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Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
2200 N. PEARL ST.
DALLAS, TX 75201-2272

April 15, 2003

Notice 03-20

TO: The Chief Executive Officer of each
financial institution and others concerned
in the Eleventh Federal Reserve District

SUBJECT
Final Revisions to the Official Staff Commentary
to Regulation Z (Truth in Lending)
DETAILS
The Board of Governors has issued a final rule revising the official staff commentary
to Regulation Z, which implements the Truth in Lending Act. The commentary interprets the
requirements of Regulation Z. The revisions
•

State the rules for disclosing fees to expedite a payment or delivery of a card;

•

Interpret the rules for replacing an accepted credit card to permit an issuer, under
certain conditions, to replace an accepted card with more than one card; and

•

Discuss the treatment of private mortgage insurance payments in disclosing the
payment schedule and the selection of Treasury security yields for determining
whether a mortgage loan is covered by provisions in Regulation Z that implement
the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act.

The final rule became effective April 1, 2003; however, the date for mandatory
compliance is October 1, 2003.

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.

-2ATTACHMENT
A copy of the Board’s notice as it appears on pages 16185–90, Vol. 68, No. 64 of the
Federal Register dated April 3, 2003, is attached.
MORE INFORMATION
For more information, please contact Eugene Coy, Banking Supervision Department,
(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.

Federal Register / Vol. 68, No. 64 / Thursday, April 3, 2003 / Rules and Regulations
Regulation Z that implement the Home
Ownership and Equity Protection Act.
DATES: This rule is effective April 1,
2003; the date for mandatory
compliance is October 1, 2003.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Krista P. DeLargy or Dan S. Sokolov,
Attorneys, or Jane E. Ahrens, Senior
Counsel, Division of Consumer and
Community Affairs, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, at (202)
452–3667 or 452–2412; for users of
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf
(‘‘TDD’’) only, contact (202) 263–4869.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 226
[Regulation Z; Docket No. R–1136]

Truth in Lending
AGENCY: Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Final rule; official staff
commentary.
SUMMARY: This final rule revises the
official staff commentary to Regulation
Z, which implements the Truth in
Lending Act. The commentary
interprets the requirements of
Regulation Z. The revisions state the
rules for disclosing fees to expedite a
payment or delivery of a card. The
revisions interpret the rules for
replacing an accepted credit card to
permit an issuer, under certain
conditions, to replace an accepted card
with more than one card. The revisions
also discuss the treatment of private
mortgage insurance payments in
disclosing the payment schedule and
the selection of Treasury security yields
for determining whether a mortgage
loan is covered by provisions in

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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 providing for uniform
disclosures about its terms and cost.
TILA gives consumers the right to
rescind certain transactions that involve
a lien on their principal dwelling, and
it requires additional disclosures and
imposes substantive restrictions on
certain home-secured loans with rates or
fees above a certain amount. The act
also addresses the rights and
responsibilities of credit card issuers
and cardholders.
TILA is implemented by the Board’s
Regulation Z (12 CFR part 226). The
Board has delegated to officials in the
Board’s Division of Consumer and
Community Affairs authority to issue
official staff interpretations of
Regulation Z. Good faith compliance
with the commentary affords creditors
protection from liability under section
130(f) of TILA. The commentary is a
substitute for individual staff
interpretations; it is updated
periodically to address significant
questions that arise.
In December 2002, the Board
published for comment proposed
changes to the commentary (67 FR
72,618, December 6, 2002). The
revisions discuss the rules for disclosing
fees to expedite a payment or delivery
of a card; replacing an accepted credit
card; including private mortgage
insurance premiums in the payment
schedule disclosure; and selecting
Treasury security yields for determining
whether a mortgage loan is covered by
the Home Ownership and Equity
Protection Act. The Board received
approximately 350 comment letters,
most on the inquiry about overdraft or
‘‘bounced check’’ services. About 280 of
the comments were from financial
institutions, other creditors, and their
representatives. The remaining
comment letters were from consumer

