View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas

l l★K

DALLAS, TEXAS
75265-5906

December 29, 2000
Notice 00-82

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

SUBJECT
Request for Public Comment
on Amendments to Regulation C
(Home Mortgage Disclosure)
DETAILS
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System has requested public comment on amendments to Regulation C (Home Mortgage Disclosure) and to the commentary that
applies and interprets the regulation. The amendments would
•

simplify the definition of a “refinancing”;

•

require lenders to report requests for preapproval;

•

simplify the definition of a reportable home improvement loan;

•

require lenders to report home-equity lines of credit;

•

expand coverage of nondepository lenders; and

•

require lenders to report the annual percentage rate of a loan, whether the loan is
subject to the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act, and whether the loan
or application involves a manufactured home.

The Board also has proposed to reorganize the regulation and to make other changes.

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.

-2-

The Board must receive comments by March 9, 2001. Please address comments to
Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street
and Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20551. Also, you may mail comments electronically to regs.comments@federalreserve.gov. All comments should refer to Docket No.
R-1001.
ATTACHMENT
A copy of the Board’s notice as it appears on pages 78656–85, Vol. 65, No. 242 of the
Federal Register dated December 15, 2000, is attached.
MORE INFORMATION
For more information, please contact Eugene Coy, Banking Supervision Department,
(214) 922-6201. For additional copies of this Bank’s notice, contact the Public Affairs
Department at (214) 922-5254 or access District Notices on our web site at
http://www.dallasfed.org/banking/notices/index.html.

Friday,
December 15, 2000

Part III

Federal Reserve
System
12 CFR Part 203
Home Mortgage Disclosure; Proposed
Rules

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00001

Fmt 4717

Sfmt 4717

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

78656

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 203
[Regulation C; Docket No. R–1001]

Home Mortgage Disclosure
AGENCY: Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Proposed rule; proposed staff
interpretation.
SUMMARY: The Board is proposing
amendments to Regulation C (Home
Mortgage Disclosure) and to the
commentary that applies and interprets
Regulation C. These amendments would
simplify the definition of a
‘‘refinancing,’’ require lenders to report
requests for preapproval, simplify the
definition of a reportable home
improvement loan, require lenders to
report home-equity lines of credit,
expand coverage of nondepository
lenders, and require lenders to report
the annual percentage rate of a loan,
whether the loan is subject to the Home
Ownership and Equity Protection Act,
and whether the loan or application
involves a manufactured home. The
Board also proposes to reorganize the
regulation and to make other changes.
DATES: Comments must be received by
March 9, 2001.
ADDRESSES: Comments directed to the
Board should refer to Docket No. R–
1001 and may be mailed to Jennifer J.
Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, 20th
Street and Constitution Avenue, N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20551, or mailed
electronically to
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov.
Comments addressed to Ms. Johnson
may be delivered to the Board’s mail
room between 8:45 a.m. and 5:15 p.m.,
and to the security control room at all
other times. Both the mail room and the
security control room are accessible
from the courtyard entrance on 20th
Street between Constitution Avenue and
C Street, N.W. Members of the public
may inspect comments in room MP–500
of the Martin Building between 9:00
a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on weekdays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
C. Wood, Counsel, James H. Mann,
Senior Attorney, or Kathleen C. Ryan,
Senior Attorney, Division of Consumer
and Community Affairs, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, Washington, D.C. 20551, at
(202) 452–3667 or (202) 452–2412. For
users of Telecommunications Device for
the Deaf (TDD) only, contact Janice
Simms at (202) 452–4984.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

I. Background on HMDA and
Regulation C
The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act
(HMDA) requires depository and certain
for-profit, nondepository institutions to
collect, report, and 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. Regulation C generally requires
that institutions 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 national origin or race,
gender, and annual income; and
• Each property, including
occupancy status and location.1
HMDA data can be used to help
determine whether institutions are
serving the housing needs of their
communities. The data help public
officials target public investment to
attract private investment where it is
needed. HMDA data also assist in
identifying possible discriminatory
lending patterns and in enforcing
antidiscrimination statutes.
II. The Board’s Review of Regulation C
The Board reviews its regulations
periodically to identify ways to clarify
and simplify the regulatory language;
respond to technological and other
developments; reduce undue regulatory
burden on the industry; delete obsolete
provisions; and improve the quality and
usefulness of the data. The review of
Regulation C began in March 1998 when
the Board published an Advance Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking (Advance
Notice; 63 FR 12329 (March 12, 1998)).
In the Advance Notice, the Board
identified several possible areas for
revision, including: reporting requests
for preapproval; exempting loans
acquired in a branch acquisition;
reporting construction loans and other
temporary financing; revising the
definitions of reportable refinancings
1 Institutions report these data to their
supervisory agencies on an application-byapplication basis using a register format.
Institutions must make their loan/application
registers available to the public, with certain fields
redacted to preserve applicants’ privacy. The
Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council
(FFIEC), on behalf of the supervisory agencies,
compiles the reported data and prepares an
individual disclosure statement for each institution,
aggregate reports for all covered institutions in each
metropolitan area, and other reports. These
disclosure statements and reports are also available
to the public.

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00002

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

and home improvement loans; reporting
manufactured home loans as a separate
category; and requiring lenders to report
additional data, such as reasons for
denial and the appraised value of the
property securing a loan. The Board
received approximately 100 comment
letters. Most commenters addressed
only the issues identified in the
Advance Notice.
The Board has received many
suggestions on how it might use its
authority under HMDA to increase
understanding of the mortgage markets
and to assist in fair lending
enforcement. These suggestions have
been the main focus of the Board’s
comprehensive review of the regulation
and of its development of proposed
revisions.
Other suggestions for change related
to increased public and agency concerns
about ‘‘predatory lending’’ practices.2
Some of them were presented in
Curbing Predatory Home Mortgage
Lending, a report by the Department of
Housing and Urban Development and
the Department of the Treasury
submitted to the Congress in June 2000
(HUD/Treasury Report). These
suggestions include requiring reporting
of the interest rate on a loan, the fees
associated with a loan, whether a loan
is subprime, and the applicant’s credit
score, debt-to-income ratio, and age. The
Board received other suggestions at
hearings on possible changes to the
Home Ownership and Equity Protection
Act (HOEPA) held in Charlotte, Boston,
Chicago, and San Francisco. See 65 FR
42889 (July 12, 2000).3
The Board has analyzed the
suggestions received from these and
other sources—focusing on whether the
likely benefits from each suggestion
exceed the probable burdens. In the
review of possible changes to Regulation
C, the Board’s staff met with a wide
range of interested parties, including
industry and consumer representatives,
and officials of financial regulatory and
2 While no precise definition of this term exists,
predatory lending can be regarded as lending
activities that, for example, involve targeting
financially unsophisticated homeowners—
frequently those having significant equity in their
homes—for loans with high rates and fees and with
repayment terms that are difficult or impossible to
meet, thus putting their homes at risk. In addition,
fraud or unlawful representations by brokers or
lenders are often features of predatory lending.
3 In 1994, HOEPA amended the Truth in Lending
Act. 15 U.S.C. § 1601 et seq. The Act restricts
certain loan terms, such as balloon payments in
home-equity loans, where (1) the APR exceeds by
more than 10 percentage points the yield on
Treasury securities of comparable maturity to the
loan, or (2) the total points and fees payable by the
consumer exceed the greater of 8 percent of the loan
amount or a dollar figure that is adjusted annually
(currently $451).

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules
fair lending enforcement agencies. The
Board’s analysis of possible changes has
been guided by consideration of the
purposes of the statute. In each case, the
Board has considered whether changes
to Regulation C could be proposed that
might help the public and the regulatory
agencies to better understand the
mortgage markets, in light of changes
that have been taking place in the past
decade. The Board gave special
attention to data associated with the
subprime market—given that this sector
has grown substantially in recent years
and also in light of concerns that it is
the market sector in which predatory
lending practices appear more likely to
occur.
The Board has considered carefully
the many suggestions for amendments
to Regulation C that have been received.
This proposal reflects the Board’s initial
determination that Regulation C should
be amended to reflect some of the
suggestions but not others. Both types of
suggestions are discussed below. The
Board would find it helpful, in
formulating a final rule, for the public
to rank all these suggestions in two
ways: First, by the importance or utility
of the additional or revised data that
would be reported; and second, by the
cost of collecting and reporting those
data.
Accordingly, based on the comments
and on its own analysis, the Board is
proposing certain changes to Regulation
C. Each of the Board’s proposals directly
addresses one or more of HMDA’s
purposes, which include helping to
determine whether financial institutions
are serving the housing needs of their
communities and assisting in fair
lending enforcement.
The proposed changes pertaining to
the coverage of transactions would
broaden the data available on the home
mortgage market generally and on the
subprime market in particular; they
would also reduce inconsistencies
among the data reported. One
recommended change would expand the
coverage of nondepository lenders.
Specifically, the Board proposes:
• Simplifying the definition of a
‘‘refinancing.’’ The current definition
offers lenders several options for
deciding which refinancings to report;
the proposed simplification would
establish a definition applicable to all
lenders. This would generate more
complete and consistent data.
• Requiring lenders to report requests
for preapproval. The rule proposed
would capture requests for preapproval
that are applications for credit, which
are covered by the act. Requests for
preapproval have been excluded from
reporting under HMDA because of

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

earlier concerns about how to
differentiate between applications for
credit and requests for prequalification.
Defining coverage narrowly would limit
compliance burden.
• Simplifying the definition of a
reportable home improvement loan. In a
change to the present reporting system,
all loans for the purpose of home
improvement would be reported;
currently, lenders may exclude them if
they do not classify them as home
improvement loans. This would
produce more consistent data.
• Requiring lenders to report homeequity lines of credit. The reporting of
home-equity lines of credit, which is
now optional, would become
mandatory. Research by Board staff has
shown that most home-equity lines of
credit are used in part for home
improvement purposes, so mandatory
coverage would provide more complete
information about the home
improvement market. Gathering
information about home improvement
loans has been required by HMDA since
its enactment in 1975.
• Expanding coverage of
nondepository lenders. Nondepository
lenders are particularly active in the
subprime market. The Board proposes
adding a dollar-volume threshold of $50
million to the current loan-percentage
test to better ensure that all significant
lenders are covered.
The Board’s proposals would also
require lenders to report additional
items of data that would enhance
understanding of the home mortgage
market generally and the subprime
market in particular. Capturing these
data would also assist fair lending
enforcement. Specifically, the Board
proposes requiring institutions to report:
• The annual percentage rate (APR) of
the loan and whether the loan is subject
to HOEPA; and
• Whether the loan or application
involves a manufactured home.
The Board has grouped under a single
section (4(a)(9)) its proposals to require
lenders to report additional data that it
believes will help enhance public
understanding of the home mortgage
lending market in general and the
subprime market in particular. In
addition, as discussed under that
section, the Board solicits comment on
three other items of information
(although it is not proposing their
collection at this time): the reasons why
a loan application was denied, the loanto-value ratio (LTV), and the identity of
an institution’s parent company, if any.
Clarifying the definitions of
refinancings and home improvement
loans (including mandating the coverage
of home-equity lines of credit) is

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00003

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

78657

necessary if those categories of HMDA
data are to be made useful to the
agencies and the public. Covering
requests for preapproval is necessary to
fully implement the statutory coverage
of an ‘‘application’’ for credit. The
narrowly drawn definition should
mitigate the burden caused by the
change. Amending the coverage test
applicable to nondepository lenders will
better ensure that significant
participants in the mortgage market
report under HMDA. The
recommendations to require the
reporting of pricing information and
manufactured home status would
produce data useful for fair lending
analysis and helpful in understanding
the subprime market. To reduce burden,
these recommendations leverage
existing regulatory definitions or
requirements.
Some of the proposed changes have
been under consideration for several
years. For example, the Board has
recognized for some time that the
analysis of aggregate data on certain
metropolitan areas is complicated by the
lack of separate reporting of
manufactured home transactions, which
have underwriting standards
significantly different from those of
transactions involving site-built homes.
The Board has waited to propose the
separate reporting of these loans,
together with other revisions, so that
lenders could make all upcoming
changes to their software and data
collection systems at one time and
minimize disruption.
There are many data collections
suggested by other agencies and the
public that, after careful consideration,
the Board is not proposing; some of
these include, for example, the credit
score of the applicant, and certain loan
terms, such as balloon payments.
Generally, the Board determined—in the
context of other changes being
proposed—that in these and other cases
a requirement to collect the additional
data entailed burden not clearly
justified by the resulting benefits. In
some cases, the Board is proposing
alternatives that the Board believes
would generate greater benefits with
less burden.
The Board believes that, taken as a
whole, the proposed changes to
Regulation C strike an appropriate
balance between benefit and burden.
The Board took account of the fact that
the proposals cannot be evaluated in
isolation, but must be assessed in the
context of reporting requirements under
other applicable laws and regulations.
The Board’s proposal reflects its
initial assessment on the merit of
potential changes identified by the

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

78658

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

public and the Board’s own internal
review. The Board solicits the public’s
views on whether there are other ways
in which to implement the proposed
changes that would further lessen and
mitigate the anticipated burden, on all
other aspects of the proposed changes,
and on any other issues that might
warrant further review. The Board also
would find it helpful, in formulating a
final rule, for commenters to rank all the
proposed and suggested changes on
which they are commenting in two
ways: first, by the importance or utility
of the additional or revised data that
would be reported; and second, by the
relative cost or burden of collecting and
reporting these data.
Solicitation of Comment on Alternative
System of Categorizing Loans
The Board solicits comment, as
discussed below, on proposals to revise
the definition of loan categories
reported under HMDA. In addition, the
Board solicits comment on an
alternative system for categorizing
loans. Under the current regulation, the
categories of loans reported are (1) home
purchase loans, (2) home improvement
loans, and (3) refinancings. An
alternative approach to categorizing
loans would require the reporting of
more loans, but would simplify the
process for determining which loans
must be reported. It could also facilitate
some depository institutions’ reporting
of data for purposes of the Community
Reinvestment Act of 1977 (CRA; 12
U.S.C. 2901 et seq.). It would potentially
limit the additional burden for
depository institutions because of its
similarity to categories familiar to them
from the Call Report or the Thrift
Financial Report.4 The Board
specifically solicits public comment on
whether lenders would experience more
burden than benefit under this
approach.
The alternative approach would
eliminate refinancings and home
improvement loans (except for
unsecured home improvement loans) as
distinct categories.5 Instead, the
4 The Call Report categories include first lien
closed-end mortgage loans, junior lien closed-end
mortgage loans, open-end mortgage loans (that is,
home-equity lines of credit), and unsecured
consumer loans, subdivided into open-end and
closed-end loans. The Thrift Financial Report is
similar, but does not subdivide closed-end mortgage
loans into first and junior liens, and shows
unsecured home improvement loans as a
subdivision of unsecured closed-end consumer
loans. Refinancings are not treated as a separate
category in the Call Report or Thrift Financial
Report.
5 HMDA defines a loan subject to reporting as ‘‘a
loan which is secured by residential real property
or a home improvement loan,’’ implying that

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

categories reported would be (1) home
purchase loans (subdivided into first
and junior liens), (2) other mortgage
loans (similarly subdivided), (3) homeequity lines of credit, and (4) unsecured
home improvement loans. The
alternative approach would cover the
mortgage lending market more fully
than either the current regulation or the
proposed revision—for example, by
capturing closed-end home-equity loans
that are not made for home
improvement purposes.
III. Discussion of Proposed Revisions
The following discussion generally
tracks the regulation (including its
appendices) as the Board proposes to
reorganize it. Proposed revisions to the
staff commentary are addressed under
the sections of the regulation that they
interpret. Also discussed under the
pertinent sections are issues regarding
which the Board does not propose any
revision. Proposed conforming and nonsubstantive changes to the regulation
and commentary generally are not
separately discussed. A few particularly
significant features of the proposed
reorganization are discussed
specifically.
Section 203.2—Definitions
2(b) Application
Requests for preapproval. A consumer
who wants to purchase a dwelling may
request a lender to provide a
‘‘preapproval’’ or commitment, based on
a comprehensive underwriting, to make
a mortgage loan once the consumer
identifies an acceptable property.6
Regulation C currently instructs lenders
not to report these requests. Under the
present rule, if a request for preapproval
ultimately results in an origination, it is
the origination, not the preapproval,
that is reported. Requests for
preapproval disposed of in other ways—
for example, those that are denied—go
unreported.
The Advance Notice asked how
requests for preapproval should be
defined in the event they are covered.
One option presented was to direct
lenders to report all requests for credit
that, in the case of denials, trigger an
adverse action notice under Regulation
B (Equal Credit Opportunity). These
include all requests regarding which: (1)
The creditor evaluates information
about the consumer; (2) decides to
decline the request; and (3)
unsecured home improvement loans are covered by
the statute.
6 Requests for preapproval are to be distinguished
from requests for ‘‘prequalification.’’ The latter
generally involve a cursory review of the
consumer’s creditworthiness; they do not result in
a conditional commitment to extend credit.

