for example, FHA-insured
loans, VA-guaranteed loans and
manufactured home loans. While the
spread on many manufactured home
loans may exceed the thresholds, these
loans tend to have elevated credit risk
and are generally not considered prime
loans. The thresholds should exclude
most FHA-insured loans and VAguaranteed loans. Moreover, Regulation
C requires lenders to distinguish FHA
and VA loans from other loan types on
their HMDA/LARs; and under the final
rules, lenders will also be required to
distinguish loans for manufactured
homes from loans for site-built homes.
Thus, even if these loans are
misclassified as higher-priced loans,
data users can treat these loans as
distinct product lines in their analyses.
The Board will take steps to minimize
any difficulties lenders may have in
calculating the spread and also to
minimize the risk of errors. These steps
include publishing the applicable
Treasury yields for common maturity
periods on the FFIEC’s Internet web site,
in addition to making the information
available by fax upon request. Lenders
will be required to use only the rates
published by the Board—and not the H–
15 or the Treasury auction results,
which lenders may use for HOEPA
purposes—to ensure consistent and
accurate calculations for HMDA data
collection and reporting. An interactive
tool could also be available on the
FFIEC Web site to calculate the rate
spread for a loan, based on information
input by the lender.
The final regulation approved in
January set an ‘‘application date’’ rule
for determining whether the rate spread
must be reported. That is, lenders would
compare the APR on a loan at
consummation with the yield on
Treasury securities of comparable
maturity as of the 15th day of the month
preceding the month in which the loan
application was received. This is the
rule used to determine HOEPA
coverage. The Board solicited comment
on whether HOEPA’s application date
rule is appropriate in calculating the
spread for HMDA purposes.

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Many industry commenters, including
the banking trade associations,
supported use of the application date for
identifying the applicable Treasury
security yield. They noted that adopting
the HOEPA rule would ease compliance
burden, as lenders whose loans are
covered by HOEPA are already familiar
with this rule. Other industry
commenters suggested that the ‘‘lock
date,’’ or date that the lender sets the
interest rate for the loan, would result
in a more accurate determination of
whether a loan was a prime loan or a
higher-priced loan. A small number of
industry commenters suggested using
the date of origination or
consummation.
The Board is adopting the date the
final interest rate is set as the date for
determining the yield on comparable
Treasury securities. The rule provides
that lenders use the 15th-of-the-month
prior to the date the final rate is set. For
example, if the lender sets the interest
rate for the final time before the loan
closing on September 3, 2004, the
relevant date for use of the Board’s table
is August 15, 2004; if the lender sets the
rate for the final time before closing on
September 17, 2004, the relevant date is
September 15, 2004. If the rate is set on
September 15, 2004, the relevant date is
September 15, 2004. These instructions
have been incorporated into Appendix
A, Paragraphs I.G.1. and 2.
The date the final rate is set more
accurately reflects the lender’s pricing
decision than a date related to the date
of application or to the date of
consummation. A date related to the
date of application or consummation
might reflect a different rate
environment than existed when the
final interest rate was established, and
could result in inaccurate and
misleading data for periods when
interest rates are volatile.
Using the date the final rate is set may
impose additional burden on some
lenders, as many lenders do not
systematically track the date the interest
rate is set or locked. In contrast, using
the HOEPA rule (a date measured from
the application date) may impose less
burden on lenders that currently make
HOEPA loans or routinely monitor their
loans for HOEPA coverage (although it
does not pose that advantage for lenders
that do not make HOEPA loans); and the
dates of application and consummation
also may be less burdensome because
these dates are already collected and
reported under HMDA. On balance,
however, the Board believes that the
benefits of increasing the accuracy of
pricing information by selecting the date
the final interest rate is set outweigh the