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16185

groups, individuals, and one state
agency.
With one exception, the final rule is
being adopted substantially as
proposed; the proposed comment
concerning expedited payment fees has
not been adopted. In addition, some
changes have been made for clarity in
response to commenters’ suggestions.
In addition to the proposed
commentary revisions, the Board’s staff
requested information on overdraft or
‘‘bounced check’’ protection services.
Institutions provide the service in lieu
of establishing a traditional overdraft
line of credit for the customer. Under
these programs, even though the
institution generally reserves the right
not to pay particular items, a dollar
limit is typically established for the
account holder and then the institution
routinely pays overdrafts on the account
up to that amount without a case-bycase assessment. The staff solicited
comment and information from the
public about how these services are
designed and operated, to determine the
need for additional guidance to
financial institutions under Regulation
Z or other laws.
About 300 of the comment letters
responded to the request to provide
information about the various ways that
depository institutions offer bounced
check protection services. The comment
letters describe programs being offered
to depository institutions by a number
of vendors. The programs vary from
vendor to vendor, and also appear to
vary in their implementation from
institution to institution. The Board’s
staff is continuing to gather information
on these services, which are not
addressed in the final rule.
II. Commentary Revisions
Subpart B—Open-End Credit
Section 226.6—Initial Disclosure
Statement
6(b) Other Charges
Representatives of the credit card
industry requested official guidance on
the rules for disclosing two fees charged
to consumers in connection with openend credit plans—a fee imposed when
a consumer requests that an individual
payment be expedited, and a fee
imposed when a consumer requests
expedited delivery of a credit card.
Because the proper characterization of
these fees under TILA previously has
been unclear, the staff proposed to
revise comment 6(b) to provide
guidance.
Under Regulation Z, creditors must
disclose fees that are ‘‘finance charges,’’
which are defined as ‘‘charges payable

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directly or indirectly by the consumer
and imposed directly or indirectly by
the creditor as an incident to or a
condition of the extension of credit.’’
For open-end credit plans, fees that are
not finance charges but that may be
imposed as part of the plan must also be
disclosed; these are commonly referred
to as ‘‘other charges.’’ The commentary
interprets this requirement to apply to
‘‘significant charges related to the plan.’’
Regulation Z does not require disclosure
of charges that are not considered either
finance charges or ‘‘other charges.’’
Fee To Expedite a Payment on a Credit
or Charge Card Account
Card issuers increasingly have been
making expedited payment services
available to consumers. The expedited
payment service provides consumers an
alternative to mailing a payment that
might not reach the card issuer by the
due date. Typically to avoid being
assessed a late fee, consumers request
expedited payment service for a lesser
charge.
Comment 6(b)–1 provides examples of
‘‘other charges’’ that must be disclosed
to consumers under Regulation Z; the
list of examples is not exhaustive. A
revision to comment 6(b)–1 was
proposed indicating that a fee imposed
for expediting an individual payment at
the consumer’s request should be
disclosed as an ‘‘other charge.’’ The
proposed comment only covered an
expedited payment service where that
method of payment was not established
in advance as the regular payment
method for the account. Under the
proposal, changes in the amount of the
fee would not trigger a change-in-terms
notice.
Generally, consumer groups agreed
with the proposal to treat the fee for an
expedited payment service as an ‘‘other
charge’’ subject to the condition that
creditors document consumers knowing
and voluntary assent to the fee.
Otherwise, they believed the fee is a
finance charge. They also advocated that
the change-in-terms notice requirements
apply.
Most industry commenters opposed
the proposed comment on expedited
payment fees. They asserted that the fee
should not be disclosed under TILA as
an ‘‘other charge’’ because in their view
the payment service is not part of the
credit plan and is not significant in its
occurrence or in amount. Industry
commenters disagreed that the fee
resembles a late charge or substitutes for
it. They noted that the fee is disclosed
to consumers at the time they request
the payment service and, therefore, they
believe consumers will not benefit
materially from disclosure of the fee on