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00004

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

communicates the decision to the
consumer. Some commenters believed
that, assuming the Board amended
Regulation C to cover requests for
preapproval, parallel coverage under
both regulations would reduce
compliance burden. Other commenters
countered that adopting the Regulation
B approach would distort the data,
capturing denied requests but not
requests that are approved but do not
lead to an origination.
The issue is whether a consumer who
asks for preapproval has filed a credit
application or whether a preapproval is
a preliminary exercise. In August 1999,
the Board published a proposed rule
under Regulation B. 64 FR 44582
(August 16, 1999). The proposal revised
the term ‘‘application’’ to include
requests for preapproval made under
procedures in which a creditor issues
creditworthy persons a written
commitment to extend credit that may
be limited in three ways: (1) The lender
specifies the maximum amount of credit
that it commits to extend; (2) the lender
specifies the period of time during
which the commitment remains valid;
and (3) the commitment may be subject
to conditions.
Based on public comment and on
further analysis, the Board proposes to
cover requests for the preapproval of
home purchase loans under Regulation
C using the same definition as in the
Regulation B proposal of August 1999.
Under this approach, only a limited
number of highly-structured
preapproval programs would be
covered—those most like programs
involving traditional mortgage
applications. The proposal would not
cover more informal prequalification
programs in which the underwriting
may be less rigorous and the lender
makes no binding, written commitment.
The statute requires that lenders
report loan applications. The Board
believes—in this context as under
Regulation B—that requests for
preapproval, defined in the fashion
proposed, represent applications and
thus should be reported. Moreover,
requests for preapproval are an
increasingly prevalent feature of the
home mortgage lending process, and the
proposed change would provide data
about this developing part of the market.
And although information about denied
requests for preapproval would not
include the property location,
information about the race or national
origin and gender of the applicant could
be useful in fair lending enforcement.
The narrow scope of the proposed
definition would promote the
consistency and accuracy of the data
collected—for example, all the data

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules
would include information about the
amount of the commitment. The
proposed definition would also avoid
affecting home-ownership counseling
programs, which typically do not
involve a credit decision by a lender.
The Board considered whether to
propose requiring lenders to
differentiate requests for preapproval
from other applications—for example,
through a separate code—or to
distinguish actions taken on requests for
preapproval from actions taken on other
applications. The Board believes the
resulting burden would likely exceed
the value of these data. The Board does
solicit comment, however, on whether
lenders should use separate codes to
identify requests for preapproval and
the actions taken on them.
Other matters. The current definition
of an ‘‘application’’ refers to requests for
credit made in accordance with
‘‘procedures established by a financial
institution.’’ To conform to the Board’s
proposed revision to Regulation B, the
definition would be revised to refer to
‘‘procedures used by a financial
institution.’’ This would focus the
definition on what institutions actually
do, rather than what their procedures
state.
2(d) Dwelling
The Board proposes to clarify,
through the staff commentary, that the
term ‘‘dwelling’’ does not apply to
transitory residences such as college
dormitories. This responds to requests
that the Board clarify the meaning of the
term ‘‘dwelling.’’
2(e) Financial Institution
Scope of coverage. HMDA defines a
covered nondepository lender as ‘‘any
person engaged for profit in the business
of mortgage lending.’’ Congress added
this language to the statute in a 1989
amendment that for the first time
brought unaffiliated nondepository
mortgage lenders within the scope of
HMDA.
To implement the statutory language,
the Board adopted a coverage test
focusing on a lender’s home purchase
mortgage lending as a proportion of its
overall lending volume. Specifically, a
nondepository mortgage lender is
covered if in the preceding year its
home purchase loan originations,
including refinancings of home
purchase loans, equaled or exceeded 10
percent of all its loan originations (by
dollar volume).7 The Board intended
7 In addition, under Regulation C, a
nondepository lender is exempt if its total assets,
combined with those of any parent corporation,
were $10 million or less on the preceding December
31, and if the institution originated fewer than 100

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

this test to avoid coverage of lenders
that, although making some mortgage
loans, arguably were not engaged ‘‘in
the business of’’ mortgage lending.
The Board has noted for some time
that this test exempts lenders
originating large volumes of home
purchase loans, when more than 90
percent of their originations involve
credit card loans or other non-home
purchase products. The HUD/Treasury
Report recommended the modification
or elimination of the 10 percent test.
The Board proposes to preserve the
existing test, while adding a dollarvolume threshold for home purchase
loan originations (and refinancings) to
ensure coverage of nondepository
lenders that are significant participants
in the home mortgage market.
Specifically, a nondepository lender
would be required to report HMDA data
if its prior-year home purchase loan
originations, including refinancings of
home purchase loans, equaled or
exceeded $50 million, even if they did
not equal or exceed 10 percent of total
originations.
The average amount of a home
purchase loan reported under HMDA is
about $120,000, so a lender with annual
home purchase originations (including
refinancings) of $50 million would have
originated between 400 and 500 loans.
Among mortgage lenders covered in
1999, approximately half reported
originations of $50 million or less. This
suggests that a coverage threshold of $50
million is a reasonable test of whether
such a lender is ‘‘engaged * * * in the
business of mortgage lending.’’ The
Board solicits comment on whether $50
million is an appropriate threshold.
Other matters. As part of the
reorganization of the regulation,
coverage criteria that currently appear
in section 203.3—‘‘Exempt
Institutions’’—would be consolidated
under the definition of ‘‘financial
institution’’ in section 203.2(e).
Correspondingly, several staff comments
that now appear under section 203.3
would appear instead under section
203.2(e).
2(f) Home-Equity Line of Credit
The Board proposes to define a homeequity line of credit as an open-end
credit plan (as defined by Regulation Z)
secured by a dwelling. This is
home purchase loans (again, including refinancings
of home purchase loans) in the preceding calendar
year. There is also a location test, under which a
nondepository lender is exempt if on the preceding
December 31 it had no office in a metropolitan area,
and received applications for, originated, or
purchased fewer than five home purchase or home
improvement loans in a metropolitan area in the
preceding calendar year.

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00005

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

78659

substantially consistent with the
definition that the Board has long
applied informally.
2(g) Home Improvement Loan
The Advance Notice solicited
comment on whether the reporting
categories currently in use should be
modified to simplify compliance and
improve the usefulness of the data. The
Board received a range of responses.
Some suggested that the Board change
the existing categories—for example, by
eliminating the requirement to report
home improvement loans, or by
eliminating the portion of the definition
relating to how a lender classifies the
loan. Others suggested replacing the
existing home improvement and
refinancing categories with a single
category consisting of all nonpurchase
loans secured by a dwelling.
The Board proposes limited changes
to the home improvement category, as
discussed below.
Classification. Regulation C defines a
home improvement loan as any loan
classified as such by the lending
institution and any part of whose
proceeds are to be used for the
improvement of a dwelling or the
related real property. This definition
was intended to minimize burden by
not requiring institutions to determine
whether a loan is a home improvement
loan for HMDA purposes if the loan is
classified otherwise by the institution.
For example, a lender that makes home
improvement loans on an installment
basis, and classifies them as installment
loans (without differentiating between
home improvement loans and loans for
other purposes) is not required to report
those home improvement loans under
HMDA.
The resulting data have proven to be
of limited usefulness to examiners,
community groups, and other data
users. Institutions’ classification
schemes differ, making the data
inconsistent; and not all loans for home
improvement purposes are reported
because some are classified as other
types of credit.
The Board proposes to drop the
classification test. Instead, lenders
would be required to report a loan as a
home improvement loan if any part of
the proceeds is to be used for home
improvement, regardless of how the
institution classifies the loan. In
determining whether loan proceeds are
intended for home improvement
purposes, lenders could rely on
applicants’ statements, and would not
be required to take any other steps to
determine the purpose of the loan. For
example, a lender could use a check-box
on a loan application to determine

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

78660

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

whether or not a loan is intended for
home improvement purposes. (See
proposed comment 4(a)(2)–1.)
Redefining home improvement loans
as proposed would increase reporting
burden by requiring lenders to report a
larger number of loans. The Board
believes that this compliance burden is
justified by the need to make home
improvement loan data more consistent,
complete, and, therefore, useful. The
Board solicits comment, however, on
whether the benefits of the proposed
change justify the added burden.
Home-equity lines of credit. If a homeequity line of credit is to be used for
home improvement purposes, an
institution currently has the option to
report the amount of the line to be used
for those purposes as a home
improvement loan or not to report credit
lines at all. Although most home-equity
lines are used, at least in part, for home
improvement purposes, some
institutions include home-equity credit
lines in their reported home
improvement loan data while others do
not.8
To improve the completeness and
comparability of data when lending
proceeds are used for home
improvement purposes, the Board
proposes to require that all applications
for home-equity lines of credit be
reported. Also, to facilitate comparisons
between the markets for open-end
home-equity lines and closed-end home
improvement loans—which have
distinct demographic characteristics—
the Board proposes that the two
products be reported separately.
Accordingly, the Board proposes to
exclude home-equity lines of credit
from the definition of a home
improvement loan, and to place them in
their own category.
To simplify the reporting of homeequity lines, and to make reporting more
comparable with the reporting of home
improvement loans, institutions would
report the full amount of a credit line,
rather than seeking to ascertain the
amount that the borrower intends to use
for home improvement purposes. The
Board solicits comment on whether this
approach would, in fact, simplify
reporting, as well as on the more general
question of whether the benefit resulting
from the proposed changes regarding
home-equity lines of credit justify the
burden that would result from them. See
section 203.4(a)(2) and Appendix A,
paragraphs I.A.4. and I.A.6., below.
8 See Glenn B. Canner, Thomas A. Durkin, and
Charles A. Luckett, ‘‘Recent Developments in Home
Equity Lending,’’ Federal Reserve Bulletin, vol. 84
(April 1998), pp. 241–251.

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

2(h) Home Purchase Loan
A new staff comment would be added
to clarify that if an institution making a
first mortgage loan also makes a second
mortgage loan that finances part or all
of the borrower’s downpayment, the
institution reports each loan separately
as a home purchase loan.
2(i) Manufactured Home
The Board proposes to add a
definition of ‘‘manufactured home.’’ See
the discussion under section 4(a)(9),
below, regarding additional data items
relating to the home mortgage lending
market in general and the subprime
market in particular.
2(j) Metropolitan Area
Currently, Regulation C defines
‘‘metropolitan statistical area’’ or
‘‘MSA’’ to mean a metropolitan
statistical area or a primary
metropolitan statistical area, as defined
by the U.S. Office of Management and
Budget (OMB). OMB is in the process of
revising the standards for defining
metropolitan areas. In August 2000,
OMB published a notice and request for
comment entitled ‘‘Final Report and
Recommendations From the
Metropolitan Area Standards Review
Committee to the Office of Management
and Budget Concerning Changes to the
Standards for Defining Metropolitan
Areas’’ (65 FR 51060 (August 22, 2000)).
The report recommended that OMB
adopt a new concept called a ‘‘core
based statistical area’’ (CBSA) to replace
the existing metropolitan statistical area
and primary metropolitan statistical
area concepts. CBSAs would be
subdivided into two categories,
‘‘micropolitan areas,’’ which would be
defined based on urban cores of 10,000
to 49,999 population, and ‘‘metropolitan
areas,’’ based on urban cores of 50,000
or more population. The report further
stated that, if OMB adopts the
recommended standards, the first areas
to be designated using the revised
standards and Census 2000 data could
be designated in 2003.
The Board proposes to replace the
term ‘‘metropolitan statistical area’’ with
‘‘metropolitan area.’’ ‘‘Metropolitan
area’’ would have the same meaning as
‘‘metropolitan statistical area’’ does
currently, until such time as OMB
adopts and implements revised
standards for metropolitan areas; at that
time, the term would refer to the areas
as defined in the revised standards.
2(k) Refinancing
Definition. Regulation C requires the
reporting of refinancings of home
purchase and home improvement loans.
The regulation defines a refinancing as

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00006

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

a loan that satisfies and replaces an
existing obligation by the same
borrower.
The Board has adopted several
successive approaches to determining
whether an application is for the
refinancing of a home purchase or home
improvement loan. At one time,
Regulation C permitted the reporting of
refinancings only if they involved an
increase in the outstanding principal.
This approach did not adequately cover
refinancing activity, such as rate-driven
refinancings.
For some years thereafter, Regulation
C provided that a loan was covered if
the balance owed on the existing loan,
plus the amount of new money for home
purchase or home improvement
purposes, exceeded half of the total new
loan amount. But lenders found this
computation burdensome—for example,
because they were often unable to
determine the portion of new money
used for the specified purposes. These
difficulties also impaired the accuracy
and consistency of the data.
To facilitate compliance, Regulation C
currently identifies four scenarios
typical of the refinancing of a home
purchase or home improvement loan. It
allows lenders to select from among
them in deciding on which refinancings
to report:
(1) The existing obligation was a home
purchase or home improvement loan, as
determined by the lender (for example, by
reference to available documents); or
(2) The applicant states that the existing
obligation was a home purchase or home
improvement loan; or
(3) The existing obligation was secured by
a lien on a dwelling; or
(4) the new obligation will be secured by
a lien on a dwelling.

This rule eases burden, but it
generates inconsistent data to the extent
that different lenders choose different
scenarios to determine if their
refinancings are to be reported.
Moreover, it is impossible for the data
user to know what the data represent.
The proposed rule makes it more likely
that the HMDA reporting will capture
refinancings of loans originally for home
purchase or home improvement.
In the Advance Notice, the Board
solicited comment about whether
changes to the refinancing category
would produce more useful data, as
well as whether such changes could
ease compliance burden. A number of
commenters suggested modifications.
Some, including community groups,
federal agencies, and others, contended
that the existing definition does not
result in the collection of useful data
because the types of refinancings
reported can vary widely from one

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules
lender to another. Several financial
institutions suggested dropping
refinancings from coverage altogether.
Others suggested permitting only those
refinancings to be reported that satisfy
and replace home purchase or home
improvement loans, or suggested
replacing the home improvement and
refinancing categories with a single
category consisting of all nonpurchase
loans secured by a dwelling.
Based on the public comments and its
own analysis, the Board proposes to
revise the definition of a refinancing for
reporting purposes. A refinancing
would be defined as a new obligation
satisfying and replacing an existing
obligation by the same borrower, where
both the existing obligation and the new
obligation are secured by a lien on a
dwelling. The proposed definition
would reduce the inconsistency of
refinancing data, because all lenders
would report using a single two-pronged
test.
This expanded reporting would entail
additional burden to the extent that
lenders must adopt a different regimen
for identifying covered refinancings.
The Board believes that the increased
burden would be outweighed by
benefits of more focused coverage and
more consistent and complete data. The
Board solicits comment, however, on
whether the proposed change strikes the
right balance between benefit and
burden.
In addition, the Board solicits
comment on whether the definition
should include not only refinancings
where the existing loan was a dwellingsecured loan, but in addition
refinancings of unsecured debt, as long
as the new loan is dwelling-secured.
Under this alternative, for example, a
lender that pays off a consumer’s
existing unsecured loan by extending a
new, dwelling-secured loan to that
consumer would report the new loan.
MECAs. The Board is not proposing
any changes regarding modification,
extension, and consolidation
agreements (MECAs). Several
commenters on the Advance Notice
suggested that the Board consider
treating certain MECAs as refinancings
under Regulation C. MECAs substitute
for traditional refinancings in some
states, such as New York and Texas, to
avoid mortgage recording fees and taxes.
Such transactions currently are not
reported because they do not meet the
definition of a refinancing (satisfaction
and replacement of an existing mortgage
loan). Some commenters suggested that
lenders should be allowed to report
MECAs that are the functional
equivalent of a refinancing.

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

The existing definition of a
refinancing establishes a bright line test
for reportable transactions, by defining
refinancings as extensions of credit that
satisfy and replace an existing loan.
Covering other agreements that are
‘‘functionally equivalent’’ to
refinancings would complicate the
application of this test by requiring
institutions and others to resolve
innumerable questions about whether
particular transactions are in fact
functionally equivalent to refinancings.
The Board believes that MECA data may
be useful in certain instances, but that,
under the existing loan-classification
scheme, the advantages of a bright-line
test for determining whether a
transaction should be reported—
especially in reducing compliance
burden—outweigh the benefits of
additional data on these transactions.
Moreover, the bright-line test benefits
the entire industry, whereas the benefits
of a rule adapted to MECAs would be
confined to a few states. Therefore, the
Board does not propose to revise the
definition of refinancing to include
MECAs.
Section 203.4—Compilation of Loan
Data
4(a) Data Format and Itemization
Consistent with the proposed
revisions regarding the definitions of
‘‘home improvement loan,’’
‘‘refinancing,’’ and ‘‘home-equity line of
credit,’’ the Board proposes to revise the
introductory material in section 203.4(a)
so that it refers to these loan types as
distinct categories.
4(a)(1) Application Date
The staff commentary would be
revised (proposed comment 4(a)(1)-5) to
clarify that the date an institution
receives an application is the date on
which it or its agent first takes
possession of a completed copy of the
application.
4(a)(2) Type and Purpose of the Loan
See the discussion of home-equity
lines of credit under section 2(f, above.
4(a)(5) Type of Action Taken and Date
Counteroffers. The staff commentary
would be revised to clarify that an
institution must report a denial on the
original terms requested by the
applicant when the institution makes a
counteroffer—such as an offer of a
different amount of credit from the
amount requested—and the applicant
does not accept the counteroffer or fails
to respond. (See comment 4(a)(5)–1.)
Underwriting conditions. The staff
commentary would be revised to clarify
that if an institution issues a loan

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00007

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

78661

approval subject to the applicant’s
meeting underwriting conditions and
the applicant does not meet them, the
institution must report the action taken
as a denial. Currently, the staff
commentary excludes from this rule the
situation in which an approval is
subject to ‘‘customary conditions.’’
Because of confusion about the scope of
this term, and the impracticality of
making it precise and comprehensive,
the exclusion is being deleted. (See
comment 4(a)(5)–4.)
Other matters. As part of the
reorganization of the regulation, the
Board proposes to move some material,
regarding the date action is taken, from
Appendix A into the staff commentary.
See proposed comment 4(a)(5)–7.
4(a)(7) Race or National Origin
See Appendix A, paragraph I.D.3.,
below, regarding changes to conform to
revised OMB guidance.
4(a)(9) Additional Items
The Board has received many
suggestions that it amend Regulation C
to require lenders to report additional
data. The Board believes that some of
the suggested additional data could be
useful in helping the public and
regulators to better understand mortgage
lending patterns, particularly in the
subprime market, and in enforcing the
fair lending laws. Therefore, the Board
proposes amending Regulation C to
require the reporting of certain
additional data, discussed below. This
action would be taken pursuant to the
Board’s authority under section 305 of
the statute to adopt new provisions to
carry out the act’s purposes.
Annual percentage rate. HMDA data
currently include no information on
loan pricing. The Board proposes to
require that creditors report the annual
percentage rate (APR) charged on a loan.
Information about the APR would
permit the identification of subprime
loans, which have different
characteristics, such as denial rates,
from other home mortgage loans. These
data may also help the public and
supervisory agencies identify practices
that potentially raise fair lending
concerns and warrant further
investigation.
Some commenters recommended that
the Board require lenders to identify
subprime loans. The Board believes,
however, that disclosure of the APR will
be effective in identifying subprime
loans, as these loans typically are priced
higher than other loans. Disclosure of
the APR would also impose less burden
on lenders, given the lack of a generally
accepted definition of a subprime loan.
Similarly, the Board has not adopted the

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

78662

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

recommendation that lenders be
required to report the interest rate and
fees on a loan. The Board believes that
the APR is a better measure of the
overall cost of credit than the interest
rate and fees on a loan, and would
impose less burden on lenders than
calculating the total fees on a loan.
To minimize the burden imposed, the
requirement to report the APR would
apply only to loans that are covered by
the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and for
which the lender is required to disclose
the APR to the consumer. (For example,
if the borrower withdraws an
application before the lender is required
to disclose the APR under Regulation Z,
the lender would not be required to
report the APR under Regulation C.) The
APR must be calculated and disclosed
by the lender to comply with TILA in
any case, although software changes
would be required to capture APR data
for HMDA reporting purposes.
Some loans covered by HMDA, such
as loans made to corporate borrowers or
for multifamily properties, would not be
covered by the reporting requirement
because they are not subject to TILA.9
HOEPA status. Obtaining information
on the volume and pattern of lending
covered under HOEPA would be useful
for better understanding the mortgage
market, particularly the subprime
market. The Board proposes to require
that HMDA reporters indicate whether a
loan is covered by the HOEPA
provisions as implemented in
Regulation Z. To limit the burden
imposed, reporting of this item would
be required only for the same loans that
would be subject to the APR-reporting
requirement (loans covered by
Regulation Z and for which the lender
is required to disclose an APR).
Manufactured home status. Currently,
loans to purchase mobile and other
manufactured homes are reported
together with loans to purchase sitebuilt or other types of housing. The
Advance Notice solicited comment on
whether the Board could improve the
usefulness of the HMDA data by
requiring reporters to identify
transactions involving mobile homes.
(The Advance Notice referred to
‘‘mobile homes,’’ which are a type of
manufactured home. This proposal
employs the broader term.)
Many commenters—including the
federal agencies charged with enforcing
the fair lending laws—believed that the
9 TILA disclosure requirements apply only to
loans to consumers for personal, family, or
household purposes; therefore, commercial loans
are excluded. In addition, several other types of
credit, such as public utility credit, securities
credit, and credit over $25,000 not secured by a lien
on a dwelling, are exempted from TILA.