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compliance burden associated with the
requirement.
Section 4(a)(12) is also modified to
clarify that lenders must report the rate
spread on a loan if the spread equals or
exceeds the thresholds. This change
conforms the regulation to the
instructions for reporting rate-spread
information in Appendix A, Paragraph
I.G.1.
4(a)(14) Lien Status
The Board proposed to require
lenders to report whether a loan is or
would be (1) secured by a first lien on
a dwelling; (2) secured by a subordinate
lien on a dwelling; or (3) not secured by
a lien on a dwelling. The Board solicited
comment on these reporting categories
(and also on whether reporting of lien
status should be required for purchased
loans). Data on lien status may help
explain some pricing disparities,
because interest rates, and therefore
APRs, vary according to lien status.
Rates on first-lien loans are generally
lower than rates on subordinate-lien or
unsecured loans. In addition, lien status
would enable data users to better
analyze information on secured and
unsecured home improvement loans.
Most industry commenters—although
opposed generally to reporting more
data under HMDA—stated that lien
status was closely linked to pricing and
that it would not be unduly burdensome
for them to report this information for
originations on their HMDA/LAR. Most
industry commenters, however,
opposed a requirement to collect and
report these data for purchased loans,
because they believe the additional
burden is not warranted. Some
commenters stated that lien status
should not be required for applications
that do not result in loans; they
suggested that an application might be
denied before the lender knows what
the lien status of the loan would have
been.
Other industry commenters opposed
the requirement to report lien status
even for originations as unduly
burdensome. These commenters stated
that while they know when a loan they
make is secured, they often do not know
their lien position with certainty. They
were concerned that a final rule would
require title searches for all reportable
loans. Some commenters stated that
they generally assume they will have a
first lien for all home purchase
applications and loans; but for other
home mortgages, often they do not know
their lien position even if the loan is
originated, and base their pricing
decisions on the assumption that they
will have a subordinate lien. A few
commenters suggested that the Board

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should allow lenders to report lien
status based on these assumptions.
Community groups, researchers, and
state, local, and tribal officials stated
that lien status was critical to
interpreting pricing data and
distinguishing secured from unsecured
home improvement loans, and many
argued that lien status should be
reported for purchased loans as well.
Some of these commenters suggested
that the data collection might serve to
deter lenders from persuading
consumers to consolidate a small first
mortgage and unsecured debt into a new
first mortgage (when a second mortgage
or an unsecured loan might be more in
the consumer’s interest). Some also
stated that data on lien status for
purchased loans would facilitate
monitoring of the activities of subprime
lenders that purchase loans which may
be unfairly priced, and for which little
data are available.
The final rule requires lenders to
report lien status on applications and
originations, but not on purchased
loans. Conforming changes have been
made to the HMDA/LAR and the
HMDA/LAR Code Sheet in Appendix A.
Lien status on loan originations will
help the public and the agencies
interpret the pricing information.
Collecting lien status on loan
originations will enable data users to
differentiate between secured and
unsecured home improvement loans,
and will facilitate fair lending data
analysis.
Lien status for applications that do
not result in originations is also
important information in the analysis of
acceptance and denial ratios for
borrowers of different races. Disparities
by race or ethnicity in acceptance and
denial ratios that initially suggest
unlawful discrimination are often
explained by differences in the lien
status of the loan for which application
was made, but only after significant
effort is expended to retrieve
information on lien status from
individual loan files.
Lenders are required to report the lien
status according to the best information
readily available to them at the time
final action is taken on an application.
A comment has been added to the staff
commentary, clarifying that Regulation
C does not require lenders to conduct
title searches solely for HMDA reporting
purposes. Lenders may rely on the title
search they routinely require for home
purchase loans; lenders may also rely on
other information readily available to
them and that they reasonably believe to
be accurate, such as the applicant’s
credit report or the applicant’s
statement on the application. For