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account-opening disclosures or on
periodic statements under TILA. More
generally, industry commenters believe
that because there is another reasonable
payment option available to the
consumer without paying a charge, the
expedited payment fee should not be
disclosed either as a finance charge or
as an ‘‘other charge’’ under TILA. They
contend that the creditor’s fee should be
considered separate from the credit plan
as though it were imposed by a thirdparty courier or wire transfer service.
Some commenters expressed concern
about the potential effect of treating an
expedited payment fee as part of the
credit plan for home-equity lines of
credit; they believe the fee should not be
considered a term of the plan subject to
the rules in § 226.5b that limit unilateral
changes.
The proposal was intended to address
fees charged to consumers who request
an expedited payment service as an
alternative to mailing a payment that
might not reach the card issuer by the
due date. This service typically allows
consumers to avoid being assessed a late
fee, which typically is higher than the
fee imposed for the expedited payment
service. The expedited payment service
covered by the proposal is not a
payment method established in advance
as the expected method for making
regular payments on the account. Where
a card issuer offers an expedited
payment service, it is usually available
to all account holders; the proposal was
not directed to situations where the
issuer makes an ad hoc accommodation
to satisfy the request of a particular
customer. The proposal also was not
intended to address electronic payment
options that are not offered as an
alternative to paying a late fee, or billpayment services offered in connection
with a consumer’s deposit account that
might be used to pay credit card bills as
well as other bills.
For the reasons discussed in the
proposal, expedited payment fees, as
currently constructed and described
above, are not finance charges under
TILA and Regulation Z because the
consumer has a reasonable means for
making payment on the account without
paying a fee to the creditor. As noted
above, the act and regulation also
require disclosure by the creditor of the
amount of any charge other than a
finance charge ‘‘that may be imposed as
part of the plan * * *. ’’ 15 U.S.C.
1637(a)(5); 12 CFR 226.6(b). The official
staff commentary interprets this
requirement to apply to ‘‘significant
charges related to the plan (that are not
finance charges)’’ and provides
examples of charges that are ‘‘other
charges’’ under this standard as well as

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charges that are not ‘‘other charges’’
under this standard. See comments
6(b)–1 and –2.
Based on the record established by the
comment letters, the fee for expediting
a payment that was described in the
proposal does not clearly meet the
standard for treatment as an ‘‘other
charge.’’ Accordingly, the proposed
revision to comment 6(b)–1, classifying
the fee as an ‘‘other charge,’’ is not being
adopted. In order to provide clear
compliance guidance, comment 6(b)–2
is being revised to indicate that, at this
time, creditors are not required to
disclose the fee under TILA and
Regulation Z. Creditors should continue
their current practice of informing
consumers of the amount of the charge
at the time the service is requested. In
addition, when the fee is charged to the
credit account, creditors must include
the cost on the periodic statement for
that billing cycle. See § 226.7(b).
In response to the request for
comment on the proper classification of
this fee and the fee to expedite delivery
of a credit card discussed below,
commenters suggested that the Board
adopt a general rule for classifying fees
under TILA. In their view, the adoption
of such a rule would aid creditors’
compliance, particularly when
determining how new fees should be
treated under TILA. There is significant
merit in reviewing this area to assess
whether general principles can be
articulated for determining the
appropriate treatment of creditors’ fees.
Accordingly, in connection with a
broader review of Regulation Z, the staff
plans to recommend that the Board
undertake such an assessment to
determine if a general rule can be
established consistent with the
requirements of TILA. This review
would include assessing the treatment
of existing fees to determine if a
different classification for individual
fees is appropriate.
Fees for Expediting Delivery of a Credit
or Charge Card
Comment 6(b)–2 provides examples of
charges that are neither finance charges
nor ‘‘other charges.’’ A revision to
comment 6(b)–2 was proposed to add,
as an example, a card issuer’s fee for
expediting delivery of a card upon
request, provided the issuer does not
charge for delivery by standard mail
service. The proposed comment is being
adopted substantially as proposed. A
minor revision has been made to clarify
that the comment also applies when the
card is delivered without a fee by a
means other than standard mail service
that is at least as fast as standard mail
service.