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

Board should require creditors to
distinguish loans and applications that
involve manufactured homes from other
transactions. These commenters
contended that such a requirement
would further HMDA’s purpose of
providing the public with data useful in
identifying possible discriminatory
lending patterns and in enforcing
antidiscrimination statutes.
Manufactured home loans are typically
underwritten differently from other
home mortgage loans and have different
denial rates. So distinguishing
manufactured home transactions,
commenters believed, would help those
analyzing HMDA data to determine
whether a lender’s high denial rates are
due to its focus on manufactured home
lending rather than to some potentially
unlawful practice. Other commenters—
such as financial institution trade
associations—opposed distinguishing
transactions involving manufactured
homes.
Based on the comments and on its
own analysis, the Board proposes to
require that creditors identify
manufactured home loans and
applications. The proposal would
identify these loans by using a widely
understood definition that appears in
the Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) regulation that
establishes construction and safety
standards for manufactured homes.
Solicitation of comment on certain
data collections not proposed. The
Board solicits comment on whether it
should consider requiring the collection
of three items that are discussed below.
Their collection is not proposed at this
time
Denial Reasons. The statute permits,
but does not require, a financial
institution to report the reasons why a
loan application was denied. Regulation
C similarly gives institutions the option
to report this information, although
under section 305 the Board could make
such reporting mandatory.
Institutions supervised by the Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency and
the Office of Thrift Supervision must
report denial reasons under those
agencies’ rules. For institutions not
required to report reasons for denial, the
level of reporting has varied widely by
supervisory agency. For example, in
1999, denial reasons were reported for
approximately 77 percent of the loan/
application register entries for denied
loans submitted to the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation and for
approximately 64 percent of the entries
for denied loans submitted to the Board.
By contrast, about 34 percent of the
entries for denied loans reported to
HUD included denial reasons.

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00008

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

Most commenters who addressed this
issue—including several financial
institutions, one banking trade
association, regulatory agencies, and
civil rights and community groups—
supported requiring all institutions
covered by HMDA to report reasons for
denial. These commenters argued that
requiring such reporting would facilitate
the identification of potential
discrimination, and that all lending
institutions should be subject to the
same rules. They pointed out that
reporting denial reasons in all cases
would allow better comparison of data
from different lenders. They also
contended that reporting denial reasons
would not be burdensome, because
lenders currently must provide the
reasons to applicants under the Equal
Credit Opportunity Act and Regulation
B (or at least inform them of their right
to know the reasons).
Some commenters—primarily
financial institutions—opposed
mandatory reporting. These commenters
maintained that denial reasons are not
a reliable fair lending indicator because
they may oversimplify the reasons for a
credit decision. Thus, these commenters
contended, users of the HMDA data
could be led to believe that
discrimination exists when in fact it
does not. Some commenters also
opposed mandatory reporting on the
basis of cost and burden; others argued
that the requirement is unnecessary,
since examiners can obtain denial
reasons from loan files.
Based on the comments and on its
own initial analysis of the benefit and
burden of collecting and reporting
denial reasons, the Board does not
propose to require reporting of denial
reasons under Regulation C. The Board
requests comment, however, on the
value of requiring these data, relative to
the burden that would be imposed on
lenders.
Loan-to-Value Ratio/Appraised
Value. In the Advance Notice, the Board
requested comment on whether the
appraised value of the property that
secures a loan should be reported. Some
commenters, primarily community
groups, supported requiring lending
institutions to report appraised value, or
related information such as LTV, noting
that such information could assist in
identifying discriminatory practices in
the performance and use of appraisals.
Commenters stated that appraisals have
a significant role in credit decisions
affecting low-income communities, and
that discrimination involving appraisals
remains difficult to document.
The majority of commenters who
addressed the issue—and almost all the
financial institutions that addressed it—

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules
opposed a requirement to report either
appraised value or LTV ratio,
maintaining that the data would not be
comparable, and thus not useful, due to
the many different methods used for
determining property value.
Commenters also argued that reporting
appraised value is unnecessary because
examiners can get the information from
loan files; that appraised value would
not provide a reliable indicator of
possible credit discrimination because
many other factors enter into a credit
decision; and that collection and
reporting for appraised value would add
cost and burden to HMDA compliance.
Commenters noted that the information
could not be reported in many
instances; for example, a loan
application may be denied or
withdrawn before an appraisal is
conducted.
The Board solicits comment on the
relative merits of requiring that lenders
report LTV or appraised value, in light
of the potential burden imposed on
institutions.
Identity of Parent Company.
Regulation C previously required
HMDA reporters to indicate the name of
any parent company on the Transmittal
Sheet. The requirement was eliminated
a few years ago as part of a set of
amendments to the regulation; at the
time, the Board noted that the change
would reduce burden, and that data
users could ascertain the reporting
institution’s parent from National
Information Center (NIC) data. 63 Fed.
Reg. 52140 (September 30, 1998).
Many users of HMDA data clearly
find it useful to have information on
parent-subsidiary relationships
included in HMDA data, rather than
available only in a separate database.
Although the additional reporting
burden imposed by the suggested
requirement would likely be minimal,
there is another way to make data on
parent-subsidiary relationships
available without requiring any
additional reporting. Board staff, in the
course of processing reported HMDA
data to produce the public disclosures,
could add parent-subsidiary information
based on NIC data. Although this option
would increase the processing cost for
the agencies slightly, it would avoid
increasing reporting requirements for
lending institutions, and would likely
produce significantly more accurate and
complete information on parentsubsidiary relationships. The Board
requests comment on the comparative
benefit and burden of requiring
institutions, rather than the agencies, to
provide these data.

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

4(b) Collection of Data on Race or
National Origin, Sex, and Income
4(b)(2) Optional Collection
Regulation C currently provides, in
accordance with the statute, that
depository institutions with assets on
the preceding year-end of $30 million or
less may, but need not, collect the data
on applicants’ race or national origin,
sex, and income. Also in accordance
with the statute, Regulation C entirely
exempts from coverage a depository
institution with total assets on the
preceding year-end at or below the
threshold set annually by the Board
based on changes in the Consumer Price
Index for Urban Wage Earners and
Clerical Workers. In 1999, the Board set
this threshold at $30 million for data
collection in 2000.
Thus, institutions with assets of less
than $30 million are now exempt not
only from collecting certain types of
data, but from the entire regulation. The
more limited exemption is superfluous;
the Board proposes to delete it.
4(d) Excluded Data
4(d)(3) Temporary Financing
The Board is not proposing any
change to this provision.
Reporting. Regulation C generally
does not permit lenders to report
temporary financing. Rather than
defining temporary financing,
Regulation C provides illustrations,
such as bridge and construction loans.
While data about some of these loans
are captured when a loan is converted
to permanent financing, some persons
have expressed concern that
construction-only loans are not being
reported. Also, some institutions have
requested that Regulation C include a
general, precise definition of temporary
financing.
The Advance Notice solicited
comment on the usefulness of data on
construction lending and the burden of
collecting such data. A few commenters,
including community groups, believed
the data would be useful and
encouraged coverage. These
commenters noted that some
institutions offer only construction
loans and do not provide permanent
financing. These institutions are thus
unable to report significant portions of
their home lending activity.
The majority of commenters on this
issue, however, believed that reporting
construction lending generally would be
duplicative because much of the same
data would be captured when the
permanent loan is reported. Some
commenters also expressed concern
about the difficulty of reporting the
required property location information

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00009

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

78663

for properties that may lack street
addresses at the construction phase.
The Board is not proposing to cover
construction loans or other temporary
financing. In some cases, the data would
not be duplicative—such as where a
lender originates construction loans but
does not offer permanent financing. But
these instances appear to be relatively
few. Imposing additional burden
industry wide would not be justified.
Time period. The Advance Notice also
requested comment on whether the
regulation should define ‘‘temporary
loans’’ in terms of a time period. Some
commenters suggested various periods,
ranging from no more than one year to
three or more years. Others supported
leaving the term defined by example. In
the absence of any generally accepted
timeframe for ‘‘temporary financing,’’
the Board is not proposing a ‘‘brightline’’ definition. Instead, the regulation
will continue to offer examples—such
as construction financing.
4(d)(6) Purchased Loans
Branch acquisition. HMDA requires
institutions to report all loans that they
purchase, including loans purchased in
bulk. Under the authority conferred by
Section 305 of the statute, the Board has
excluded loans acquired through a
merger or acquisition from the reporting
requirements of Regulation C. See 60 FR
63996 (December 11, 1995).
The Advance Notice solicited
comment on whether HMDA data for
loans purchased as part of a branch
acquisition are useful or whether the
exclusion currently allowed for loans
obtained through a merger should be
extended to such loans. Most
commenters who addressed this issue—
primarily financial institutions—
believed the data would not be useful
and need not be reported. These
commenters argued that the purchase of
a loan as part of a branch acquisition,
like the purchase of loans as part of a
merger, is not primarily a credit
decision but rather is incidental to an
investment decision—in this case, to
acquire the branch. These commenters
also contended that such reporting is
burdensome. Some commenters,
including community groups and a few
financial institutions, urged the Board
not to expand the merger exception
because doing so would reduce the
publicly available data about creditors’
loan acquisitions.
Based on the comments and its own
analysis, the Board proposes to exclude
loans purchased as part of a branch
acquisition from HMDA’s reporting
requirements. A ‘‘branch acquisition’’
entails the purchase of all the assets and
liabilities of a branch of a depository

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

78664

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

institution; it need not involve the
purchase of the branch’s physical
facilities. Loans purchased as part of a
branch asset sale (not including sale of
the branch’s liabilities) would continue
to be reported.
Bulk purchases. The Board is not
proposing any change regarding bulk
purchases. A number of commenters on
the Advance Notice proposed excluding
loans acquired through bulk purchases
from the reporting requirements.
However, unlike mergers and branch
acquisitions, which are transactions
driven by a number of factors, bulk
purchases typically are based on a credit
analysis of the portfolio being sold.
Excluding bulk purchases, therefore,
would result in the loss of data useful
in determining whether institutions are
serving the housing needs of their
communities. Accordingly, the Board is
not proposing to exclude bulk
purchases.
Purchase of ‘‘seasoned loans.’’ The
Board is not proposing any changes
regarding the purchase of ‘‘seasoned
loans.’’ The Advance Notice solicited
comment on whether other revisions
regarding purchased loans could
improve data quality and reduce
burden. The Advance Notice referred
specifically to the possible exclusion of
seasoned loans—such as those
originated more than one or two years
before the year being reported on.
Several commenters, including financial
institutions and trade associations,
recommended excluding loans that had
been originated, for example, more than
six months, one year, or two years prior
to purchase. These commenters
contended that purchasing such loans
does not reflect credit decisions by the
acquirer, but rather decisions to
purchase assets. They noted that
reporting such loans was burdensome
since data may be incomplete and
difficult to locate.
Other commenters believed that
seasoned loans should be reported.
These commenters (including financial
institutions and community groups)
noted, for example, that certain
programs prohibit the sale of loans
before one or two years have passed—
in order to ensure the loans are
performing. Some commenters
expressed concern that institutions
would no longer receive positive
consideration for purchases of these
loans under the CRA, which could
reduce the loans’ marketability. Certain
commenters believed that the burden of
tracking seasoned loans in order to
exclude them could outweigh the
benefits of lessened reporting
requirements.

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

20:01 Dec 14, 2000

Based on the comments and on
further analysis, the Board believes that
data on loan purchases generally,
including seasoned loans, are useful in
evaluating an institution’s mortgage
lending activity. The Board therefore
does not propose to exclude seasoned
loans from the reporting requirements.
Section 203.5—Disclosure and
Reporting
5(b) Public Disclosure of Statement
The regulation requires that a
financial institution make its disclosure
statement available to the public, under
certain circumstances, within a
specified number of ‘‘business days.’’ A
paragraph would be added to the staff
commentary to clarify that for this
purpose a ‘‘business day’’ is any
calendar day other than a Saturday,
Sunday, or legal public holiday. (See
proposed comment 5(b)–1.)
5(f) Loan Aggregation and Central
Depositories
As part of the reorganization of the
regulation, material on loan aggregation
and central depositories that now
appears in section 203.1—‘‘Authority,
purpose, and scope’’—would be moved
to section 203.5, as paragraph (f).
Section 203.6—Enforcement
As part of the reorganization of the
regulation, material from the staff
commentary (see comments 4(a)–1 and
6(b)–1) would be moved to this section
of the regulation. This material clarifies
that certain actions do not violate the
act or regulation.
IV. Appendix A
The Board’s proposed reorganization
of the regulation entails non-substantive
revisions of Appendix A, such as
redesignating several provisions. The
Board also proposes certain substantive
changes that would conform Appendix
A to proposals discussed above.
I. Instructions for Completion of Loan/
Application Register
A. Application or Loan Information
4. Purpose
Code 5—Home-equity line of credit. The
Board is proposing to add a code identifying
home-equity lines of credit. See discussion
under section 2(f), above.
Code 6—Manufactured home. The Board is
proposing to add a code for loans and
applications involving manufactured homes.
See the discussion of ‘‘Manufactured home
status’’ under section 4(a)(9), above. A
reporting entity would use this code in
addition to any other code identifying the
purpose of the transaction. For example, an
application to purchase a single-family
manufactured home would be coded as ‘‘1,
6.’’

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00010

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

6. Loan Amount
The Board proposes to require institutions
to report the full amount of home-equity
credit lines. See discussion under section
2(f), above.
C. Property Location
Coordination with the CRA. Appendix A
provides guidance to institutions that report
data under the CRA regarding the reporting
of property-location information for loans
located outside the metropolitan areas where
those lenders have offices. In response to
inquiries from lenders, the Board proposes to
clarify this guidance, without changing it
substantively.
These lenders must report the metropolitan
area, state, and county where the property is
located. In general, they must also report the
census tract. However, if the property is
located in an untracted area, they may report
either ‘‘NA’’ or the block numbering area
instead of census tract information; and if the
property is located in a county with a
population of 30,000 or less, a lender may
report either ‘‘NA’’ or the census tract
number.
Requests for preapproval. The Board is
proposing explicitly to include certain
requests for preapproval in the definition of
an ‘‘application’’ for credit. See section 2(b),
above. Since these requests would not
include data on property location, the Board
proposes to clarify that lenders may report
‘‘NA’’ in the property location fields
associated with requests for preapproval.
D. Applicant Information—Race or National
Origin, Sex, and Income
3. Race or National Origin of Borrower or
Applicant
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has revised its ‘‘Standards for
Maintaining, Collecting, and Presenting
Federal Data on Race and Ethnicity.’’ The
revised standards prescribe five racial
designations: American Indian or Alaska
Native, Asian, Black or African American,
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander,
and White. For data on ethnicity, the
standards provide for data on whether
individuals are Hispanic or Latino, or do not
fall within this category. 62 Fed. Reg. 58782
(October 30, 1997). The standards require
that respondents be offered the option of
selecting one or more designations.
Federal agencies use these OMB standards
when racial and ethnic data are collected by
means of respondent self-identification or by
observers. The Bureau of the Census uses
these standards, for example, in its decennial
and other data collections.
The Board proposes to revise Regulation C
to conform to the revised OMB standards.
The Board is also proposing to continue
permitting institutions to report that race and
ethnicity data were not provided by an
applicant in a mail or telephone application,
or that such data are not applicable—for
example, in connection with a loan to a
corporation rather than to a natural person.
5. Income
The Board is not proposing any changes
regarding the reporting of applicant income.
Section 203.4(a)(7) of Regulation C
provides that an institution must report the

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm02

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules
‘‘gross annual income relied upon in
processing the application’’ on its loan/
application register. In some instances,
institutions make credit decisions based only
on the portion of an applicant’s income
necessary for the applicant to qualify for a
loan (such as the applicant’s earned income),
rather than on the applicant’s total annual
income from all sources.
CRA examiners evaluate a large retail
institution’s CRA performance in part based
on the number and amount of home
mortgages (as reported under HMDA) that the
institution makes to low-, moderate-, middle, and upper-income individuals. 12 CFR
228.22(b)(2)(iii) and (3)(i). The CRA
regulations define these income categories
based on the median family income for an
area, which is calculated using gross annual
income. If an institution reports only part of
an applicant’s income on its loan/application
register, the applicant may appear to be in an
income category that is lower than the
applicant’s actual income category, thus
misstating the lender’s CRA performance.
Changing Regulation C, however, would
impose significant burden on institutions,
many of which are not subject to CRA. It is
unclear whether the difference between
income relied upon and total annual income
is large enough to have a material impact on
an assessment of an institution’s CRA
performance. The Board believes that given
this lack of information, imposing additional
burden on institutions is not warranted.
G. Other Data
The Board proposes to add fields regarding
the APR and HOEPA status. See the
discussion under section 4(a)(9), above, of
additional items proposed for data collection.
Form of Transmittal Sheet. The form of
transmittal sheet that accompanies the loan/
application register currently calls for the
telephone and facsimile numbers of the
reporting institution, but not for the e-mail
address. The Board proposes to require the
institution to provide its e-mail address, if
one exists, on the transmittal sheet, for use
in contacting the financial institution.