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example, a lender would report a loan
origination as secured by a subordinate
lien if the application states that there
is a mortgage on the property (and the
mortgage will not be paid off as part of
the transaction). If the same application
did not result in an origination—for
example, because the application is
denied or withdrawn—the lender would
report the application as an application
for a subordinate-lien loan.
The final rule does not require lenders
to collect and report lien status for loans
that they purchase. Pricing information
is not required for purchased loans, nor
is information on ethnicity, race, and
sex. Thus, the utility of lien-status data
on purchased loans would be limited
and would not justify the additional
reporting burden.
Appendix A to Part 203—Form and
Instructions for Completion of HMDA
Loan/Application Register
In the final rules, the instructions for
completing the HMDA/LAR provide
three codes for indicating whether a
loan or application relates to a
preapproval request as defined in
§ 203.2(b). Codes 1 and 2 indicate
whether a preapproval for a home
purchase loan was requested. Because
only preapprovals for home purchase
loans are covered under the final rule,
lenders use code 3, ‘‘not applicable,’’ for
refinancings and home improvement
loans and applications and for
purchased loans of any type.
Commenters asked what code should be
used for home purchase applications
and loans if a lender does not have a
preapproval program as defined in
§ 203.2(b). Appendix A has been
changed to clarify that code 3 should be
used for home purchase loans and
applications if the lender does not offer
covered preapprovals.
Instructions for calculating the rate
spread and for reporting lien status have
been added to Appendix A, as discussed
above under §§ 203.4(a)(12) and (14).
The HMDA/LAR and the HMDA/LAR
Code Sheet have been modified to
reflect the requirement in § 203.4(a)(14)
to report lien status. Appendix A has
also been modified to reflect the revised
rules regarding collection of ethnicity,
race, and sex in applications taken by
telephone, discussed under Appendix B
below.
Appendix B to Part 203—Form and
Instructions for Data Collection on
Ethnicity, Race, and Sex
The Board proposed to conform the
telephone application rule regarding
ethnicity, race, and sex to the rule
applicable to mail and Internet
applications. There has been a

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substantial decline in response rates
regarding race and ethnicity. From 1993
to 2000, the proportion of home
mortgage loan applications of all types
with missing race or ethnicity data
increased from about 8 percent to about
28 percent. (Missing data about the
applicant’s sex have increased in a
similar fashion.) At least part of this
decline may be explained by an
apparent increase in lenders’ use of the
telephone to take applications. The
Board solicited comment on the benefits
and burdens of this proposal.
Commenters were divided on whether
lenders should be required to ask for
ethnicity, race, and sex in telephone
applications. Community groups,
researchers, and state, local, and tribal
officials urged the Board to require
lenders to ask for such information on
telephone applications. Many of these
commenters pointed out that without
the information, fair lending analyses
based on HMDA data are less effective.
These commenters also believe that the
number of applications taken by
telephone will continue to grow and,
thus, that the rate of applications and
loans missing information about
ethnicity, race, and sex will increase as
well. Some industry commenters
supported the proposal, stating that it
was simpler to have one rule on
collection of ethnicity, race, and sex that
applies regardless of the manner in
which an application is taken.
On the other hand, many other
industry commenters opposed the
proposal because they believe that
applicants will resent the intrusion into
an area they regard as confidential or
sensitive. Some commenters believe that
applicants will fear discrimination, and
will not pursue an application, will
refuse to supply the information, or will
supply incorrect information. Still
others said that requiring lenders to ask
for information about ethnicity, race,
and sex would raise the cost of taking
telephone applications. A few
commenters asked the Board to provide
a script for requesting the information in
telephone applications.
The final rule requires lenders to ask
for applicants’ ethnicity, race, and sex
in telephone applications. This
amendment will serve the fair lending
enforcement purpose of HMDA by
improving the data obtained on
ethnicity, race, and sex; the Board
believes this benefit outweighs the costs
of compliance.
The Board is making the amended
rule applicable as of January 1, 2003,
through a rule published elsewhere in
today’s Federal Register. Although for
at least some lenders the cost of
implementing the telephone rule in

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2003 may be somewhat greater than the
cost of implementing it in 2004, the
Board believes that the cost difference is
justified by the need to try to stem the
increasing rate of missing data.
The final rule conforms the
procedures for requesting applicant
information in telephone applications to
those for applications taken by mail or
on the Internet. Generally, loan
applicants must be advised that
requesting information about ethnicity,
race, and sex is mandated by the federal
government to assist in the enforcement
of fair lending laws. In addition,
applicants must be advised that the
lenders are prohibited from
discriminating on the basis of the
information provided, or on the basis of
the applicant’s choosing to provide or
not provide the information.
For applications taken beginning
January 1, 2003, lenders are required to
ask telephone applicants for monitoring
information using the national origin or
race categories in the current
Appendices A and B, as set forth in a
notice published elsewhere in today’s
Federal Register. For applications taken
by telephone on or after January 1, 2004,
lenders are required to ask for
monitoring information using the
ethnicity and race categories in revised
Appendices A and B.
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (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. 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 7100–0247 for the Federal
Reserve’s information collection under
Regulation C.
The mandatory collection of
information that is revised by this
rulemaking is found in 12 CFR part 203,
which implements 12 U.S.C. 2801–
2810. Public officials use this
information to determine whether
financial institutions are serving the
housing needs of their communities; to
help target public investment to
promote private investment where it is
needed; and to identify possible
discriminatory lending patterns for
enforcement of antidiscrimination
statutes.
The respondents are all financial
institutions, depositories and nondepositories, that meet the tests for
coverage under the regulation.
Depository institutions with offices in