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Industry commenters uniformly
agreed that fees for expedited credit
card delivery should not have to be
disclosed under TILA as long as the
consumer can obtain the card without
paying a fee; some of these commenters
believe it should be sufficient if the card
issuer sends the card without a fee by
any ‘‘reasonable method.’’ Consumer
groups contended that the fee should be
disclosed as an ‘‘other charge’’ if the
creditor documents consumers’
knowing and voluntary assent to the fee,
the fee charged for expediting delivery
is reasonably related to the actual cost
of delivery, and the card is available
without a fee by first-class mail or faster.
If these conditions are not satisfied,
consumer advocates believe the fee
should be disclosed as a finance charge.
The final comment reflects the view
that a fee for expedited delivery of a
credit card is not incidental to the
extension of credit and thus is not a
finance charge where the consumer
requests the service and the card is also
available by standard mail service (or
another means that is at least as fast)
without a fee. In those circumstances,
the amount of the voluntary charge for
expedited delivery in relation to the
creditor’s cost is not a factor in
determining whether the fee is a finance
charge.
In addition, the fee does not appear to
be an ‘‘other charge’’ under Regulation
Z. An expedited card delivery service
does not appear to be significant or
related to the credit plan because the
service is provided only occasionally,
such as when a consumer seeks to
replace a lost or stolen credit card and
requests expedited delivery. Finally,
nothing in the record suggests the need
for additional documentation to
demonstrate that the consumer’s assent
to the service is knowing and voluntary.
Section 226.9—Subsequent Disclosure
Requirements
9(c) Change in Terms
A revision to comment 9(c)(2)–1 was
proposed to address expedited payment
fees consistent with the proposed
revision to comment 6(b)–1. Because
expedited payment fees are not being
classified as ‘‘other charges’’ at this
time, the proposed revision to comment
9(c)(2)–1 is unnecessary and is not being
adopted.
Section 226.12—Special Credit Card
Provisions
12(a) Issuance of Credit Cards
Under the proposal, comment
12(a)(2)–6 would be revised to allow
card issuers, subject to certain
conditions, to replace an accepted credit

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card with one or more replacement
cards. Most commenters supported the
proposed commentary provision with
some suggested revisions, as discussed
below. The proposal is adopted with
revisions.
Section 132 of TILA, which is
implemented by § 226.12(a) of
Regulation Z, generally prohibits
creditors from issuing credit cards
except in response to a request or
application. Section 132 explicitly
exempts from this prohibition credit
cards issued as renewals of or
substitutes for previously accepted
credit cards. Existing comment 12(a)(2)–
5, the ‘‘one-for-one rule,’’ interprets
these statutory and regulatory
provisions by providing that, in general,
a creditor may not issue more than one
credit card as a renewal of or substitute
for an accepted card (as that term is
defined under Regulation Z). The
existing staff commentary does not,
however, construe Section 132 as
requiring one-for-one replacement in all
circumstances. See comment 12(a)(2)–6.
Advances in technology used for
information transmittal have enabled
card issuers to issue credit cards in
different sizes and formats. These new
cards may enhance consumer
convenience. A merchant’s card reading
equipment determines, however,
whether a consumer can use a particular
credit card with that merchant. For
example, some merchants’ equipment
and some automated teller machines
require insertion of a ‘‘full-size’’ credit
card. Certain cards that are reduced in
size may require different card readers
than those presently used for ‘‘full-size’’
cards. Some card issuers have requested
guidance on the issuance of cards using
new technologies, which are intended to
supplement but not necessarily replace
a cardholder’s existing card.
To address these developments, under
the proposal, comment 12(a)(2)–6 would
be revised to provide additional
guidance, consistent with the statute
and legislative purpose. The proposed
comment indicated that a card issuer
may replace an accepted credit card
with more than one renewal or
substitute card on the same account
where: (1) The replacement cards access
only the account of the accepted card;
(2) all cards issued under the account
are governed by the same terms and
conditions; and (3) the consumer’s total
liability for unauthorized use with
respect to the account does not increase.
Several industry commenters
requested that the first condition be
revised to require only that any
replacement card access the same
‘‘credit plan’’ as the accepted card. This
suggested revision is too broad. For