V. Appendix B
Appendix B would be revised to
clarify that if an application is made
entirely by telephone, the reporting
institution is permitted, although not
required, to request data on race or
national origin and sex. (Lenders are
reminded, however, that these data
must be requested when an application
is taken over the Internet.) This
clarification makes explicit the Board’s
longstanding views on this issue. Other
changes would reflect the revised OMB
guidance discussed above.
VI. Reorganization of the Regulation
Currently, formal guidance for
compliance with HMDA is contained in
Regulation C, in the instructions for
completing the loan/application register
(Appendix A to the regulation), in the
instructions for the collection of certain
applicant data (Appendix B), and in the
staff commentary. Informal guidance is
provided in the FFIEC’s ‘‘A Guide to
HMDA Reporting: Getting It Right!’’
Compliance officers and other
commenters have expressed concern
about having to consult several sources
to locate a requirement or interpretation
dealing with a particular issue.
The Advance Notice solicited
comment on the benefit of incorporating
all of the interpretive materials into the
commentary, reducing the instructions
in Appendix A to code descriptions,
and reorganizing the material within the
regulation. These changes were
supported by most of the commenters
that addressed them—including both
data reporters and data users. They
believed that a reorganization would
make the regulation easier to
understand and decrease possible
misinterpretations by reporters and
others. For these commenters, the

benefits of simplification outweighed
the burden of learning a new system of
organization.
Several financial institutions opposed
any changes. They considered
Regulation C easy to understand and
expressed concern that the benefits of
reorganization did not justify the burden
of relearning the regulation. A few
commenters recommended streamlining
the reporting requirements, rather than
the interpretive material, to reduce
burden.
Based on the comments and its own
analysis, the Board has reorganized the
regulation and commentary, eliminated
redundant provisions, revised the
instructions to make reporting easier,
and made other changes—such as
rewording some provisions—so that the
regulation becomes easier to use.
The cross-references to Appendix A
in the staff commentary would be
deleted; they would be unnecessary in
view of the simplification and
reorganization of Appendix A. ‘‘A Guide
to HMDA Reporting: Getting It Right!’’
will continue to be published, in a
format reflecting the reorganized
regulation.
Provisions of the regulation,
appendices, and commentary are
redesignated as indicated in the tables
below. The first five tables identify
redesignated provisions in the first five
sections of the regulation and in the
corresponding paragraphs of the staff
commentary; the sixth and seventh
tables identify redesignated provisions
in Appendices A and B. While the
tables present a substantially complete
summary of the proposed
reorganization, they should not be used
as a substitute for a detailed comparison
of the proposal with the existing
regulation.

TABLE 1.—SECTION 203.1—AUTHORITY, PURPOSE, AND SCOPE
Current

Proposed

Commentary 203.1(c)–2, 3, 4 ..................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.1(c)–5 ..........................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.1(c)–6 ..........................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.1(c)–7 ..........................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.1(c)–8 ..........................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.1(c)–9 ..........................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.1(c)–10 ........................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.1(c)–11 ........................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.1(c)–12 ........................................................................................................................
Regulation 203.1(d) ..................................................................................................................................

Regulation 203.2(k)
Commentary 203.1(c)–2
Commentary 203.1(c)–3
Commentary 203.1(c)–4
Commentary 203.1(c)–5
Commentary 203.1(c)–6
Commentary 203.1(c)–7
Commentary 203.1(c)–8
Commentary 203.1(c)–9
Regulation 203.5(f)

TABLE 2.—SECTION 203.2—DEFINITIONS
Current

Proposed

Regulation 203.2(f) ...................................................................................................................................
Regulation 203.2(g) ..................................................................................................................................
Regulation 203.2(h) ..................................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.2(e)–1 ..........................................................................................................................

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

20:01 Dec 14, 2000

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00011

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

78665

Regulation 203.2(g)
Regulation 203.2(h)
Regulation 203.2(j)
Commentary 203.2(e)–5

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm02

PsN: 15DEP2

78666

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 2.—SECTION 203.2—DEFINITIONS—Continued
Current

Commentary
Commentary
Commentary
Commentary
Commentary
Commentary
Commentary
Commentary
Commentary
Commentary

Proposed

203.2(e)–2 ..........................................................................................................................
203.2(f)–1 ...........................................................................................................................
203.2(f)–2 ...........................................................................................................................
203.2(f)–3 ...........................................................................................................................
203.2(f)–4 ...........................................................................................................................
203.2(f)–5 ...........................................................................................................................
203.2(f)–6 ...........................................................................................................................
203.2(f)–7 ...........................................................................................................................
203.2(f)–8 ...........................................................................................................................
203.2(g)–6 ..........................................................................................................................

Commentary
Deleted
Commentary
Deleted
Deleted
Commentary
Commentary
Commentary
Commentary
Deleted

203.2(e)–6
203.4(a)(2)–1
203.2(g)–1
203.2(g)–2
203.4(g)(4)–2
203.2(g)–3

TABLE 3.—SECTION 203.3—EXEMPT INSTITUTIONS
Current

Proposed

Regulation 203.3(a)(1) .............................................................................................................................
Regulation 203.3(a)(2) .............................................................................................................................
Regulation 203.3(b) ..................................................................................................................................
Regulation 203.3(c)(1) .............................................................................................................................
Regulation 203.3(c)(2) .............................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.3(a)–1 ..........................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.3(a)–2 ..........................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.3(a)–3 ..........................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.3(a)–4 ..........................................................................................................................

Regulation 203.2(e)(1)
Regulation 203.2(e)(2)
Regulation 203.3(a)
Commentary 203.2(e)–1
Regulation 203.3(b)
Commentary 203.2(e)–1
Commentary 203.2(e)–2
Commentary 203.2(e)–3
Commentary 203.4(c)–1

TABLE 4.—SECTION 203.4—COMPILATION OF LOAN DATA
Current
Commentary
Commentary
Commentary
Commentary
Commentary
Commentary
Commentary

Proposed

203.4(a)–1 ..........................................................................................................................
203.4(a)(2)–1 ......................................................................................................................
203.4(a)(3)–1 ......................................................................................................................
203.4(a)(3)–2 ......................................................................................................................
203.4(a)(4)–3 ......................................................................................................................
203.4(a)(4)–4 ......................................................................................................................
203.4(d)–1 ..........................................................................................................................

Regulation 203.6(b)(3)
Commentary 203.2(g)–4
Deleted
Commentary 203.4(a)(3)–1
Deleted
Commentary 203.4(a)(4)–3
Deleted

TABLE 5.—SECTION 203.5—DISCLOSURE AND REPORTING
Current

Proposed

Regulation 203.5(a) ..................................................................................................................................
Regulation 203.5(b)(1) .............................................................................................................................
Regulation 203.5(b)(2) .............................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.5(a)–1 ..........................................................................................................................
Commentary 203.5(a)–2 ..........................................................................................................................

Regulation 203.5(a)(1)
Regulation 203.5(b)(2)
Regulation 203.5(b)(3)
Commentary 203.5(a)–4
Commentary 203.5(a)–5

TABLE 6. APPENDIX A
Current

Proposed

I.A .............................................................................................................................................................
I.B .............................................................................................................................................................
I.C .............................................................................................................................................................
I.D .............................................................................................................................................................
I.E .............................................................................................................................................................
I.F .............................................................................................................................................................
II.A ............................................................................................................................................................
II.B ............................................................................................................................................................
II.C ............................................................................................................................................................
II.D ............................................................................................................................................................
II.E ............................................................................................................................................................
III.A ...........................................................................................................................................................
III.B ...........................................................................................................................................................
III.C ...........................................................................................................................................................
III.D.1 ........................................................................................................................................................

Deleted
Deleted
Deleted
Deleted
Regulation 203.5(a)(2)
Regulation 203.3(a)(3)
Commentary 203.5(a)–1
Commentary 203.5(a)–2
Commentary 203.5(a)–3
Commentary 203.5(a)–3
Regulation 203.4(a)(8)
Deleted
Commentary 203.5(a)–6
Commentary 203.5(a)–7
Regulation 203.5(b)(1) and (2); Commentary 203.5(b)–1
Regulation 203.5(b)(3)

III.D.1.a .....................................................................................................................................................

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

20:01 Dec 14, 2000

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00012

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm02

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

78667

TABLE 6. APPENDIX A—Continued
Current

Proposed

III.D.1.b .....................................................................................................................................................
III.D.2 ........................................................................................................................................................
III.E.1 ........................................................................................................................................................
III.E.2 ........................................................................................................................................................
III.E.3 ........................................................................................................................................................
III.F.1 ........................................................................................................................................................
III.F.2 ........................................................................................................................................................
IV.A.1 ........................................................................................................................................................
IV.A.2 ........................................................................................................................................................
IV.A.3 ........................................................................................................................................................
IV.A.4 ........................................................................................................................................................
IV.A.5 ........................................................................................................................................................
IV.B ...........................................................................................................................................................
V.A.1 .........................................................................................................................................................

Regulation 203.5(b)(3)
Commentary 203.5(b)–2
Regulation 203.5(c)
Commentary 203.5(c)–1
Regulation 203.5(c)
Commentary 203.5(e)–1
Commentary 203.5(e)–2
Commentary 203.4(a)–1(i)
Commentary 203.4(a)–1(ii)
Commentary 203.4(a)–1(iii)
Commentary 203.4(a)–1(iv)
Commentary 203.4(a)–1(v)
Deleted
1st paragraph App.A.I.A.1; 2nd paragraph
Commentary 203.4(a)(1)–4
App. A.I.A.2
App. A.I.A.3
App. A.I.A.4
App. A.I.A.4; explanatory material regarding home purchase, HELOCs, deleted
App. A.I.A.5
App. A.I.A.5
App. A.I.A.6
App. A.I.B.1
App. A.I.B.1
App. A.I.B.2
App. A.I.C
App. A.I.C.1
App. A.I.C.2
App. A.I.C.3
App. A.I.C.4
App. A.I.C.5
Deleted
App. A.I.C.6
App. A.I.D
App. A.I.D.1
App. A.I.D.2; App.B. I.B.5
App. A.I.D.3
App. A.I.D.4
App. A.I.D.5
App. A.I.E.
Commentary 203.4(a)(8)–2
App. A.I.F
App. A.II.

V.A.2
V.A.3
V.A.4
V.A.5

.........................................................................................................................................................
.........................................................................................................................................................
.........................................................................................................................................................
.........................................................................................................................................................

V.A.6 .........................................................................................................................................................
V.A.7 .........................................................................................................................................................
V.A.8 .........................................................................................................................................................
V.B.1 .........................................................................................................................................................
V.B.2 .........................................................................................................................................................
V.B.3 .........................................................................................................................................................
V.C ...........................................................................................................................................................
V.C.1 ........................................................................................................................................................
V.C.2 ........................................................................................................................................................
V.C.3 ........................................................................................................................................................
V.C.4 ........................................................................................................................................................
V.C.5 ........................................................................................................................................................
V.C.6 ........................................................................................................................................................
V.C.7 ........................................................................................................................................................
V.D ...........................................................................................................................................................
V.D.1 ........................................................................................................................................................
V.D.2 ........................................................................................................................................................
V.D.3 ........................................................................................................................................................
V.D.4 ........................................................................................................................................................
V.D.5 ........................................................................................................................................................
V.E.1., 2.a, b, c, e ....................................................................................................................................
V.E.1., 2.d ................................................................................................................................................
V.F ............................................................................................................................................................
VI. .............................................................................................................................................................

TABLE 7. APPENDIX B
Current
I.B.2
I.B.3
I.B.4
I.B.5

Proposed

..........................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................
..........................................................................................................................................................

VII. Form of Comment Letters
Comment letters should refer to
Docket No. R–1001, and, when possible,
should use a standard typeface with a
type size of 10 or 12 characters per inch.
This will enable the Board to convert
the text to machine-readable form
through electronic scanning, and will
facilitate automated retrieval of
comments for review. Comments may,
of course, be transmitted electronically
to the address provided in this notice.
Also, comments may be submitted on

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

31⁄2 or 51⁄2 inch computer diskettes in
any IBM-compatible DOS-or Windowsbased format, if accompanied by an
original document in paper form.
VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with section 3506 of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. Ch. 35; 5 CFR 1320 Appendix
A.1), the Board has reviewed the
proposed revisions under the authority
delegated to the Board by OMB. The
Federal Reserve may not conduct or

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00013

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

App. B.I.B.3
App. B.I.B.4
App. B.I.B.5
Deleted

sponsor, and an organization is not
required to respond to, this information
collection unless it displays a currently
valid OMB number. The OMB control
number is 7100–0247.
The information collection
requirements that would be revised by
this rulemaking appear in 12 CFR part
203. The information collection is
mandatory under 12 U.S.C. 2801–2810.
It generates data used to help determine
whether financial institutions are
serving the housing needs of their

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

78668

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

communities, to help target investment
to promote private investment where it
is needed, and to provide data to assist
in identifying possible discriminatory
lending patterns and in enforcing
antidiscrimination statutes.
The respondents are all types of
financial institutions that meet the tests
for coverage under the regulation. Under
the Paperwork Reduction Act, however,
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 loan/
application registers and modified
registers for three years, and their
disclosure statements for five years.
The current estimated annual burden
for this information collection varies
from 10 to 10,000 hours, depending on
individual circumstances, with
estimated averages of 202 hours for state
member banks and 160 hours for
mortgage banking subsidiaries and other
respondents. The current estimated
annual burden for the 625 institutions
under Federal Reserve supervision is
approximately 122,000 hours.
The proposed revisions would
increase by 10 to 20 percent the overall
burden imposed on institutions with
respect to the data collection and
reporting requirements. The majority of
the proposed revisions would require
new information to be reported on the
loan/application registers (requests for
preapproval, home-equity lines of
credit, APR of a loan, HOEPA status of
a loan, and whether a loan is for
manufactured housing) as well as
redefined information (home
improvement loans and refinancings).
These proposed revisions would require
extra training for all lenders. The hourly
paperwork burden will increase due to
the new requirements. The modification
of the coverage test for nondepository
lenders would increase by a small
amount—probably well under 5
percent—the number of those lenders
required to report HMDA data. The
proposed exclusion for the reporting of
loans acquired in a branch acquisition
would slightly decrease the overall
burden. The Federal Reserve expects
individual institution burden to vary

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

according to the amount and types of
lending done by the institution.
In order to quantify the burden
estimates, the Federal Reserve solicits
comment on the incremental burden
associated with collecting and reporting
information on: requests for
preapproval, home-equity lines of
credit, the redefinition of home
improvement loans and refinancings (as
well as on the alternative of collecting
and reporting information on
nonpurchase home loans generally),
APR data, HOEPA status, and
manufactured housing status. The
Federal Reserve also solicits comment
on how many institutions have a
‘‘structured’’ preapproval program that
would be covered by the proposed
HMDA revisions and how long it would
take those institutions to collect and
report the preapproval data. The Federal
Reserve solicits comment on the number
of hours on average an institution
spends training its staff in a year when
no revisions are proposed and how
many hours the institution foresees
training staff to review these revisions.
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. The data,
as modified according to the regulation,
are made publicly available and are not
considered confidential. Information
that might identify an individual
borrower or applicant is given
confidential treatment under exemption
6 of the Freedom of Information Act (5
U.S.C. 552(b)(6)).
The Paperwork Reduction Act
requires that the Board solicit comment
on: (a) Whether the proposed revised
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
Federal Reserve’s functions, including
whether the information has practical
utility; (b) the accuracy of the Federal
Reserve’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed revised information
collection, including the cost of
compliance; (c) ways to enhance the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and (d)
ways to minimize the burden of
information collection on respondents,
including through the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology. Comments on
the collection of information should be
sent to OMB, Paperwork Reduction
Project (7100–0247), Washington, D.C.
20530, with copies of such comments
sent to Mary M. West, Federal Reserve
Clearance Officer, Mail Stop 97, Board

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00014

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, Washington, D.C. 20551.
IX. Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis
In accordance with section 3(a) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
603(a)), the Board’s Division of Research
and Statistics has prepared a
preliminary regulatory analysis of this
proposal. A copy of the analysis may be
obtained from Publications Services,
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, Washington, D.C.
20551, at (202) 452–3245. A summary of
the preliminary analysis follows.
The major changes proposed for the
regulation involve bringing more
institutions and transactions under
requirements for data collection and
reporting and requiring more data on
each covered transaction. Among the
proposed revisions, those increasing the
transactions covered and the data that
are required to be reported for each
transaction are the most significant in
terms of potential benefits and in
increasing regulatory burden. The
proposal would affect all institutions
currently within the scope of the
regulation, including covered small
institutions. The number of institutions
that would newly be brought under the
regulation is probably fairly limited; no
newly covered institution would be a
small mortgage lender in that, to be
covered, institutions would have
originated $50 million or more of homepurchase loans (including refinancings
of such loans) in the prior calendar year
and they may have significant other
lending activities as well.
The draft proposal does not arise from
a need to implement specific legislative
changes. Rather, it is a consequence of
Board policy to review its regulations
periodically and a desire to update the
regulation to reflect mortgage markets
better, enhance consumer protection,
and comply with new guidance from the
Office of Management and Budget
concerning collection of data on race
and ethnicity by federal agencies.
It is difficult to quantify the benefits
and costs associated with the proposed
changes to the regulation. The expanded
coverage will provide data to help
identify possible discriminatory lending
patterns and assist regulators in
conducting examinations under the
CRA and other laws. The data will also
help inform the public about
developments in the mortgage market by
revealing the distribution of annual
percentage rates on home loans and by
ensuring that information is available
about a significant and growing segment
of the home loan market, home-equity
lines of credit.

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules
Although the proposed changes may
offer a number of benefits they also will
impose significant costs on lenders by
requiring changes to their current
procedures and systems for collecting
and reporting required data. The
regulatory agencies will take steps to
mitigate these costs, but start-up costs
for financial institutions to revise
current computer and compliance
systems are likely to be significant. The
regulatory agencies themselves will also
incur costs to revise computer software
used to edit the HMDA data prior to its
release to the public and to prepare
required reports for both the regulated
institutions and the public.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 203
Banks, Banking, Federal Reserve
System, Mortgages, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Text of Proposed Revisions
Certain conventions have been used
to highlight the proposed revisions to
the text of Regulation C, Appendix B
(including the Sample Data-Collection
Form), and the Official Staff
Commentary. New language is shown
inside arrows, while language that
would be deleted is set off in brackets.
However, these conventions are not
used in Appendix A because of the
substantial number of changes; likewise,
the changes to the forms in Appendix A
are not highlighted, because these
forms—which are very detailed—are
easier to read without the conventions.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Board proposes to revise
12 CFR part 203 to read as follows:
PART 203—HOME MORTGAGE
DISCLOSURE (REGULATION C)
Sec.
203.1 Authority, purpose, and scope.
203.2 Definitions.
203.3 Exempt institutions.
203.4 Compilation of loan data.
203.5 Disclosure and reporting.
203.6 Enforcement.
Appendix A to Part 203—Form and
Instructions for Completion of HMDA
Loan/Application Register
Appendix B to Part 203—Form and
Instructions for Data Collection on Race
or National Origin and Sex
Supplement I to Part 203—Staff Commentary
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 2801–2810.
§ 203.1

Authority, purpose, and scope.