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metropolitan areas whose assets are
below an asset size threshold (currently
$32 million) that adjusts yearly are not
required to comply. Under the
Paperwork Reduction Act the Federal
Reserve accounts for the burden of the
paperwork associated with the
regulation only for state member banks,
their subsidiaries, subsidiaries of bank
holding companies, U.S. 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 (12
U.S.C. 601–604a; 611–631). Other
federal agencies account for the
paperwork burden for the institutions
they supervise. Respondents must
maintain their HMDA/LARs and
modified HMDA/LARs for three years,
and their disclosure statements for five
years.
The final rule has three principal
elements. In January 2002, the Board
approved several amendments to
Regulation C, including one that
requires lenders to report the spread
between the APR on a loan and the
yield on Treasury securities of
comparable maturity when the spread
exceeds a certain threshold. The final
rule sets the reporting threshold (which
depends on lien status) at the level
proposed by the Board in January 2002.
The final rule also adds a field to the
HMDA/LAR for lien status, which must
be reported for loans and applications,
but not for purchased loans. Finally, the
final rule requires lenders to ask
telephone applicants their ethnicity,
race, and sex. The public comments on
these issues are summarized above in
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
When the Board adopted the January
2002 amendments, it estimated the
annual burden for the information
collection as varying from 12 to 12,000
hours, averaging 242 hours for state
member banks and 192 hours for
mortgage banking subsidiaries and other
respondents. (These estimates were
based on the number of HMDA data
submissions by Federal Reserve
supervised respondents that were
required to report calendar year 2000
data in March 2001.) Two items in the
present amendments will increase the
annual burden: The requirement to
report lien status and the requirement to
ask telephone applicants their ethnicity,
race, and sex. The Board estimates that
the addition of these two items will
increase the burden by 7 percent.
Accordingly, the Board estimates that
the annual burden for the information
collection varies from 13 to 12,840

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hours per institution, averaging 260
hours for state member banks and 200
hours for mortgage banking subsidiaries
and other respondents. Therefore, the
annual burden of the information
collection under Regulation C is
estimated to be approximately 155,000
total annual hours for Federal Reserve
supervised respondents.
The present rule changes will also
cause respondents to incur a modest
programming cost in addition to the
programming cost associated with the
January 2002 amendments. In
particular, institutions will have to
program their systems to add a new
field to the HMDA/LAR for lien status;
and institutions that do not now collect
ethnicity, race, and sex on telephone
applications may have to reprogram
their systems to enable such collection.
The Board believes that these additional
costs will fit within the broad cost
ranges the Board estimated applied to
the January 2002 amendments. For
convenience, those ranges are
reproduced here: Institutions that use
vendor-provided software systems (the
bulk of reporting institutions) will face
costs averaging around $2,000–$5,000;
institutions that purchase and adapt offthe-shelf applications will face costs
averaging between $20,000–$50,000;
and institutions that use mainframe
systems (the largest institutions) will
face costs averaging between $120,000–
$270,000. Using the maximum cost for
each of the three ranges to calculate a
weighted average, it is estimated that
the average covered financial institution
will incur a total cost from the January
2002 amendments and the present
amendments of approximately $17,500.
The Board’s Legal Division has
determined that HMDA data collection
and reporting are required by law;
completion of the loan/application
register, submission to the Federal
Reserve, and disclosure to the public
upon request are mandatory. After the
data are redacted as required by the
statute and regulation, they are made
publicly available and are not
considered confidential. Data that the
statute and regulation require be
redacted (loan number, date the
application is received, and the date the
action is taken) are given confidential
treatment under exemption 6 of the
Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C.
552(b)(6)).
The Board has a continuing interest in
the public’s opinions of its 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