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example, some open-end credit plans
might include multiple accounts, such
as a credit card account and a home
equity line of credit (HELOC), where the
consumer’s credit card does not access
the HELOC account. The commenters’
suggestion to broaden the comment
would permit creditors to replace an
accepted card with one that accesses the
credit card account and another that
accesses the HELOC. Because the
consumer did not previously have credit
card access to the HELOC, adding such
access on an unsolicited basis would be
inconsistent with the legislative
purposes of Section 132. Accordingly,
the final comment provides that the
replacement cards should access only
the accounts previously accessed by the
consumer’s accepted card. Minor
revisions have been made to this part of
the final comment for clarity; no change
in meaning is intended.
Some industry commenters requested
a clarification in the final rule that a
supplemental card need not access all of
the features of the consumer’s existing
card account. Neither the proposal nor
the final comment requires that all
replacement cards issued access all of
the account features of the accepted
card.
Commenters also requested a
clarification that issuers would not be
prevented from issuing multiple
replacement cards when there is a
substitution due to a change in the card
issuer’s name or account number, or
where there is a successor card issuer.
The requirement that supplemental
cards must access the same account as
the accepted card does not preclude
issuers from issuing multiple
replacement cards as part of a proper
substitution. See, e.g., comments
12(a)(2)–2 and –3.
Some industry commenters opposed
the second condition—that all cards
issued in connection with a renewal or
substitution be subject to the same terms
and conditions. Some commenters
noted that for safety and soundness
reasons, an issuer might limit use of a
supplemental access device to lowdollar sales transactions (such as
purchases at a vending machine or gas
pump); limit the availability of credit on
a supplemental card (such as a card for
the cardholder’s dependent child); or
limit use of particular access devices to
transactions with merchants that
employ special security procedures or
agree to special risk-sharing
arrangements. Other commenters
requested clarification that all credit
features accessible with a supplemental
card need not be subject to the same
terms, for example, a different APR

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might apply to purchase transactions
and cash advances.
As proposed, the final comment
provides that where a card issuer
replaces an accepted card with more
than one renewal or substitute card on
an unsolicited basis, all replacement
cards must be issued subject to the same
terms and conditions. The final
comment clarifies that this requirement
applies only to terms and conditions
that are required to be disclosed under
§ 226.6 of Regulation Z, except that a
creditor may vary terms for which no
change-in-terms notice is required
under § 226.9(c). For example, a card
issuer could issue a supplemental card
that has a lower APR, has a lower credit
limit, can only be used for small dollar
transactions or for a subset of
merchants, or is subject to different
security procedures than the accepted
card. Moreover, the comment does not
suggest that all the credit features
available with the unsolicited
supplemental card must be subject to
the same terms; for example, the APRs
for purchase transactions and cash
advances might differ for the
supplemental card to the same extent
that these terms differ for the accepted
card.
Commenters generally supported the
third condition, that the consumer’s
total liability for unauthorized use of the
account must not increase as a result of
the creditor’s issuance of a
supplemental card. That condition is
adopted without revision in the final
comment.
Several consumer groups advocated
adding a condition that either the
replacement cards all be mailed in the
same envelope to deter identity theft or
the consumer be given written notice
seven days before the mailing of an
additional card. They also
recommended requiring other security
measures, such as consumer-initiated
card activation.
Card issuers typically send cards that
are not activated and employ security
procedures requiring the consumer to
verify receipt of the card, to avoid or
limit monetary losses from the theft of
credit cards sent through the mail.
These measures have become
increasingly common and are used on a
substantial portion of cards now issued.
It is expected that industry will
continue these practices, which should
be as effective when replacing an
accepted card with one or more renewal
or substitute cards.
Comment was also solicited on
whether it would be appropriate to
allow the unsolicited issuance of
supplemental cards for an existing
account on the conditions specified