(a) Authority. This regulation is
issued by the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System (‘‘Board’’)
pursuant to the Home Mortgage
Disclosure Act (12 U.S.C. 2801 et seq.),
as amended. The information-collection
requirements have been approved by the
U.S. Office of Management and Budget

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

20:01 Dec 14, 2000

fl(‘‘OMB’’)fi under 44 U.S.C. 3501 et
seq. and have been assigned OMB
numbers 1557–0159, 3064–0046, 1550–
0021, [and] 7100–0247 fl, and 2502–
0529,fi for institutions reporting data to
the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, the Office of Thrift
Supervision, [and] the Federal Reserve
System, fland the Department of
Housing and Urban Development
(‘‘HUD’’),fi respectively [; numbers]fl.
A numberfi for the National Credit
Union Administration [and the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development are] flisfi pending.
(b) Purpose. (1) This regulation
implements the Home Mortgage
Disclosure Act, which is intended to
provide the public with loan data that
can be used:
(i) To help determine whether
financial institutions are serving the
housing needs of their communities;
(ii) To assist public officials in
distributing public-sector investments
so as to attract private investment to
areas where it is needed; and
(iii) To assist in identifying possible
discriminatory lending patterns and
enforcing antidiscrimination statutes.
(2) Neither the act nor this regulation
is intended to encourage unsound
lending practices or the allocation of
credit.
(c) Scope. This regulation applies to
certain financial institutions, including
banks, savings associations, credit
unions, and other mortgage lending
institutions, as defined in § 203.2(e).
flThe regulationfi [It] requires an
institution to report data to its
supervisory agency about home
purchase flloans,fi [and] home
improvement loans, flrefinancings, and
home equity lines of credit thatfi it
originates or purchases, or for which it
receives applications; and to disclose
certain data to the public.
[(d) Loan aggregation and central data
depositories. Using the loan data made
available by financial institutions, the
Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council will prepare
disclosure statements and will produce
various reports for individual
institutions for each metropolitan
statistical area (‘‘MSA’’), showing
lending patterns by location, age of
housing stock, income level, sex, and
racial characteristics. The disclosure
statements and reports will be available
to the public at central data depositories
located in each MSA. A listing of central
data depositories can be obtained from
the Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council, Washington, D.C.
20006.]

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00015

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

§ 203.2

78669

Definitions.

In this regulation:
(a) Act means the Home Mortgage
Disclosure Act (12 U.S.C. 2801 et seq.),
as amended.
(b) Application means an oral or
written request for a home purchase
flloan, afi [or] home improvement
loan fl, a refinancing, or a home-equity
line of creditfi that is made in
accordance with procedures
[established] flusedfi by a financial
institution for the type of credit
requested. flThe term includes a
request for a preapproval under
procedures in which a financial
institution issues to creditworthy
persons a written commitment for a
home purchase loan up to a specified
amount that is valid for a designated
period of time, even if issued subject to
the identification of a suitable property
or other conditions.fi
(c) Branch office means: (1) Any office
of a bank, savings association, or credit
union that is approved as a branch by
a federal or state supervisory agency,
but excludes free-standing electronic
terminals such as automated teller
machines; and
(2) Any office of a flfor-profitfi
mortgage-lending institution (other than
a bank, savings association, or credit
union) that takes applications from the
public for home purchase flloansfi or
home improvement loans. A flforprofitfi mortgage-lending institution is
also deemed to have a branch office in
a[n MSA] flmetropolitan areafi if, in
the preceding calendar year, it received
applications for, originated, or
purchased five or more home purchase
flloansfi or home improvement loans
flrelated tofi [on] property located in
that [MSA] flmetropolitan areafi.
(d) Dwelling means a residential
structure (whether or not [it is] attached
to real property) located in a state of the
United States of America, the District of
Columbia, or the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico. The term includes an
individual condominium unit,
cooperative unit, or [mobile or]
manufactured home.
[(e) Financial institution means:
(1) A bank, savings association, or
credit union that originated in the
preceding calendar year a home
purchase loan (other than temporary
financing such as a construction loan)
including a refinancing of a home
purchase loan, secured by a first lien on
a one-to four-family dwelling if—
(i) The institution is federally insured
or regulated; or
(ii) The loan is insured, guaranteed, or
supplemented by any federal agency; or
(iii) The institution intended to sell
the loan to the Federal National

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm02

PsN: 15DEP2

78670

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

Mortgage Association or the Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Corporation;
(2) A for-profit mortgage-lending
institution (other than a bank, savings
association, or credit union) whose
home purchase loan originations
(including refinancings of home
purchase loans) equaled or exceeded ten
percent of its loan-origination volume,
measured in dollars, in the preceding
calendar year.]
fl(e) Financial institution means:
(1) A bank, savings association, or
credit union that:
(i) On the preceding December 31 had
assets in excess of the asset threshold
established and published annually by
the Board for coverage by the act, based
on the year-to-year change in the
average of the Consumer Price Index for
Urban Wage Earners and Clerical
Workers, not seasonally adjusted, for
each twelve month period ending in
November, with rounding to the nearest
million;
(ii) On the preceding December 31,
had a home or branch office in a
metropolitan area;
(iii) In the preceding calendar year,
originated at least one home purchase
loan (excluding temporary financing
such as a construction loan) or
refinancing of a home purchase loan,
secured by a first lien on a one-to-fourfamily dwelling; and
(iv) Meets at least one of the following
three criteria:
(A) The institution is federally
insured or regulated;
(B) The mortgage loan referred to in
paragraph (e)(1)(iii) of this section was
insured, guaranteed, or supplemented
by a federal agency; or
(C) The mortgage loan referred to in
paragraph (e)(1)(iii) oF THIS SECTION
was intended by the institution for sale
to the Federal National Mortgage
Association or the Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation; and
(2) A for-profit mortgage-lending
institution (other than a bank, savings
association, or credit union) that:
(i) In the preceding calendar year
either:
(A) Originated home purchase loans,
including refinancings of home
purchase loans, that equaled at least ten
percent of its loan-origination volume,
measured in dollars; or
(B) Originated home purchase loans,
including refinancings of home
purchase loans, that equaled at least $50
million;
(ii) Had either a home office or a
branch office in a metropolitan area, on
the preceding December 31; and
(iii) Either:
(A) Had total assets of more than $10
million, counting the assets of any

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

20:01 Dec 14, 2000

parent corporation, on the preceding
December 31; or
(B) Originated at least 100 home
purchase loans, including refinancings
of home purchase loans, in the
preceding calendar year.
(f) Home-equity line of credit means
an open-end credit plan secured by a
dwelling as defined in Regulation Z
(Truth in Lending), 12 CFR part 226.fi
[(f)]fl(g)fi Home improvement loan
means any loan fl, other than a homeequity line of credit,fi that [: (1)] is for
the purpose, in whole or in part, of
repairing, rehabilitating, remodeling or
improving a dwelling or the real
property on which it is located fl.fi [;
and (2) is classified by the financial
institution as a home improvement
loan.]
[(g)]fl(h)fi Home purchase loan
means any loan secured by and made
for the purpose of purchasing a
dwelling.
fl(i) Manufactured home means any
residential structure as defined under
regulations of the Department of
Housing and Urban Development
establishing manufactured home
construction and safety standards (24
CFR 3280.2).fi
[(h)]fl(j)fi Metropolitan [statistical]
area [or MSA] means a metropolitan
area as defined by OMB.
fl(k) Refinancing means a new
obligation satisfying and replacing an
existing obligation by the same
borrower, where:
(1) For coverage purposes, the existing
obligation is a home purchase loan (as
determined by the lender, for example,
by reference to available documents, or
as stated by the applicant), and both the
existing obligation and the new
obligation are secured by first liens on
dwellings; and
(2) For reporting purposes, both the
existing obligation and the new
obligation are secured by a lien on a
dwelling.fi
§ 203.3

Exempt institutions.

[(a) Exemption based on location,
asset size, or number of home purchase
loans. (1) A bank, savings association, or
credit union is exempt from the
requirements of this regulation for a
given calendar year if on the preceding
December 31—
(i) The institution had neither a home
office nor a branch office in an MSA; or
(ii) The institution’s total assets were
at or below the asset threshold
established by the Board. The asset
threshold was adjusted from $10 million
to $28 million as of December 31, 1996.
For subsequent years, the Board will
adjust the threshold based on the yearto-year change in the average of the

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00016

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage
Earners and Clerical Workers, not
seasonally adjusted, for each 12-month
period ending in November, with
rounding to the nearest million. The
Board will publish any adjustment in
the asset figure in December in the staff
commentary.
(2) A for-profit mortgage lending
institution (other than a bank, savings
association, or credit union) is exempt
from the requirements of this regulation
for a given calendar year if—
(i) The institution had neither a home
office nor a branch office in an MSA on
the preceding December 31; or
(ii) The institution’s total assets
combined with those of any parent
corporation were $10 million or less on
the preceding December 31, and the
institution originated fewer than 100
home purchase loans (including
refinancings of home purchase loans) in
the preceding calendar year.]
[(b)] fl(a)fi Exemption based on
state law. (1) A state-chartered or statelicensed financial institution is exempt
from the requirements of this regulation
if the Board determines that the
institution is subject to a state
disclosure law that contains
requirements substantially similar to
those imposed by this regulation and
flthatfi contains adequate provisions
for enforcement.
(2) Any state-chartered or statelicensed financial institution, or
association of such institutions may
apply to the Board for an exemption
under this paragraph.
(3) An institution that is exempt
under this paragraph shall fluse the
disclosure form required by its state law
andfi submit the data required by
flthatfi [the state disclosure] law to its
state supervisory agency for purposes of
aggregation.
[(c)] fl(b)fi Loss of exemption. [(1)
An institution losing an exemption that
was based on the criteria set forth in
paragraph (a) of this section shall
comply with this regulation beginning
with the calendar year following the
year in which it lost its exemption.]
[(2)] An institution losing a[n] flstatelawfi exemption under paragraph [(b)]
fl(a)fi of this section shall comply
with this regulation beginning with the
calendar year following the year for
which it last reported loan data under
the state disclosure law.
§ 203.4

Compilation of loan data.

(a) Data format and itemization. A
financial institution shall collect data
regarding applications for, and
originations and purchases of, home
purchase flloans,fi [and] home
improvement loans fl,fi [(including]

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm02

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules
refinancings [of both)] fl, and homeequity lines of creditfi for each
calendar year. These transactions shall
be recorded, within thirty calendar days
after the end of each calendar quarter in
which final action is taken (such as
origination or purchase of a loan, or
denial or withdrawal of an application),
on a register in the format prescribed in
Appendix A of this part and shall
include the following items:
(1) Afln identifyingfi number for the
loan or loan application, and the date
the application was received.
(2) The type and purpose of the loan
flor applicationfi.
(3) The owner-occupancy status of the
property to which the loan flor
applicationfi relates.
(4) The amount of the loan or
application.
(5) The type of action taken, and the
date.
(6) The location of the property to
which the loan flor applicationfi
relates, by flmetropolitan areafi
[MSA], state, county, and census tract,
if the institution has a home or branch
office in that flmetropolitan areafi
[MSA].
(7) The race or national origin and sex
of the applicant or borrower, and the
gross annual income relied on in
processing the application.
(8) The type of entity purchasing a
loan that the institution originates or
purchases and then sells within the
same calendar year fl(this information
need not be included in quarterly
updates).
(9) For a loan or application that is
subject to Regulation Z (Truth in
Lending, 12 CFR part 226), the
following additional items:
(i) The annual percentage rate for the
loan, as calculated and disclosed under
§ 226.14(b) or § 226.22 of Regulation Z.
(ii) An indication whether the loan is
subject to the Home Ownership and
Equity Protection Act of 1994, as
implemented in § 226.32 of Regulation
Z.fi
(b) Collection of data on race or
national origin, sex, and income. (1) A
financial institution shall collect data
about the race or national origin and sex
of the applicant or borrower as
prescribed in appendix B flof this
partfi. [If the borrower or applicant
chooses not to provide the information,
the lender shall note the data on the
basis of visual observation or surname,
to the extent possible.]
(2) Race or national origin, sex, and
income data may but need not be
collected for[—
(i) Loans] flloansfi purchased by the
financial institutionfl.fi[; or
(ii) Applications received or loans
originated by a bank, savings

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

20:01 Dec 14, 2000

association, or credit union with assets
on the preceding December 31 of $30
million or less.]
(c) Optional data. A financial
institution may report the reasons it
denied a loan application.
(d) Excluded data. A financial
institution shall not report:
(1) Loans originated or purchased by
the financial institution acting in a
fiduciary capacity (such as trustee);
(2) Loans on unimproved land;
(3) Temporary financing (such as
bridge or construction loans);
(4) The purchase of an interest in a
pool of loans (such as mortgageparticipation certificatesfl, mortgagebacked securities, or real estate
mortgage investment conduitsfi); [or]
(5) The purchase solely of the right to
service loans[.] fl; or
(6) Loans purchased as part of a
merger or acquisition, or as part of the
acquisition of all of the assets and
liabilities of a branch office as defined
in § 203.2(c)(1).fi
(e) Data reporting under CRA for
banks and savings associations with
total assets of $250 million or more and
banks and savings association that are
subsidiaries of a holding company
whose total banking and thrift assets are
$1 billion or more. As required by
[agency] regulations that implement the
Community Reinvestment Act flof
1977 (12 U.S.C. 2901 et seq.)fi, banks
and savings associations that had total
assets of $250 million or more (or are
subsidiaries of a holding company with
total banking and thrift assets of $1
billion or more) as of December 31 for
each of the immediately preceding two
years [,] shall also collect the location of
property located outside the
flmetropolitan areasfi [MSAs] in
which the institution has a home or
branch office, or outside any
flmetropolitan areasfi [MSAs].
§ 203.5

Disclosure and reporting.

(a) Reporting to agency. fl(1)fi By
March 1 following the calendar year for
which the loan data are compiled, a
financial institution shall send its
complete loan/application register to the
agency office specified in appendix A of
this part fl.fi [and] flThe
institutionfi shall retain a copy for its
records for [a period of not less than]
flat leastfi three years.
fl(2) A subsidiary of a bank or
savings association shall complete a
separate loan/application register. The
subsidiary shall submit the register,
directly or through its parent, to the
agency that supervises its parent.fi
(b) Public disclosure of statement.
fl(1) The Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council (‘‘FFIEC’’) will
prepare a disclosure statement from the
data each institution submits.fi

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00017

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

78671

[(1)] fl(2)fi A financial institution
shall make its [mortgage loan]
disclosure statement ([to be] prepared
by the [Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council] flFFIECfi)
available to the public at its home office
no later than three business days after
receiving it from the [Examination
Council] flFFIECfi.
[(2)] fl(3)fi In addition, a financial
institution shall either—
(i) Make its disclosure statement
available to the public [(]within ten
business days of receiving it [)] in at
least one branch office in each
additional flmetropolitan areafi [MSA]
where the institution has offices (the
disclosure statement need only contain
data relating to the flmetropolitan
areafi [MSA] where the branch is
located); or
(ii) Post the address for sending
written requests for the disclosure
statement in the lobby of each branch
office in a[n] flmetropolitan areafi
[MSA] where the institution has offices,
and mail or deliver a copy of the
disclosure statement, within fifteen
calendar days of receiving a written
request (the disclosure statement need
only contain data relating to the
flmetropolitan areafi [MSA] for which
the request is made). Including the
address in the general notice required
under paragraph (e) of this section
satisfies this requirement.
(c) Public disclosure of loan/
application register. A financial
institution shall make its loan/
application register available to the
public after [modifying it in accordance
with Appendix A.] flremoving the
following information regarding each
entry: the application or loan number,
the date that the application was
received, and the date action was
taken.fi flAn institution shall make its
modified register available following the
calendar year for which the data are
compiled, by March 31 for a request
received on or before March 1, and
within 30 days for a request received
after March 1. The modified register
need only contain data relating to the
flmetropolitan areafi [MSA] for which
the request is made.
(d) Availability of data. A financial
institution shall make its modified
register available to the public for a
period of three years and its disclosure
statement available for a period of five
years. An institution shall make the data
available for inspection and copying
during the hours the office is normally
open to the public for business. It may

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm02

PsN: 15DEP2

78672

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

impose a reasonable fee for any cost
incurred in providing or reproducing
the data.
(e) Notice of availability. A financial
institution shall post a general notice
about the availability of its HMDA data
in the lobby of its home office and of
each branch office located in a[n]
flmetropolitan areafi [MSA]. It shall
flprovidefi promptly upon request
[provide] the location of the institution’s
offices where the statement is available
for inspection and copying, or it may
include the location in the fllobbyfi
notice.
fl(f) Loan aggregation and central
data depositories. Using the loan data
made available by financial institutions,
the FFIEC will produce reports for
individual institutions for each
metropolitan area, showing lending
patterns by location, age of housing
stock, income level, sex, and racial
characteristics. These reports, as well as
individual institution disclosure
statements, will be available to the
public at central data depositories
located in each metropolitan area. A
listing of central data depositories can
be obtained from the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council,
Washington, D.C. 20006.fi
§ 203.6

Enforcement.