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Federal Reserve System, 20th and C
Streets, NW., Washington, DC 20551;
and to the Office of Management and
Budget, Paperwork Reduction Project
(7100–0247), Washington, DC 20503.
IV. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
In accordance with section 3(a) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
604(a)), the Board has prepared a final
regulatory analysis of these revisions. A
copy of the analysis may be obtained
from Publications Services, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, Washington, DC 20551, at (202)
452–3245. A summary of the analysis
follows.
The final rule is a consequence of
Board policy to review its regulations
periodically and a desire to update the
regulation to reflect mortgage markets
more clearly and enhance consumer
protection.
The Board received no comments
specifically responding to the initial
regulatory analysis published in
conjunction with the proposed rule. As
discussed in Sections I and II, however,
some comments the Board received
discussed the burden arising from
particular aspects of the proposed rule.
Such comments are summarized
throughout Sections I and II, as are the
Board’s responses. Section II also
discusses alternative measures the
Board considered.
The changes under the final rule
require more data on certain covered
transactions. Some of the changes will
affect all institutions currently within
the scope of the regulation, including
covered small institutions; others will
affect only certain institutions,
depending upon the interest rates and
fees they charge and on whether they
take applications by telephone.
It is difficult to quantify the benefits
and costs associated with the final rule.
The new information will provide data
to help identify possible discriminatory
lending patterns and assist regulators in
conducting examinations under the
Community Reinvestment Act and other
laws. Additional data on covered
transactions will allow for more precise
differentiation among loan products and
reduce the potential bias that results
when dissimilar loan products are
jointly classified. The data will also
help inform the public about
developments in the mortgage market by
revealing pricing information on highercost home loans, and improve local
governments’ ability to use HMDA data
to help guide local investments. More
complete data about applicant
characteristics in telephone applications
will improve fair lending analysis.

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Although the final rule offers a
number of benefits, it also will require
covered lenders, including small
institutions, to change their current
procedures and systems for collecting
and reporting required data. The Board
believes the benefits outweigh these
added costs.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 203
Banks, Banking, Mortgages, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Board amends 12 CFR
part 203 as follows:
PART 203—HOME MORTGAGE
DISCLOSURE (REGULATION C)
1. The authority citation for part 203
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 2801–2810.

2. Section 203.4 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraph (a)(12); and
b. Adding a new paragraph (a)(14).
§ 203.4

Compilation of loan data.

(a) Data format and itemization.
* * *
(12) For originated loans subject to
Regulation Z, 12 CFR part 226, the
difference between the loan’s annual
percentage rate (APR) and the yield on
Treasury securities having comparable
periods of maturity, if that difference is
equal to or greater than 3 percentage
points for loans secured by a first lien
on a dwelling, or equal to or greater than
5 percentage points for loans secured by
a subordinate lien on a dwelling. The
lender shall use the yield on Treasury
securities as of the 15th day of the
preceding month if the rate is set
between the 1st and the 14th day of the
month and as of the 15th day of the
current month if the rate is set on or
after the 15th day, as prescribed in
appendix A to this part.
*
*
*
*
*
(14) The lien status of the loan or
application (first lien, subordinate lien,
or not secured by a lien on a dwelling).
*
*
*
*
*
3. Appendix A is amended by:
a. Revising paragraph I.A.8.;
b. Revising paragraph I.D.2.;
c. Revising paragraph I.G.1.;
d. Redesignating paragraph I.G.2. as
paragraph I.G.3. and adding a new
paragraph I.G.2.;
e. Adding a new paragraph I.H.;
f. Revising the Loan/Application
Register; and
g. Revising the Loan/Application
Register Code Sheet.

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Appendix A to Part 203—Form and
Instructions for Completion of HMDA
Loan/Application Register
*

*

*

*

*

I. Instructions for Completion of Loan/
Application Register

*

*

*

*

*

A. Application or Loan Information

*

*

*

*

*

8. Request for Preapproval of a Home
Purchase Loan
Indicate whether the application or loan
involved a request for preapproval of a home
purchase loan by entering the applicable
code from the following:
Code 1—Preapproval requested
Code 2—Preapproval not requested
Code 3—Not applicable
a. Enter code 2 if your institution has a
covered preapproval program but the
applicant does not request a preapproval.
b. Enter code 3 if your institution does not
have a preapproval program as defined in
§ 203.2(b).
c. Enter code 3 for applications or loans for
home improvement or refinancing, and for
purchased loans.