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above even when there is no renewal of
or substitution for the cardholder’s
existing card. Industry commenters
stated that allowing additional cards to
be sent outside of renewal or
substitution would reduce card issuers’
costs by eliminating the need to produce
and distribute unnecessary replacement
cards. They also noted that the issuance
of supplemental cards alone (as opposed
to issuance in connection with a
renewal or substitution) would not
result in increased risk of liability for
unauthorized use of the cards.
Consumer advocates opposed the
unsolicited issuance of more than one
card on an existing account (when there
is no renewal or substitution) unless
consumers are notified by mail seven
days before an additional card is sent
and security measures such as
consumer-initiated card activation are
required, to protect against any added
risk of theft and unauthorized use.
Based on the comments received, staff
plans to recommend that the Board
consider amending § 226.12(a) to allow
the unsolicited issuance of additional
cards on an existing account outside of
renewal or substitution under certain
conditions. Also, consideration may be
given to whether changes to Regulation
E’s restrictions on the unsolicited
issuance of additional debit cards on a
consumer’s existing asset account are
warranted.
Subpart C—Closed-End Credit
Section 226.18—Content of Disclosures
18(g) Payment Schedule
The disclosures for closed-end loans
must include the number, amounts, and
timing of payments scheduled to repay
the obligation. Premiums paid for
insurance that protects the creditor
against the consumer’s default or other
credit loss (sometimes referred to as
private mortgage insurance) are finance
charges that must be included in the
payment schedule. The payment
schedule should reflect the fact that,
under the Homeowners Protection Act
of 1998 (HPA), such insurance generally
must terminate before the term of the
loan expires.
With some revisions for clarity,
changes to comment 18(g)–5 are
adopted as proposed to provide
additional guidance on how mortgage
insurance premiums should be
disclosed on the payment schedule
when some premiums are collected and
escrowed at the time the loan is closed.
Creditors are required to disclose a
payment schedule based on the
borrower’s legal obligation. The
comment provides an example to
facilitate compliance.

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Commenters generally supported the
proposal. Several commenters noted
that the loan documents might be silent
on how the termination of insurance
premiums will be implemented under
the HPA. TILA disclosures must be
based on the legal obligation, which is
determined by applicable state or other
law, and not solely by the parties’
written agreement. See comment
17(c)(1)–1. Comment 18(g)–5 has been
revised to reflect this guidance.
Two commenters sought clarification
that the rules for disclosing mortgage
insurance premiums under TILA would
not affect the rules for escrow accounts
under the Real Estate Settlement
Procedures Act (RESPA). The text of the
final comment has been modified to
allay those concerns; the comment in no
way affects creditors’ compliance with
RESPA’s aggregate escrow accounting
rules.
Section 226.19—Certain Residential
Mortgage Transactions
19(b) Certain Variable-Rate
Transactions
A technical amendment to comment
19(b)(1)–2 is adopted, as proposed, to
change the citation to comment 19(b)–
5, as amended (65 FR 17129, March 31,
2000). No substantive change is
intended.
Subpart E—Special Rules for Certain
Home Mortgage Transactions
Section 226.32—Requirements for
Certain Closed-End Home Mortgages
32(a) Coverage
Section 226.32 implements the Home
Ownership and Equity Protection Act of
1994 (HOEPA), which is part of the
Truth in Lending Act. HOEPA requires
additional disclosures and provides
substantive protections for certain
home-secured loans carrying rates or
fees above specified triggers. HOEPA
covers mortgage loans for which the
annual percentage rate (APR) exceeds
the yield on Treasury securities with a
comparable maturity by a specified
number of percentage points (8 for firstlien loans, 10 for subordinate-lien
loans). The APR is compared with the
yield on Treasury securities as of the
15th day of the month immediately
preceding the month of application.
Revisions to comment 32(a)(1)(i)–4
were proposed to clarify how creditors
should determine the applicable yield
on Treasury securities. The proposal
provided that creditors should not use
results of Treasury auctions. Instead,
creditors should use yields on actively
traded issues adjusted to constant
maturities that are listed on the Board’s