(a) Administrative enforcement. A
violation of the act or this regulation is
subject to administrative sanctions as
provided in section 305 of the act,
including the imposition of civil money
penalties, where applicable. Compliance
is enforced by the agencies listed in
appendix A [of this regulation] flof this
partfi.
(b) Bona fide errors. fl(1)fi An error
in compiling or recording loan data is
not a violation of the act or this
regulation if it was unintentional and
occurred despite the maintenance of
procedures reasonably adapted to avoid
such errors.
fl(2) An incorrect entry for a census
tract number is a bona fide error, and is
not a violation of the act or this
regulation, provided that the institution
maintains reasonable procedures to
avoid such errors.
(3) If an institution makes a good-faith
effort to record all data concerning
covered transactions fully and
accurately within 30 days after the end
of each calendar quarter, and some data
are nevertheless inaccurate or
incomplete, the error or omission is not
a violation of the act or this regulation
provided that the institution corrects
and completes the information prior to
reporting the loan/application register to
its regulatory agency.fi

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

flAppendix A to Part 203—Form and
Instructions for Completion of HMDA
Loan/Application Register
Paperwork Reduction Act Notice
This report is required by law (12 U.S.C.
2801–2810 and 12 CFR part 203). An agency
may not conduct or sponsor, and an
organization is not required to respond to, a
collection of information unless it displays a
currently valid Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) Control Number. See 12 CFR
203.1(a) for the currently valid OMB Control
Numbers, applicable to this information
collection, for the agencies responsible for
the collection of information. Send
comments regarding this burden estimate or
any other aspect of this collection of
information, including suggestions for
reducing the burden, to the respective
agencies and to OMB, Office of Information
and Regulatory Affairs, Paperwork Reduction
Project, Washington, D.C. 20503. Be sure to
reference the applicable agency and its OMB
control number, as found in 12 CFR 203.1(a),
when submitting comments to OMB.
I. Instructions for Completion of Loan/
Application Register
A. Application or Loan Information
1. Application or Loan Number. a. Enter an
identifying number that can be used later to
retrieve the loan or application file. It can be
any number of your choosing (not exceeding
25 characters). You may use letters,
numerals, or a combination of both.
2. Date Application Received. a. For paper
submissions only, enter the date the loan
application was received by your institution
by month, day, and year, using numerals in
the form MM/DD/CCYY (for example, 01/15/
2000). For institutions submitting data in
electronic form, the proper format is
CCYYMMDD. If your institution normally
records the date shown on the application
form you may use that date instead. Enter
‘‘NA’’ for loans purchased by your
institution.
3. Type. Indicate the type of loan or
application by entering the applicable code
from the following:
1—Conventional (any loan other than FHA,
VA, FSA, or RHS loans)
2—FHA-insured (Federal Housing
Administration)
3—VA-guaranteed (Veterans
Administration)
4—FSA/RHS-guaranteed (Farm Service
Agency or Rural Housing Service)
4. Purpose. Indicate the purpose of the loan
or application by entering the applicable
code from the following:
Code 1—Home purchase (one- to fourfamily)
Code 2—Home improvement (one- to fourfamily)
a. Report both secured and unsecured
loans.
Code 3—Refinancings (one- to four-family)
a. Do not report a refinancing if, under the
loan agreement, you are unconditionally
obligated to refinance the obligation, or you
are obligated to refinance the obligation
subject to conditions within the borrower’s
control.

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00018

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4700

Code 4—Multifamily dwelling (home
purchase, home improvement, and
refinancings)
a. Code 4 applies to loans and applications
on dwellings for five or more families,
including home purchase loans, refinancings,
and loans for repairing, rehabilitating, and
remodeling purposes.
b. Do not use Code 4 for loans on
individual condominium or cooperative
units; use other Codes as applicable.
Code 5—Home-equity line of credit (oneto-four-family)
Code 6—Manufactured home
a. Use the applicable Code from Codes 1–
5 and also use Code 6 if applicable.
5. Owner Occupancy. Indicate whether the
property to which the loan or loan
application relates is to be owner-occupied as
a principal dwelling by entering the
applicable code from the following:
Code 1—Owner-occupied as a principal
residence
a. For purchased loans, use Code 1 unless
the loan documents or application indicate
that the property will not be owner-occupied
as a principal residence.
Code 2—Not owner-occupied as a
principal residence
a. Code 2 applies to second homes or
vacation homes, as well as rental properties.
Code 3—Not applicable
a. Use Code 3 if the property to which the
loan relates is a multifamily dwelling; is not
located in a metropolitan area; or is located
in a metropolitan area in which your
institution has neither a home nor a branch
office. Alternatively, at your option, you may
use Code 1 or 2 for these situations, as
applicable, to report the actual occupancy
status.
6. Loan Amount. Enter the amount of the
loan or application. Do not report loans
below $500. Show the amount in thousands,
rounding to the nearest thousand ($500
should be rounded up to the next $1,000).
For example, a loan for $167,300 should be
entered as 167 and one for $15,500 as 16.
a. For a home purchase loan that you
originated, enter the principal amount of the
loan.
b. For a home purchase loan that you
purchased, enter the unpaid principal
balance of the loan at the time of purchase.
c. For all home improvement loans, enter
the entire amount of the loan—including
unpaid finance charges if that is how such
loans are recorded on your books—even if
only a part of the proceeds is intended for
home improvement.
d. Report the entire amount of a homeequity line of credit, but only in the year the
line is established (or other action is taken,
such as denial of an application).
e. For refinancings, indicate the total
amount of the refinancing, including both the
amount outstanding on the original loan and
any amount of ‘‘new money.’’
f. For a loan application that was denied
or withdrawn, enter the amount applied for.
B. Action Taken
1. Type of action. Indicate the type of
action taken on the application or loan by
using one of the following codes.
Code 1—Loan originated.

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules
a. Use Code 1 for a loan that is originated,
including one resulting from a counteroffer
(your offer to the applicant to make the loan
on different terms or in a different amount
from the terms or amount initially applied
for) that the applicant accepts.
Code 2—Approved but not accepted.
a. Use Code 2 when the application is
approved but the applicant (or a loan broker
or correspondent) fails to respond to your
notification of approval or your commitment
letter within the specified time.
Code 3—Application denied.
a. Report as a denial the situation when an
applicant turns down or fails to respond to
your counteroffer.
Code 4—Application withdrawn.
a. Use Code 4 when the application is
expressly withdrawn by the applicant before
a credit decision was made.
Code 5—File closed for incompleteness.
a. Use Code 5 if you sent a written notice
of incompleteness under § 202.9(c)(2) of
Regulation B (Equal Credit Opportunity) and
the applicant failed to respond to your
request for additional information within the
period of time specified in your notice.
Code 6—Loan purchased by your
institution.
2. Date of action. For paper submissions
only, enter the date by month, day, and year,
using numerals in the form MM/DD/CCYY
(for example, 02/22/2000). For institutions
submitting data in electronic form, the proper
format is CCYYMMDD.
a. For loans originated, enter the settlement
or closing date.
b. For loans purchased, enter the date of
purchase by your institution.
c. For applications denied, applications
approved but not accepted by the applicant,
and files closed for incompleteness, enter the
date that the action was taken by your
institution or the date the notice was sent to
the applicant.
d. For applications withdrawn, enter the
date you received the applicant’s express
withdrawal; or enter the date shown on the
notification from the applicant, in the case of
a written withdrawal.
C. Property Location
Except as otherwise provided, in these
columns enter the applicant codes for the
metropolitan area, state, county, and census
tract for the property to which a loan relates.
1. Metropolitan area For each loan or loan
application, indicate the location of the
property by the metropolitan area number.
Metropolitan area boundaries are defined by
OMB; use the boundaries that were in effect
on January 1 of the calendar year for which
you are reporting. A listing of metropolitan
areas is available from your supervisory
agency or the FFIEC.
2. State and County. Use the Federal
Information Processing Standard (FIPS) twodigit numerical code for the state and the
three-digit numerical code for the county.
These codes are available from your
supervisory agency or the FFIEC.
3. Census Tract. Indicate the census tract
where the property is located.
Notwithstanding paragraph 6:
a. Enter the code ‘‘NA’’ if the property is
located in an area not divided into census

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

tracts on the U.S. Census Bureau’s censustract outline maps (see paragraph 4 below).
Alternatively, if the property is located in a
block numbering area (BNA), you may enter
the BNA number.
b. If the property is located in a county
with a population of 30,000 or less in the
1990 census (as determined by the Census
Bureau’s 1990 CPH–2 population series),
enter ‘‘NA’’ (even if the population has
increased above 30,000 since 1990), or enter
the census tract number (or the BNA number,
if applicable).
4. Census Tract Number. For the census
tract number, consult the U.S. Census
Bureau’s Census Tract/Street Index for 1990,
and for addresses not listed in the index,
consult the Census Bureau’s census tract
outline maps. Use the maps from the Census
Bureau’s 1990 CPH–3 series, or equivalent
1990 census data from the Census Bureau
(such as the Census TIGER/Line file) or from
a private publisher.
5. Outside-Metropolitan Area. For loans on
property located outside the metropolitan
areas in which the institution has a home or
branch office, or outside any metropolitan
area, an institution may choose one of the
following two options. Under the first option,
the institution may enter the metropolitan
area, state, and county codes and the census
tract number. It may enter ‘‘NA’’ in the
metropolitan area or census tract column if
no code or number exists for the property. In
the census tract column, if there is a BNA
number for the property rather than a census
tract number, the institution may enter the
BNA number at its option. (Codes exist for
all states and counties). Under this first
option, the codes and tract number must
accurately identify the property location in
question. Under the second option, which is
not available if paragraph 6 applies, an
institution enters ‘‘NA’’ in all four columns,
whether or not the codes or numbers exist for
the property.
6. Data Reporting Under CRA for Banks
and Savings Associations with Total Assets
of $250 Million or More and Banks and
Savings Associations that are Subsidiaries of
a Holding Company Whose Total Banking
and Thrift Assets are $1 Billion or More. If
you are a bank or savings association with
total assets of $250 million or more as of
December 31 for each of the immediately
preceding two years, you must enter the
location of property even if the property is
outside metropolitan areas in which you
have a home or branch office, or outside any
metropolitan area. Enter this information also
if you are a bank or savings association that
is a subsidiary of a holding company with
total banking and thrift assets of $1 billion or
more as of December 31 for each of the
immediately preceding two years.
7. Requests for Preapproval.
Notwithstanding paragraphs 1–6, if the
application is a request for preapproval, you
may enter the code ‘‘NA’’ in all four columns.
D. Applicant Information—Race or National
Origin, Sex, and Income
Appendix B of this part contains
instructions for the collection of data on race
or national origin and sex, and also contains
a sample form for data collection.

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00019

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4700

78673

1. Applicability. Report this information for
loans that you originate as well as for
applications that do not result in an
origination.
a. You need not collect or report this
information for loans purchased. If you
choose not to, use the Codes for ‘‘not
applicable.’’
b. If the borrower or applicant is not a
natural person (a corporation or partnership,
for example), use the Codes for ‘‘not
applicable.’’
2. Mail or Telephone Applications. Any
loan applications mailed to applicants must
contain a collection form similar to that
shown in appendix B of this part, and you
must record on your register the data on race
or national origin and sex if the applicant
provides it. If the applicant chooses not to
provide the data, enter the Code for
‘‘information not provided by applicant in
mail or telephone application’’ specified in
the next paragraph. (See Appendix B for
complete information on the collection of
these data in mail or telephone applications.)
3. Race or National Origin of Borrower or
Applicant. Use the following Codes to
indicate the race or national origin of the
applicant or borrower under column ‘‘A’’ and
of any co-applicant or co-borrower under
column ‘‘CA.’’
If an applicant selects more than one
designation, use all Codes corresponding to
the applicant’s selections. If there is more
than one co-applicant, provide the required
information only for the first co-applicant
listed on the application form. If there are no
co-applicants or co-borrowers, use Code 8 for
‘‘not applicable’’ in the co-applicant column.
1—American Indian or Alaska Native
2—Asian
3—Black or African American
4—Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
5—White
6—Hispanic or Latino
7—Information not provided by applicant in
mail or telephone application
8—Not Applicable
4. Sex of Borrower or Applicant. Use the
following Codes to indicate the sex of the
applicant or borrower under column ‘‘A’’ and
of any co-applicant or co-borrower under
column ‘‘CA.’’ If there is more than one coapplicant, provide this information only for
the first co-applicant listed on the
application form. If there are no coapplicants or co-borrowers, use Code 4 for
‘‘not applicable.’’
1—Male
2—Female
3—Information not provided by applicant in
mail or telephone application
4—Not applicable
5. Income. Enter the gross annual income
that your institution relied on in making the
credit decision.
a. Round all dollar amounts to the nearest
thousand (round $500 up to the next $1,000),
and show in terms of thousands. For
example, $35,500 should be reported as 36.
b. For loans on multifamily dwellings,
enter ‘‘NA.’’
c. If no income information is asked for or
relied on in the credit decision, enter ‘‘NA.’’

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

78674

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

E. Type of Purchaser
Enter the applicable code to indicate
whether a loan that your institution
originated or purchased was then sold to a
secondary market entity within the same
calendar year:
Code 0—Loan was not originated or was
not sold in calendar year covered by register.
a. Use Code 0 for applications that were
denied, withdrawn, or approved but not
accepted by the applicant; and for files
closed for incompleteness.
b. Use Code 0 if you originated or
purchased a loan and did not sell it during
that same calendar year. If you sell the loan
in a succeeding year, you need not report the
sale.
Code 1—FNMA (Federal National
Mortgage Association)
Code 2—GNMA (Government National
Mortgage Association)
a. Use Code 2 if you conditionally assign
a loan to GNMA in connection with a
mortgage-backed security transaction.
Code 3—FHLMC (Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation)
Code 4—FAMC (Federal Agricultural
Mortgage Corporation)
Code 5—Commercial bank
Code 6—Savings bank or savings
association
Code 7—Life insurance company
Code 8—Affiliate institution
a. Use Code 8 for loans sold to an
institution affiliated with you, such as your
subsidiary or a subsidiary of your parent
corporation.
Code 9—Other type of purchaser
F. Reasons for Denial
1. You are not required to enter the reasons
for denial of an application. But if you
choose to do so you may indicate up to three
reasons using the following codes. Leave this
column blank if the ‘‘action taken’’ on the
application is not a denial. For example, do
not complete this column if the application
was withdrawn or the file was closed for
incompleteness.
1—Debt-to-income ratio
2—Employment history
3—Credit history
4—Collateral
5—Insufficient cash (downpayment, closing
costs)
6—Unverifiable information
7—Credit application incomplete
8—Mortgage insurance denied
9—Other
2. If your institution uses the model form
for adverse action contained in Appendix to
Regulation B (Form C–1 in Appendix C,
Sample Notification Form), use the foregoing
codes as follows:
a. Code 1 for: Income insufficient for
amount of credit requested, and Excessive
obligations in relation to income.
b. Code 2 for: Temporary or irregular
employment, and Length of employment.

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

c. Code 3 for: Insufficient number of credit
references provided; Unacceptable type of
credit references provided; No credit file;
Limited credit experience; Poor credit
performance with us; Delinquent past or
present credit obligations with others;
Garnishment, attachment, foreclosure,
repossession, collection action, or judgment;
and Bankruptcy.
d. Code 4 for: Value or type of collateral
not sufficient.
e. Code 6 for: Unable to verify credit
references; Unable to verify employment;
Unable to verify income; and Unable to verify
residence.
f. Code 7 for: Credit application
incomplete.
g. Code 9 for: Length of residence;
Temporary residence; and Other reasons
specified on notice.
G. Other Data
For an application or loan covered by the
Truth in Lending Act (TILA), enter the
following information:
1. Annual Percentage Rate. Enter the
annual percentage rate (APR) as calculated
and disclosed under Regulation Z (12 CFR
part 226).
a. If the application or loan is not subject
to TILA, or is subject to TILA but an APR was
not required to be disclosed to the applicant
(for example, because the application was
withdrawn before the time disclosure was
required), enter ‘‘NA.’’
b. If only an estimated APR was required
to be disclosed to the applicant, enter the
estimated APR.
c. Enter the APR to two decimal places. If
the APR was disclosed to the applicant
showing less than two decimal places, fill the
remaining decimal places with zeros; if
showing more than two decimal places, the
APR may be rounded or the digits beyond
two decimal places may be truncated.
d. In a home-equity line of credit with an
introductory rate, where both the
introductory and regular APR were required
to be disclosed to the applicant, enter the
regular APR.
2. HOEPA status. a. If the loan or
application is covered by TILA, but is not
covered by the Home Ownership and Equity
Protection Act of 1994 (HOEPA), as
implemented in Regulation Z, § 226.32, enter
Code 0.
b. If the loan or application is covered by
TILA and by § 226.32, enter Code 1.
c. If the loan or application is not covered
by TILA, is covered by TILA but no APR was
required to be disclosed to the applicant, or
for any other reason it cannot be determined
whether the loan or application is covered by
§ 226.32, enter Code 2.
II. Federal Supervisory Agencies
Send your loan/application register, direct
any questions, and direct any requests (such
as for a listing of metropolitan areas or FIPS

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00020

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4700

codes) to the office of your federal
supervisory agency as specified below. Terms
used below that are not defined in the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.
1813(s)) have the meanings given to them in
the International Banking Act of 1978 (12
U.S.C. 3101).
A. National Banks and Their Subsidiaries
and Federal Branches and Federal Agencies
of Foreign Banks
District office of the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency for the district
in which the institution is located.
B. State Member Banks of the Federal
Reserve System, Their Subsidiaries,
Subsidiaries of Bank Holding Companies,
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
Federal Reserve Bank serving the District
in which the state member bank is located;
for institutions other than state member
banks, the Federal Reserve Bank specified by
the Board of Governors.
C. Nonmember Insured Banks (Except for
Federal Savings Banks) and Their
Subsidiaries and Insured State Branches of
Foreign Banks
Regional director of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation for the region in
which the institution is located.
D. Savings Institutions Insured Under the
Savings Association Insurance Fund of the
FDIC, Federally Chartered Savings Banks
Insured Under the Bank Insurance Fund of
the FDIC (but not Including State-Chartered
Savings Banks Insured Under the Bank
Insurance Fund), their Subsidiaries, and
Subsidiaries of Savings Institution Holding
Companies
Regional or other office specified by the
Office of Thrift Supervision.
E. Credit Unions and Their Subsidiaries
National Credit Union Administration,
Office of Examination and Insurance, 1775
Duke Street, Alexandria, V.A. 22314.
F. Other Depository Institutions
Regional director of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation for the region in
which the institution is located.
G. Other Mortgage-Lending Institutions
Assistant Secretary for Housing, HMDA
Reporting—Room 9233, U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th
Street, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20410.fi
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00021

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4725

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

78675

78676

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00022

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4725

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00023

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4700

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

78677

78678

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

BILLING CODE 6210–01–C

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
[A. Format.]
You may list questions regarding the race
or national origin and sex of the applicant on
your loan application form, or on a separate
form that refers to the application. (See the
sample form below for recommended
language.)
[B.] flII.fi Procedures.
[1] flA.fi You must ask the applicant for
this information, but cannot require the
applicant to provide it.