*

*

*

*

*

D. Applicant Information—Ethnicity, Race,
Sex, and Income

*

*

*

*

*

2. Mail, Internet, or Telephone
Applications. All loan applications,
including applications taken by mail,
Internet, or telephone must use a collection
form similar to that shown in appendix B
regarding ethnicity, race, and sex. For
applications taken by telephone, the
information in the collection form must be
stated orally by the lender, except for
information that pertains uniquely to
applications taken in writing. If the applicant
does not provide these data in an application
taken by mail or telephone or on the Internet,
enter the code for ‘‘information not provided
by applicant in mail, Internet, or telephone
application’’ specified in paragraphs I.D.3.,
4., and 5. of this appendix. (See appendix B
for complete information on the collection of
these data in mail, Internet, or telephone
applications.)

*

*

*

*

*

G. Pricing-Related Data
1. Rate Spread
a. For a home purchase loan, a refinancing,
or a dwelling-secured home improvement
loan that you originated, report the spread
between the annual percentage rate (APR)
and the applicable Treasury yield if the
spread is equal to or greater than 3
percentage points for first-lien loans or 5
percentage points for subordinate-lien loans.
To determine whether the rate spread meets
this threshold, use the Treasury yield for
securities of a comparable period of maturity
as of the 15th day of a given month,
depending on when the interest rate was set,
and use the APR for the loan, as calculated
and disclosed to the consumer under
§§ 226.6 or 226.18 of Regulation Z (12 CFR
part 226). Use the 15th day of a given month
for any loan on which the interest rate was
set on or after that 15th day through the 14th

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day of the next month. (For example, if the
rate is set on September 17, 2004, use the
Treasury yield as of September 15, 2004; if
the interest rate is set on September 3, 2004,
use the Treasury yield as of August 15, 2004).
To determine the applicable Treasury
security yield, the financial institution must
use the table published on the FFIEC’s Web
site (http://www.ffiec.gov/hmda) entitled
‘‘Treasury Securities of Comparable Maturity
under Regulation C.’’
b. If the loan is not subject to Regulation
Z, or is a home improvement loan that is not
dwelling-secured, or is a loan that you
purchased, enter ‘‘NA.’’
c. Enter ‘‘NA’’ in the case of an application
that does not result in a loan origination.
d. Enter the rate spread to two decimal
places, and use a leading zero. For example,
enter 03.29. If the difference between the
APR and the Treasury yield is a figure with
more than two decimal places, round the

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figure or truncate the digits beyond two
decimal places.
e. If the difference between the APR and
the Treasury yield is less than 3 percentage
points for a first-lien loan and less than 5
percentage points for a subordinate-lien loan,
enter ‘‘NA.’’
2. Date the interest rate was set. The
relevant date to use to determine the
Treasury yield is the date on which the loan’s
interest rate was set by the financial
institution for the final time before closing.
If an interest rate is set pursuant to a ‘‘lockin’’ agreement between the lender and the
borrower, then the date on which the
agreement fixes the interest rate is the date
the rate was set. If a rate is re-set after a lockin agreement is executed (for example,
because the borrower exercises a float-down
option or the agreement expires), then the
relevant date is the date the rate is re-set for
the final time before closing. If no lock-in

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agreement is executed, then the relevant date
is the date on which the institution sets the
rate for the final time before closing.

*

*

*

*

*

H. Lien Status
Use the following codes for loans that you
originate and for applications that do not
result in an origination:
Code 1—Secured by a first lien.
Code 2—Secured by a subordinate lien.
Code 3—Not secured by a lien.
Code 4—Not applicable (purchased loan).
a. Use Codes 1 through 3 for loans that you
originate, as well as for applications that do
not result in an origination (applications that
are approved but not accepted, denied,
withdrawn, or closed for incompleteness).
b. Use Code 4 for loans that you purchase.