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issuer for the use of the other
institution’s ATM in a shared or
interchange system. (See also comment
■ 1. The authority citation for part 226
7(b)–2.)
continues to read as follows:
viii. Taxes and filing or notary fees
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 3806; 15 U.S.C. 1604
excluded from the finance charge under
and 1637(c)(5).
§ 226.4(e).
ix. A fee to expedite delivery of a
■ 2. In Supplement I to Part 226:
credit
card, either at account opening or
■ a. Under Section 226.6—Initial Discloduring the life of the account, provided
sure Statement, under 6(b) Other
delivery of the card is also available by
charges, paragraph 2. is revised.
standard mail service (or other means at
■ b. Under Section 226.12—Special
Credit Card Provisions, under Paragraph least as fast) without paying a fee for
delivery.
12(a)(2), paragraph 6. is revised.
x. A fee charged for arranging a single
■ c. Under Section 226.18—Content of
payment on the credit account, upon the
Disclosures, under 18(g) Payment
consumer’s request (regardless of how
schedule, paragraph 5. is revised.
■ d. Under Section 226.19—Certain Resi- frequently the consumer requests the
service), if the credit plan provides that
dential Mortgage and Variable-Rate
Transactions, under Paragraph 19(b)(1), the consumer may make payments on
the account by another reasonable
paragraph 2. is amended by removing
means, such as by standard mail service,
‘‘comment 19(b)–4’’ and adding ‘‘comwithout paying a fee to the creditor.
ment 19(b)–5’’ in its place.
■ e. Under Section 226.32—Require*
*
*
*
*
ments for Certain Closed-End Home
Section
226.12—Special
Credit Card
Mortgages, under Paragraph 32(a)(1)(i),
Provisions
paragraph 4. is revised.
12(a) Issuance of credit cards.
Supplement I To Part 226—Official
*
*
*
*
*
Staff Interpretations
Paragraph 12(a)(2).
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
6.
One-for-one
rule—exceptions.
The
Subpart B—Open-End Credit
regulation does not prohibit the card
*
*
*
*
*
issuer from:
i. Replacing a debit/credit card with a
Section 226.6—Initial Disclosure
credit card and another card with only
Statement
debit functions (or debit functions plus
*
*
*
*
*
an associated overdraft capability), since
6(b) Other charges.
the latter card could be issued on an
*
*
*
*
*
unsolicited basis under Regulation E.
2. Exclusions. The following are
ii. Replacing an accepted card with
examples of charges that are not ‘‘other
more than one renewal or substitute
charges’’:
card, provided that:
i. Fees charged for documentary
A. No replacement card accesses any
evidence of transactions for income tax
account not accessed by the accepted
purposes.
card;
ii. Amounts payable by a consumer
B. For terms and conditions required
for collection activity after default;
to be disclosed under § 226.6, all
attorney’s fees, whether or not
replacement cards are issued subject to
automatically imposed; foreclosure
the same terms and conditions, except
costs; post-judgment interest rates
that a creditor may vary terms for which
imposed by law; and reinstatement or
no change in terms notice is required
reissuance fees.
under § 226.9(c); and
iii. Premiums for voluntary credit life
C. Under the account’s terms the
or disability insurance, or for property
consumer’s total liability for
insurance, that are not part of the
unauthorized use with respect to the
finance charge.
account does not increase.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 226
iv. Application fees under
*
*
*
*
*
§ 226.4(c)(1).
Consumer protection, Disclosures,
v. A monthly service charge for a
Subpart C—Closed-End Credit
Federal Reserve System, Truth in
checking account with overdraft
lending.
*
*
*
*
protection that is applied to all checking *
Text of Revisions
accounts, whether or not a credit feature Section 226.18—Content of Disclosures
is attached.
*
*
*
*
■ Comments are numbered to comply
vi. Charges for submitting as payment *
18(g) Payment schedule.
with Federal Register publication rules. a check that is later returned unpaid
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, (see commentary to § 226.4(c)(2)).
*
*
*
*
*
5. Mortgage insurance. The payment
vii. Charges imposed on a cardholder
the Board amends 12 CFR part 226 as folschedule should reflect the consumer’s
by an institution other than the card
lows:
‘‘Selected Interest Rates’’ (statistical
release H–15). The H–15 is published
daily and is posted on the Board’s
Internet Web site at http://
www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h15.
The proposed comment also clarified
that for purposes of HOEPA’s rate-based
trigger, creditors should compare the
APR on 30-year loans (and other loans
of 20 or more years) with the yield
reported on the H–15 for a 20-year
constant maturity. The Department of
the Treasury recently ceased auctioning
30-year securities. Creditors asked for
additional guidance since the H–15 lists
a 20-year constant maturity and a longterm average of the yields for Treasury
securities with terms to maturity of 25
or more years, and refers to a Treasury
formula for estimating a 30-year yield.
Commenters generally supported the
proposed revisions as enhancing
uniformity and easing compliance.
However, several credit unions that
commented preferred having flexibility
to use any figure on the H–15
comparable to a loan’s maturity,
including the Treasury formula for
estimating a 30-year yield. Other
commenters, while concurring with the
guidance to use 20-year constant
maturities to calculate the APR trigger
for 30-year loans, encouraged the Board
to explore alternatives and make further
revisions to the commentary if more
suitable alternatives become available.
One commenter requested guidance on
the effect of an irregular first payment
period on the loan’s maturity.
The comment has been adopted
substantially as proposed, with a minor
revision for clarification. Requiring that
all creditors use the yields on the H–15
for Treasury constant maturities should
ensure uniform application of HOEPA.
The final comment clarifies that for
purposes of determining a loan’s
maturity under HOEPA’s rate-based
trigger, creditors may rely on the rules
in § 226.17(c)(4). Under the rule,
creditors may ignore the effect of first
payment periods that are slightly longer
or shorter than other scheduled
payment periods.