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

20:01 Dec 14, 2000

flB. You must offer the applicant the
option of selecting one or more
designations.fi
[2.] flC.fi If the applicant chooses not to
provide the information for an application
taken in person, note this fact on the form
and note the data, to the extent possible, on
the basis of visual observation or surname.
[3.] flD.fi Inform the applicant that the
federal government is requesting his
information in order to monitor compliance
with federal statutes that prohibit lenders
from discriminating against applicants on
these bases. Inform the applicant that if the
information is not provided where the
application is taken in person, you are
required to note the data on the basis of
visual observation or surname.

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00024

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4700

[4.] flE.fi If an application is made
entirely by telephone, [this information need
not be requested] flyou are permitted to
request this information but not required to
do sofi. And the data need not be provided
when an application is taken by mail, if the
applicant fails to answer these questions on
the application form. Whether an application
was received by mail or telephone must be
indicated, if it is not otherwise evident on the
face of the application.
[5. The ‘‘other block is available only to the
applicant who chooses to indicate some other
appropriate category for race or national
origin. If completing the form based on visual
observation, do not use this category; use one
of the other five categories.]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm02

PsN: 15DEP2

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00025

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4700

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

78679

78680

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

BILLING CODE 6210–01–C

Supplement I to Part 203—Staff
Commentary
Introduction
1. Status [and citations]. The commentary
in this supplement is the vehicle by which
the Division of Consumer and Community
Affairs of the Federal Reserve Board issues
formal staff interpretations of Regulation C
(12 CFR part 203). [The parenthetical
citations given are references to Appendix A
to Regulation C, Form and Instructions for
Completion of the HMDA Loan/Application
Register.]
Section 203.1—Authority, Purpose, and
Scope
1(c) Scope.
1. General. The comments in this section
address issues affecting coverage of
institutions flandfi exemptions from
coverage [, and data-collection requirements].
2. Meaning of refinancing. A refinancing of
a loan is the satisfaction and replacement of
an existing obligation by a new obligation by
the same borrower. The term ‘‘refinancing’’
refers to the new obligation. If the existing
obligation is not satisfied and replaced, but
is only renewed, modified, extended, or
consolidated (as in certain modification,
extension, and consolidation agreements),
the transaction is not a refinancing for
purposes of HMDA.
3. Refinancing—coverage. The regulation
bases coverage, in part, on whether an
institution originates home purchase loans.
For determining whether an institution is
subject to Regulation C or is exempt from
coverage, an origination of a home purchase
loan includes the refinancing of a home
purchase loan. An institution may always
determine the actual purpose of the existing
obligation (for example, by reference to
available documents). Alternatively, an
institution may—
i. Rely on the statement of the applicant
that the existing obligation was (or was not)
a home purchase loan; or
ii. Assume that the new obligation is not
a refinancing of a home purchase loan if
either the existing obligation or the new
obligation is not secured by a first lien on the
dwelling.
4. Refinancing—data collection. The
regulation requires collection and reporting
of data on refinancings of home purchase and
home improvement loans. An institution may
always determine the actual purpose of the
existing obligation (for example, by reference
to available documents). Alternatively, an
institution may—
i. Rely on the statement of the applicant
that the existing obligation was (or was not)
a home purchase or home improvement loan;
or
ii. Assume that the new obligation is a
refinancing of a home purchase or home
improvement loan only if the existing
obligation was secured by a lien on a
dwelling; or
iii. Assume that the new obligation is a
refinancing of a home purchase or homeimprovement loan only if the new obligation
will be secured by a lien on a dwelling.]
[5.] fl2.fi The broker rule and the
meaning of ‘‘broker’’ and ‘‘investor.’’ For the

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

purposes of the guidance given in this
commentary, an institution that takes and
processes a loan application and arranges for
another institution to acquire the loan at or
after closing is acting as a ‘‘broker,’’ and an
institution that acquires a loan from a broker
at or after closing is acting as an ‘‘investor.’’
(The terms used in this commentary may
have different meanings in certain parts of
the mortgage lending industry, and other
terms may be used in place of these terms,
for example in the Federal Housing
Administration mortgage insurance
programs.) Depending on the facts, a broker
may or may not make a credit decision on an
application (and thus it may or may not have
reporting responsibilities). If the broker
makes a credit decision, it reports that
decision; if it does not make a credit
decision, it does not report. If an investor
reviews an application and makes a credit
decision prior to closing, the investor reports
that decision. If the investor does not review
the application prior to closing, it reports
only the loans that it purchases; it does not
report the loans it does not purchase. Thus,
an institution that makes a credit decision on
an application prior to closing reports that
decision regardless of whose name the loan
closes in.
[6.] fl3.fi Illustrations of the broker rule.
Assume that, prior to closing, four investors
receive the same application from a broker;
two deny it, one approves it, and one
approves it and acquires the loan. In these
circumstances, the first two report denials,
the third reports the transaction as approved
but not accepted, and the fourth reports an
origination (whether the loan closes in the
name of the broker or the investor).
Alternatively, assume that the broker denies
a loan before sending it to an investor; in this
situation, the broker reports a denial.
[7.] fl4.fi Broker’s use of investor’s
underwriting criteria. If a broker makes a
credit decision based on underwriting
criteria set by an investor, but without the
investor’s review prior to closing, the broker
has made the credit decision. The broker
reports as an origination a loan that it
approves and closes, and reports as a denial
an application that it turns down (either
because the application does not meet the
investor’s underwriting guidelines or for
some other reason). The investor reports as
purchases only those loans it purchases.
[8.] fl5.fi Insurance and other criteria. If
an institution evaluates an application based
on the criteria or actions of a third party
other than an investor (such as a government
or private insurer or guarantor), the
institution must report the action taken on
the application (loan originated, approved
but not accepted, or denied, for example).
[9.] fl6.fi Credit decision of agent is
decision of principal. If an institution
approves loans through the actions of an
agent, the institution must report the action
taken on the application (loan originated,
approved but not accepted, or denied, for
example). State law determines whether one
party is the agent of another.
[10.] fl7.fi Affiliate bank underwriting
(250.250 review). If an institution makes an
independent evaluation of the
creditworthiness of an applicant (for

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00026

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4700

example, as part of a preclosing review by an
affiliate bank under 12 CFR 250.250, which
interprets section 23A of the Federal Reserve
Act), the institution is making a credit
decision. If the institution then acquires the
loan, it reports the loan as an origination
whether the loan closes in the name of the
institution or its affiliate. An institution that
does not acquire the loan but takes another
action reports that action.
[11.] fl8.fi Participation loan. An
institution that originates a loan and then
sells partial interests to other institutions
reports the loan as an origination. An
institution that acquires only a partial
interest in such a loan does not report the
transaction even if it has participated in the
underwriting and origination of the loan.
[12.] fl9.fi Assumptions. An assumption
occurs when an institution enters into a
written agreement accepting a new borrower
as the obligor on an existing obligation. An
institution reports as a home purchase loan
an assumption (or an application for an
assumption) in the amount of the outstanding
principal. If a transaction does not involve a
written agreement between a new borrower
and the institution, it is not an assumption
for HMDA purposes and is not reported.
Section 203.2—Definitions
2(b) Application.
1. Consistency with Regulation B. Board
interpretations that appear in the official staff
commentary to Regulation B (Equal Credit
Opportunity, 12 CFR part 202, Supplement I)
are generally applicable to the definition of
an application under Regulation C. However,
under Regulation C the definition of an
application does not include prequalification
requests.
2. Prequalification. A prequalification
request is a request by a prospective loan
applicant fl(other than a request for
preapproval)fi for a preliminary
determination on whether the prospective
applicant would likely qualify for credit
under an institution’s standards, or on the
amount of credit for which the prospective
applicant would likely qualify. Some
institutions evaluate prequalification
requests through a procedure that is separate
from the institution’s normal loan
application process; others use the same
process. In either case, Regulation C does not
require an institution to report
prequalification requests on the HMDA–LAR,
even though these requests may constitute
applications under Regulation B.
2(c) Branch office.
1. Credit union. For purposes of Regulation
C, a ‘‘branch’’ of a credit union is any office
where member accounts are established or
loans are made, whether or not the office has
been approved as a branch by a federal or
state agency. (See 12 U.S.C. 1752.)
2. Depository institution. A branch of a
depository institution does not include a loan
production office, the office of an affiliate, or
the office of a third party such as a loan
broker. (But see appendix A of this part,
Paragraph flI.C.6fi [V.C.7], which requires
certain depository institutions to report
property location even for properties located
outside those flmetropolitan areasfi [MSAs]
in which the institution has a home or
branch office.)

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules
3. Nondepository institution. A branch of a
nondepository institution does not include
the office of an affiliate or other third party
such as a loan broker. (But [see appendix A
of this part, Paragraph V.C.6, which requires]
certain nondepository institutions flmustfi
[to] report property location even in
flmetropolitan areasfi [MSAs] where they
do not have a physical location.)
2(d) Dwelling.
1. flCoveragefi [Scope]. The definition of
‘‘dwelling’’ is not limited to the principal or
other residence of the applicant or borrower,
and thus includes vacation or second homes
and rental properties. A dwelling also
includes [a mobile or manufactured home,] a
multifamily structure (such as an apartment
building) [, and a condominium or a
cooperative unit. Recreational vehicles such
as boats or campers are not dwellings for
purposes of HMDA].
fl2. Exclusions. Recreational vehicles such
as boats or campers are not dwellings for
purposes of HMDA. Also excluded are
transitory residences—whose occupants
previously occupied principal residences
elsewhere and expect to do so again.
Examples include hotels, hospitals, and
college dormitories.fi
2(e) Financial institution.
fl1. General. An institution that met the
test for coverage under HMDA in year 1, and
then ceases to meet the test (for example,
because its assets fall below the threshold on
December 31 of year 2) stops collecting
HMDA data beginning with year 3. Similarly,
an institution that did not meet the coverage
test for a given year, and then meets the test
in the succeeding year, begins collecting
HMDA data for the calendar year following
the year in which it meets the test for
coverage. For example, a for-profit mortgage
lending institution (other than a bank,
savings association, or credit union) that, in
year 1, falls below the thresholds specified in
section 203.2(e)(2)(iii), but meets one of them
in year 2 (and otherwise meets the criteria for
coverage), need not collect data in year 2, but
begins collecting data in year 3.
2. Adjustment of exemption threshold for
depository institutions. Depository
institutions with assets at or below $30
million are exempt from collecting data for
2000.
3. Coverage after a merger. Several
scenarios of data-collection responsibilities
for the calendar year of a merger are
described below. Under all the scenarios, if
the merger results in a covered institution,
that institution must begin data collection
January 1 of the following calendar year.
i. Two institutions are not covered by
Regulation C because of asset size. The
institutions merge. No data collection is
required for the year of the merger (even if
the merger results in a covered institution).
ii. A covered institution and an exempt
institution merge. The covered institution is
the surviving institution. For the year of the
merger, data collection is required for the
covered institution’s transactions. Data
collection is optional for transactions
handled in offices of the previously exempt
institution.
iii. A covered institution and an exempt
institution merge. The exempt institution is

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

20:01 Dec 14, 2000

the surviving institution, or a new institution
is formed. Data collection is required for
transactions of the covered institution that
take place prior to the merger. Data collection
is optional for transactions taking place after
the merger date.
iv. Two covered institutions merge. Data
collection is required for the entire year. The
surviving or resulting institution files either
a consolidated submission or separate
submissions for that year.fi
fl4. Originations. Institutions are
reminded that coverage depends in part on
whether they have originated home purchase
loans. To determine whether their activities
with respect to a particular loan constitute an
origination, institutions should consult,
among other parts of the staff commentary,
the discussion of the broker rule under
§§ 203.1(c) and 203.4(a).fi
[1.] fl5.fi Branches of foreign banks—
treated as [a] bankflsfi. A federal branch or
a state-licensed insured branch of a foreign
bank is a ‘‘bank’’ under section 3(a)(1) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.
1813(a)), and is covered by HMDA if it meets
the tests for a depository institution found in
section[s] 203.2(e)(1) [and 203.3(a)(1)] of
Regulation C.
[2.] fl6.fi Branches and offices of foreign
banks—treated as [a] for-profit mortgage
lending institutionflsfi. Federal agencies,
state-licensed agencies, state-licensed
uninsured branches of foreign banks,
commercial lending companies owned or
controlled by foreign banks, and entities
operating under section 25 or 25A of the
Federal Reserve Act, 12 U.S.C. 601 and 611
(Edge Act and agreement corporations) are
not ‘‘banks’’ under the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act. These entities are nonetheless
covered by HMDA if they meet the tests for
a flfor-profitfi nondepository mortgage
lending institution found in section[s]
203.2(e)(2) [and 203.3(a)(2)] of Regulation C.
2[(f)] fl(g)fi Home improvement loan.
[1. Definition. A home improvement loan
is a loan that is made for the purpose of home
improvement and that is classified by the
institution as a home improvement loan.
2. Statement of the applicant. An
institution may rely on the oral or written
statement of an applicant regarding the
proposed use of loan proceeds
3. Home-equity lines. An institution that
has chosen to report home-equity lines of
credit reports as a home improvement loan
only the part of a home-equity line that is
intended for home improvement. An
institution that reports home-equity lines
reports the disposition of all applications, not
just originations.
4. Classification requirement. An
institution has ‘‘classified’’ a loan as a home
improvement loan if it has entered the loan
on its books as a home improvement loan, or
has otherwise coded or identified the loan as
a home improvement loan. For example, an
institution that has booked a loan or reported
it on a ‘‘call report’’ as a home improvement
loan has classified it as a home improvement
loan. An institution may also classify loans
as home improvement loans in other ways
(for example, by color-coding loan files).]
[5.] fl1.fi Improvements to real property.
Home improvements include improvements

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00027

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4700

78681

both to a dwelling and to the real property
on which the dwelling is located (for
example, installation of a swimming pool,
construction of a garage, or landscaping).
[6.] fl2.fi Commercial and other loans. A
flhome improvementfi loan [for
improvement purposes] flmay include a
loanfi originated outside an institution’s
[consumer] flresidential mortgagefi lending
division (such as a loan to improve an
apartment building made through the
commercial loan department)fl.fi[is
reported if the institution classifies it as a
home improvement loan.]
[7. Multiple-purpose loan. A loan for home
improvement and for other purposes is
treated as a home improvement loan even if
less than 50 percent of the total loan
proceeds are to be used for improvement,
provided the institution classifies the loan as
a home improvement loan. (But see comment
(2)(f)–3 of this supplement on home-equity
lines of credit.)]
[8.] fl3.fi Mixed-use property. A loan to
improve property used for residential and
commercial purposes (for example, a
building containing apartment units and
retail space) [satisfies the purpose
requirement] flis a home improvement
loanfi if the loan proceeds are flusedfi
primarily to improve the residential portion
of the property. If the loan proceeds are
flusedfi to improve the entire property (for
example, to replace the heating system), the
loan [satisfies the purpose requirement] flis
a home improvement loanfi if the property
itself is primarily residential. An institution
may use any reasonable standard to
determine the primary use of the property,
such as by square footage or by the income
generated. An institution may select the
standard to apply on a case-by-case basis. [To
report the loan as a home improvement loan,
the institution must also classify it as such.]
fl4. Multiple-category loans. If a loan is a
home improvement loan as well as a
refinancing, an institution reports the loan as
a home improvement loan.fi
2[(g)]fl(h)fi Home purchase loan.
1. Multiple properties. A home purchase
loan includes a loan secured by one dwelling
and used to purchase another dwelling.
2. Mixed-use property. A fldwellingsecuredfi loan to purchase property used
primarily for residential purposes (for
example, an apartment building containing a
convenience store) is a home purchase loan.
An institution may use any reasonable
standard to determine the primary use of the
property, such as by square footage or by the
income generated. An institution may select
the standard to apply on a case-by-case basis.
3. Farm loan. A loan to purchase property
used primarily for agricultural purposes is
not a home purchase loan even if the
property includes a dwelling. An institution
may use any reasonable standard to
determine the primary use of the property,
such as by reference to the exemption from
Regulation X (Real Estate Settlement
Procedures, 24 CFR 3500.5(b)(1)) for a loan
on property of 25 acres or more. An
institution may select the standard to apply
on a case-by-case basis.
4. Commercial and other loans. A home
purchase loan flmayfi include[s] a loan

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm02

PsN: 15DEP2

78682

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

originated outside an institution’s residential
mortgage lending division (such as a loan for
the purchase of an apartment building made
through the commercial loan department).
[For home purchase loans, there is no
classification test.]
5. Construction and permanent financing.
A home purchase loan includes both a
combined construction/permanent loan and
the permanent financing that replaces a
construction-only loan. It does not include a
construction-only loan, which is considered
‘‘temporary financing’’ under Regulation C
and is not reported.
[6. Home-equity line. An institution that
has chosen to report home-equity lines of
credit reports as a home purchase loan only
the part that is intended for home purchase.
An institution may rely on the applicant’s
oral or written statement about the proposed
use of the funds. An institution that reports
home-equity lines reports the disposition of
all applications, not just the originations.]
fl6. Second mortgages that finance the
downpayments on first mortgages. If an
institution making a first mortgage loan to a
home purchaser also makes a second
mortgage loan to the same purchaser to
finance part or all the home purchaser’s
downpayment, the institution reports each
loan separately as a home purchase loan.
7. Multiple-category loans. If a loan is a
home purchase loan as well as a home
improvement loan, refinancing, or homeequity line of credit, an institution reports
the loan as a home purchase loan.fi
Section 203.3—Exempt Institutions
[3(a) Exemption based on location, asset
size, or number of home purchase loans.
1. General. An institution that ceases to
meet the tests for HMDA coverage (such as
the 10 percent test for nondepository
institutions) or becomes exempt may stop
collecting HMDA data beginning with the
next calendar year. For example, a bank
whose assets are at or below the threshold on
December 31 of a given year reports data for
that full calendar year, in which it was
covered, but does not report data for the
succeeding calendar year.
2. Adjustment of exemption threshold for
depository institutions. For data collection in
2000, the asset-size exemption threshold is
$30 million. Depository institutions with
assets at or below $30 million are exempt
from collecting data for 2000.
3. Coverage after a merger. Several
scenarios of data-collection responsibilities
for the calendar year of a merger are
described below. Under all the scenarios, if
the merger results in a covered institution,
that institution must begin data collection
January 1 of the following calendar year.
i. Two institutions are exempt from
Regulation C because of asset size. The
institutions merge. No data collection is
required for the year of the merger (even if
the merger results in a covered institution).
ii. A covered institution and an exempt
institution merge. The covered institution is
the surviving institution. For the year of the
merger, data collection is required for the
covered institution’s transactions. Data
collection is optional for transactions
handled in offices of the previously exempt
institution.