*

*

*

*

*

BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

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18:18 Jun 26, 2002

BILLING CODE 6210–01–C

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Federal Register / Vol. 67, No. 124 / Thursday, June 27, 2002 / Rules and Regulations
4. Appendix B is amended by revising
Paragraph II.A to read as follows:
Appendix B to Part 203—Form and
Instructions for Data Collection on
Ethnicity, Race, and Sex
*

*

*

*

*

II. Procedures
A. You must ask the applicant for this
information (but you cannot require the
applicant to provide it) whether the
application is taken in person, by mail or
telephone, or on the Internet. For
applications taken by telephone, the
information in the collection form must be
stated orally by the lender, except for that
information which pertains uniquely to
applications taken in writing.

*

*
*
*
*
5. In Supplement I to Part 203:
a. Under Section 203.2—Definitions, a
new heading 2(i) Manufactured Home
and a new paragraph 1 are added.
b. Under Section 203.4—Compilation
of Loan Data, under Paragraph 4(a)(12),
paragraph 1 is revised; and a new
heading Paragraph 4(a)(14) and a new
paragraph 1 are added.
Supplement I to Part 203—Staff
Commentary
*

*

*

*

*

Section 203.2—Definitions

*

*

*

*

*

2(i) Manufactured home.
1. Definition of a manufactured home. The
definition in § 203.2(i) refers to the federal
building code for factory-built housing
established by the Department of Housing
and Urban Development (HUD). The HUD
code requires generally that housing be
essentially ready for occupancy upon leaving
the factory and being transported to a
building site. Modular homes that meet all of
the HUD code standards are included in the
definition because they are ready for
occupancy upon leaving the factory. Other
factory-built homes, such as panelized and
pre-cut homes, generally do not meet the
HUD code because they require a significant
amount of construction on site before they
are ready for occupancy. Loans and
applications relating to manufactured homes
that do not meet the HUD code should not
be identified as manufactured housing under
HMDA.

*

*

*

*

*

Section 203.4—Compilation of Loan Data
4(a) Data Format and Itemization. * * *
Paragraph 4(a)(12) Rate spread
information.
1. Treasury securities of comparable
maturity. To determine the yield on a
Treasury security, lenders must use the table
entitled ‘‘Treasury Securities of Comparable
Maturity under Regulation C,’’ which will be
published on the FFIEC’s Web site (http://
www.ffiec.gov/hmda) and made available in
paper form upon request. This table will
provide, for the 15th day of each month,
Treasury security yields for every available

loan maturity. The applicable Treasury yield
date will depend on the date on which the
financial institution set the interest rate on
the loan for the final time before closing. See
Appendix A, Paragraphs I.G.1. and 2.

*

*

*

*

*

Paragraph 4(a)(14) Lien status.
1. Determining lien status for applications
and loans originated. i. Lenders are required
to report lien status for loans they originate
and applications that do not result in
originations. Lien status is determined by
reference to the best information readily
available to the lender at the time final action
is taken and to the lender’s own procedures.
Thus, lenders may rely on the title search
they routinely perform as part of their
underwriting procedures—for example, for
home purchase loans. Regulation C does not
require lenders to perform title searches
solely to comply with HMDA reporting
requirements. Lenders may rely on other
information that is readily available to them
at the time final action is taken and that they
reasonably believe is accurate, such as the
applicant’s statement on the application or
the applicant’s credit report. For example,
where the applicant indicates on the
application that there is a mortgage on the
property or where the applicant’s credit
report shows that the applicant has a
mortgage—and that mortgage is not going to
be paid off as part of the transaction—the
lender may assume that the loan it originates
is secured by a subordinate lien. If the same
application did not result in an origination—
for example, because the application is
denied or withdrawn—the lender would
report the application as an application for a
subordinate-lien loan.
ii. Lenders may also consider their
established procedures when determining
lien status for applications that do not result
in originations. For example, a consumer
applies to a lender to refinance a $100,000
first mortgage; the consumer also has a home
equity line of credit for $20,000. If the
lender’s practice in such a case is to ensure
that it will have first-lien position—through
a subordination agreement with the holder of
the mortgage on the home equity line—then
the lender should report the application as an
application for a first-lien loan.

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By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, June 21, 2002.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 02–16191 Filed 6–26–02; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

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