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Federal Register / Vol. 68, No. 64 / Thursday, April 3, 2003 / Rules and Regulations

mortgage insurance payments until the
date on which the creditor must
automatically terminate coverage under
applicable law, even though the
consumer may have a right to request
that the insurance be cancelled earlier.
The payment schedule must reflect the
legal obligation, as determined by
applicable state or other law. For
example, assume that under applicable
law, mortgage insurance must terminate
after the 130th scheduled monthly
payment, and the creditor collects at
closing and places in escrow two
months of premiums. If, under the legal
obligation, the creditor will include
mortgage insurance premiums in 130
payments and refund the escrowed
payments when the insurance is
terminated, the payment schedule
should reflect 130 premium payments.
If, under the legal obligation, the
creditor will apply the amount
escrowed to the two final insurance
payments, the payment schedule should
reflect 128 monthly premium payments.
(For assumptions in calculating a
payment schedule that includes
mortgage insurance that must be
automatically terminated, see comments
17(c)(1)–8 and 17(c)(1)–10.)
*
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*
Subpart E—Special Rules for Certain
Home Mortgage Transactions
*

*

*

*

*

Section 226.32—Requirements for
Certain Closed-End Home Mortgages
*

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*
*
32(a) Coverage.
Paragraph 32(a)(1)(i).
*
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*
*
4. Treasury securities. To determine
the yield on comparable Treasury
securities for the annual percentage rate
test, creditors may use the yield on
actively traded issues adjusted to
constant maturities published in the
Board’s ‘‘Selected Interest Rates’’
(statistical release H–15). Creditors must
use the yield corresponding to the
constant maturity that is closest to the
loan’s maturity. If the loan’s maturity is
exactly halfway between security
maturities, the annual percentage rate
on the loan should be compared with
the yield for Treasury securities having
the lower yield. In determining the
loan’s maturity, creditors may rely on
the rules in § 226.17(c)(4) regarding
irregular first payment periods. For
example:
i. If the H–15 contains a yield for
Treasury securities with constant
maturities of 7 years and 10 years and
no maturity in between, the annual
percentage rate for an 8-year mortgage

loan is compared with the yield of
securities having a 7-year maturity, and
the annual percentage rate for a 9-year
mortgage loan is compared with the
yield of securities having a 10-year
maturity.
ii. If a mortgage loan has a term of 15
years, and the H–15 contains a yield of
5.21 percent for constant maturities of
10 years, and also contains a yield of
6.33 percent for constant maturities of
20 years, then the creditor compares the
annual percentage rate for a 15-year
mortgage loan with the yield for
constant maturities of 10 years.
iii. If a mortgage loan has a term of 30
years, and the H–15 does not contain a
yield for 30-year constant maturities,
but contains a yield for 20-year constant
maturities, and an average yield for
securities with remaining terms to
maturity of 25 years and over, then the
annual percentage rate on the loan is
compared with the yield for 20-year
constant maturities.
*
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*
*
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, acting through the
Director of the Division of Consumer and
Community Affairs under delegated
authority, March 28, 2003.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Deputy Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 03–8022 Filed 4–2–03; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P