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

20:01 Dec 14, 2000

iii. A covered institution and an exempt
institution merge. The exempt institution is
the surviving institution, or a new institution
is formed. Data collection is required for
transactions of the covered institution that
take place prior to the merger. Data collection
is optional for transactions taking place after
the merger date.
iv. Two covered institutions merge. Data
collection is required for the entire year. The
surviving or resulting institution files either
a consolidated submission or separate
submissions for that year.
4. Mergers versus purchases in bulk. If a
covered institution acquires loans in bulk
from another institution (for example, from
the receiver for a failed institution) but no
merger or acquisition of an institution is
involved, the institution reports the loans as
purchased loans.]
Section 203.4—Compilation of Loan Data
Paragraph 4(a) Data Format and
Itemization.
fl1. Reporting requirements. i. An
institution reports data on covered loans that
it originated and covered loans that it
purchased during the calendar year described
in the report. An institution reports these
data even if the loans were subsequently sold
by the institution.
ii. An institution reports the data for
applications for covered loans that did not
result in originations—for example,
applications that the institution denied or
that the applicant withdrew during the
calendar year described in the report.
iii. In the case of brokered loan
applications or applications forwarded
through a correspondent, the institution
reports as originations loans that it approved
and subsequently acquired according to a
pre-closing arrangement (whether or not they
closed in the institution’s name).
Additionally, the institution reports the data
for all applications that did not result in
originations—for example, applications that
the institution denied or that the applicant
withdrew during the calendar year covered
by the report (whether or not they would
have closed in the institution’s name). For all
of these loans and applications, the
institution reports the required data
regarding the borrower’s or applicant’s race
or national origin, sex, and income.
iv. Originations are to be reported only
once. If the institution is the loan broker or
correspondent, it does not report as
originations loans that it forwarded to
another lender for approval prior to closing,
and that were approved and subsequently
acquired by that lender (whether or not they
closed in the institution’s name).
v. An institution reports applications that
were received in the previous calendar year
but were acted upon during the calendar year
covered by the current register.
vi. A financial institution submits all
required data to its supervisory agency in one
package, with the prescribed transmittal
sheet. An officer of the institution certifies to
the accuracy of the data.
vii. The transmittal sheet states the total
number of line entries contained in the
accompanying data transmission.fi
[1. Quarterly updating. An institution must
make a good-faith effort to record all required

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00028

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4700

data concerning covered transactions—loan
originations (including refinancings), loan
purchases, and the disposition of
applications that did not result in
originations—fully and accurately within 30
days after the end of each calendar quarter.
If some data are inaccurate or incomplete
despite this good-faith effort, the error or
omission is not a violation of Regulation C
provided that the institution corrects and
completes the information prior to reporting
the HMDA–LAR to its regulatory agency.]
2. Updating—agency requirements. Certain
state or federal regulations, such as the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s
regulations, may require an institution to
update its data more frequently than is
required under Regulation C.
3. Form of updating. An institution may
maintain the quarterly updates of the
HMDA–LAR in electronic or any other
format, provided the institution can make the
information available to its regulatory agency
in a timely manner upon request.
Paragraph 4(a)(1) Application flnumber
and applicationfi date.
1. Application date—consistency. In
reporting the date of application, an
institution reports the date the application
was received or the date shown on the
application. Although an institution need not
choose the same approach for its entire
HMDA submission, it should be generally
consistent (such as by routinely using one
approach within a particular division of the
institution or for a category of loans).
2. Application date—application
forwarded by a broker. For an application
forwarded by a broker, an institution reports
the date the application was received by the
broker, the date the application was received
by the institution, or the date shown on the
application. Although an institution need not
choose the same approach for its entire
HMDA submission, it should be generally
consistent (such as by routinely using one
approach within a particular division of the
institution or for a category of loans).
3. Application date—reinstated
application. If, within the same calendar
year, an applicant asks an institution to
reinstate a counteroffer that the applicant
previously did not accept (or asks the
institution to reconsider an application that
was denied, withdrawn, or closed for
incompleteness), the institution may treat
that request as the continuation of the earlier
transaction or as a new transaction. If the
institution treats the request for
reinstatement or reconsideration as a new
transaction, it reports the date of the request
as the application date.
fl4. Application or loan number. An
institution ensures that each reported
identifying number is unique within the
institution. If an institution’s register
contains data for branch offices, for example,
the institution could use a letter or a
numerical code to identify the loans or
applications of different branches, or could
assign a certain series of numbers to
particular branches to avoid duplicate
numbers. Institutions are strongly
encouraged not to use the applicant’s or
borrower’s name or social security number,
for privacy reasons.

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm02

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules
5. Application—date of receipt. For
reporting purposes, the date a lender or
broker receives an application is the date on
which it or its agent first takes possession of
a physical or electronic copy of the
application in completed form. State law
determines whether one party is the agent of
another. For example, if a completed
application is received by a lender on the
Friday before a three-day weekend, and the
lender uploads the application onto its
computer system the following Tuesday, the
lender should report Friday’s date as the date
it received the application.
6. Application—year action taken. An
institution must report an application in the
calendar year in which the institution takes
final action on the application.fi
Paragraph 4(a)(2) Type and purpose.
fl1. Purpose—statement of applicant. An
institution may rely on the oral or written
statement of an applicant regarding the
proposed use of loan proceeds. For example,
a lender could use a check-box on a loan
application to determine whether or not the
applicant intends to use loan proceeds for
home improvement purposes.fi
[1. Purpose—multiple-purpose loan. If a
loan is for home improvement and another
covered purpose, an institution reports the
loan as a home improvement loan if the
institution classifies it as a home
improvement loan. Otherwise the institution
reports the loan as a home purchase loan or
a refinancing, as appropriate. An institution
may determine how to report such loans on
a case-by-case basis.]
Paragraph 4(a)(3) Occupancy.
[1. Occupancy—actual occupancy status. If
a loan relates to multifamily property,
property located outside an MSA, or property
in an MSA where the institution has no home
or branch office, the institution may either
report the actual occupancy status or report
using the code for ‘‘not applicable.’’ (A
nondepository institution may be deemed to
have a home or branch office in an MSA
under § 203.2(c)(2) of Regulation C.)]
[2.] fl1.fi Occupancy—multiple
properties. If a loan relates to multiple
properties, the institution reports the owner
occupancy status of the property for which
property location is being reported. (See the
comments to paragraph 4(a)(6), Property
location.)
Paragraph 4(a)(4) Loan amount.
1. Loan amount—counteroffer. If an
applicant accepts a counteroffer for an
amount different from the amount initially
requested, the institution reports the loan
amount granted. If an applicant does not
accept a counteroffer or fails to respond, the
institution reports the loan amount initially
requested.
2. Loan amount—multiple-purpose loan.
[Except in the case of a home-equity line of
credit, a]flAfin institution reports the entire
amount of the loan, even if only a part of the
proceeds is intended for home purchase or
home improvement.
[3. Loan amount—home-equity line. An
institution that reports home-equity lines of
credit reports only the part that is intended
for home improvement or home purchase
purposes. An institution may rely on the
applicant’s oral or written statement about
the proposed use of the loan proceeds.]

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

[4.] fl3.fi Loan amount—assumption. An
institution that enters into a written
agreement accepting a new party as the
obligor on a loan reports the amount of the
outstanding principal on the assumption as
the loan amount.
Paragraph 4(a)(5) Type of action taken and
date.
1. Action taken—counteroffers. If an
institution makes a counteroffer to lend on
terms different from the applicant’s initial
request (for example, for a shorter loan
maturity flor in a different amountfi) and
the applicant does not accept the
counteroffer or fails to respond, the
institution reports the action taken as a
denial flon the original terms requested by
the applicant.fi
2. Action taken—rescinded transactions. If
a borrower rescinds a transaction after
closing, the institution, on a case-by-case
basis, may report the transaction either as an
origination or as an application that was
approved but not accepted.
3. Action taken—purchased loans. An
institution reports the loans that it purchased
during the calendar year, and does not report
the loans that it declined to purchase.
4. Action taken—conditional approvals. If
an institution issues a loan approval subject
to the applicant’s meeting underwriting
conditions [(other than customary loancommitment or loan closing conditions, such
as a clear-title requirement or an acceptable
property survey)] and the applicant does not
meet them, the institution reports the action
taken as a denial.
5. Action taken date—approved but not
accepted. For a loan approved by an
institution but not accepted by the applicant,
the institution reports using any reasonable
date, such as the approval date, the deadline
for accepting the offer, or the date the file
was closed. Although an institution need not
choose the same approach for its entire
HMDA submission, it should be generally
consistent (such as by routinely using one
approach within a particular division of the
institution or for a category of loans).
6. Action taken date—originations. For
loan originations, an institution generally
reports the settlement or closing date. For
loan originations that an institution acquires
through a broker, the institution reports
either the settlement or closing date, or the
date the institution acquired the loan from
the broker. If the disbursement of funds takes
place on a date later than the settlement or
closing date, the institution may use the date
of disbursement. For a construction/
permanent loan, the institution reports either
the settlement or closing date, or the date the
loan converts to the permanent financing.
Although an institution need not choose the
same approach for its entire HMDA
submission, it should be generally consistent
(such as by routinely using one approach
within a particular division of the institution
or for a category of loans).
flNotwithstanding this flexibility regarding
the use of the closing date in connection with
reporting the date action was taken, the year
in which an origination goes to closing is the
year in which the institution must report the
origination.
7. Action taken—pending applications. An
institution does not report any loan

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00029

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4700

78683

application still pending at the end of the
calendar year; it reports that application on
its register for the year in which final action
is taken.fi
Paragraph 4(a)(6) Property location.
1. Property location—multiple properties
(home improvement/refinance of home
improvement). For a home improvement
loan, an institution reports the property being
improved. If more than one property is being
improved, the institution reports the location
of one of the properties or reports the loan
using multiple entries on its HMDA–LAR
(with unique identifiers) and allocating the
loan amount among the properties.
2. Property location—multiple properties
(home purchase/refinance of home
purchase). For a home purchase loan, an
institution reports the property taken as
security. If an institution takes more than one
property as security, the institution reports
the location of the property being purchased
if there is just one. If the loan is to purchase
multiple properties and is secured by
multiple properties, the institution reports
the location of one of the properties or
reports the loan using multiple entries on its
HMDA–LAR (with unique identifiers) and
allocating the loan amount among the
properties.
3. Property location—loans purchased
from another institution. The requirement to
report the property location by census tract
in a[n MSA] flmetropolitan areafi where
the institution has a home or branch office
applies not only to loan applications and
originations but also to loans purchased from
another institution. This includes loans
purchased from an institution that did not
have a home or branch office in that
flmetropolitan areafi [MSA] and did not
collect the property-location information.
4. Property location—[mobile or]
manufactured home. If information about the
potential site of a [mobile or] manufactured
home is not available, an institution reports
using the code for ‘‘not applicable.’’
5. Property location—use of BNA. At its
option, an institution may report property
location by using a block numbering area
(BNA). The U.S. Census Bureau, in
conjunction with state agencies, has
established BNAs as statistical subdivisions
of counties in which census tracts have not
been established. BNAs are generally
identified in census data by numbers in the
range 9501 to 9989.99.
Paragraph 4(a)(7) Applicant and income
data.
1. Applicant data—completion by
applicant. An institution reports the
monitoring information as provided by the
applicant. For example, if an applicant
checks the fl‘‘Asian’’fi [‘‘other’’] box the
institution reports using the fl‘‘Asian’’fi
[‘‘other’’] code.
2. Applicant data—completion by lender. If
an applicant fails to provide the requested
information for an application taken in
person, the institution reports the data on the
basis of visual observation or surname. [As
stated in paragraph I.B.5 to Appendix B of
this part, the institution does not use the
‘‘other’’ code, but selects from the categories
listed on the form.]
3. Applicant data—application completed
in person. When an applicant meets in

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

78684

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules

person with a lender to complete an
application that was begun by mail or
telephone, the institution must request the
monitoring information. If the meeting occurs
after the application process is complete, for
example, at closing, the institution is not
required to obtain monitoring information.
4. Applicant data—joint applicant. A joint
applicant may enter the governmentmonitoring information on behalf of an
absent joint applicant. If the information is
not provided, the institution reports using
the code for ‘‘information not provided by
applicant in mail or telephone application.’’
5. Applicant data—video and other
electronic-application processes. An
institution that accepts applications through
electronic media with a video component
treats the applications as taken in person and
collects the information about the race or
national origin and sex of applicants. An
institution that accepts applications through
electronic media without a video component
(for example, the Internet or facsimile) treats
the applications as accepted by mail. [(See
Appendix B of this part for procedures to be
used for data collection.)]
6. Income data—income relied on. An
institution reports the gross annual income
relied on in evaluating the creditworthiness
of applicants. For example, if an institution
relies on an applicant’s salary to compute a
debt-to-income ratio but also relies on the
applicant’s annual bonus to evaluate
creditworthiness, the institution reports the
salary and the bonus to the extent relied
upon. Similarly, if an institution relies on the
income of a cosigner to evaluate
creditworthiness, the institution includes
this income to the extent relied upon. But an
institution does not include the income of a
guarantor who is only secondarily liable.
7. Income data—co-applicant. If two
persons jointly apply for a loan and both list
income on the application, but the institution
relies only on the income of one applicant in
computing ratios and in evaluating
creditworthiness, the institution reports only
the income relied on.
8. Income data—loan to employee. An
institution may report ‘‘NA’’ in the income
field for loans to employees to protect their
privacy, even though the institution relied on
their income in making its credit decisions.
Paragraph 4(a)(8) Purchaser.
1. Type of purchaser—loan-participation
interests sold to more than one entity. An
institution that originates a loan, and then
sells it to more than one entity, reports the
‘‘type of purchaser’’ based on the entity
purchasing the greatest interest, if any. If an
institution retains a majority interest, it does
not report the sale.
fl2. Type of purchaser—swapped loans.
Loans ‘‘swapped’’ for mortgage-backed
securities are to be treated as sales; the
purchaser is the type of entity receiving the
loans that are swapped.fi
4(c) Optional data.
1. Agency requirements. Certain state or
federal entities, such as the Office of Thrift
Supervision, require institutions to report the
reasons for denial even though this is
optional reporting under HMDA and
Regulation C.
4(d) Excluded data.

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

[1. Loan pool. The purchase of an interest
in a loan pool (such as a mortgageparticipation certificate, a mortgage-backed
security, or a real estate mortgage investment
conduit or ‘‘REMIC’’) is a purchase of an
interest in a security under HMDA and is not
reported on the HMDA–LAR.]
fl1. Mergers, purchases in bulk, and
branch acquisitions. If a covered institution
acquires loans in bulk from another
institution (for example, from the receiver for
a failed institution) but no merger or
acquisition of the institution, or acquisition
of a branch, is involved, the institution
reports the loans as purchased loans.fi
Section 203.5’Disclosure and Reporting
5(a) Reporting to agency.
fl1. Submission of data. Institutions
submit data to their supervisory agencies in
an automated, machine-readable form. The
format conforms to that of the HMDA–LAR.
An institution should contact its federal
supervisory agency for information regarding
procedures and technical specifications for
automated data submission; in some cases,
agencies also make software for automated
data submission available to institutions. The
data are edited before submission, using the
edits included in the agency-supplied
software or equivalent edits in software
available from vendors or developed inhouse. (Institutions that report twenty-five or
fewer entries on their HMDA–LAR may
collect and report the data in paper form. An
institution that submits its register in
nonautomated form sends two copies that are
typed or computer printed and must use the
format of the HMDA–LAR (but need not use
the form itself). Each page is numbered, and
the total number of pages are given (for
example, ‘‘Page 1 of 3’’).
2. Procedures for entering data. The
required data are entered in the register for
each loan origination, each application acted
on, and each loan purchased during the
calendar year. The institution should decide
on the procedure it wants to follow—for
example, whether to begin entering the
required data, when an application is
received, or to wait until final action is taken
(such as when a loan goes to closing or an
application is denied).
3. Options for collection. An institution
may collect data on separate registers at
different branches, or on separate registers for
different loan types (such as for home
purchase or home improvement loans, or for
loans on multifamily dwellings). Entries need
not be grouped on the register by
metropolitan area, or chronologically, or by
census tract numbers, or in any other
particular order.fi
[1.] fl4.fi Change in supervisory agency.
If the supervisory agency for a covered
institution changes (as a consequence of a
merger or a change in the institution’s
charter, for example), the institution must
report data to its new supervisory agency for
the year of the change and subsequent years.
[2] fl5.fi Subsidiaries. An institution is a
subsidiary of a bank or savings association
(for purposes of reporting HMDA data to the
parent’s supervisory agency) if the bank or
savings association holds or controls an
ownership interest that is greater than 50
percent of the institution.

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00030

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4700

fl6. Transmittal sheet—additional data
submissions. Each additional data
submission that becomes necessary (for
example, because the institution discovers
that data were omitted from the initial
submission, or because revisions are called
for) must be accompanied by a separate
transmittal sheet.
7. Transmittal sheet—revisions or
deletions. If a data submission involves
revisions or deletions of previously
submitted data, state the total of all line
entries contained in that submission,
including both those representing revisions
or deletions of previously submitted entries,
and those that are being resubmitted
unchanged or are being submitted for the first
time. Depository institutions must provide a
list of the metropolitan areas in which they
have home or branch offices.
5(b) Public disclosure of statement.
1. Business day. For purposes of § 203.5, a
business day is any calendar day other than
a Saturday, Sunday, or legal public holiday.
2. Format. An institution may make the
disclosure statement available in paper form
or, if the person requesting the data agrees,
in automated form (such as by PC diskette or
computer tape).
5(c) Public disclosure of loan/application
register.
1. Format. An institution may make the
modified register available in paper or
automated form (such as by PC diskette or
computer tape). Although institutions are not
required to make the modified register
available in census tract order, they are
strongly encouraged to do so in order to
enhance its utility to users.fi
5(e) Notice of availability.
1. Poster—suggested text. [The suggested
wording of the poster text provided in
Appendix A of this part is optional. An
institution may use other text that meets the
requirements of the regulation.] flAn
institution may use any text that meets the
requirements of the regulation. Some of the
federal financial regulatory agencies and
HUD provide HMDA posters that an
institution can use to inform the public of the
availability of its HMDA data, or the
institution may create its own posters. If an
institution prints its own, the following
language is suggested but is not required:
Home Mortgage Disclosure Act Notice
The HMDA data about our residential
mortgage lending are available for review.
The data show geographic distribution of
loans and applications; race, gender, and
income of applicants and borrowers; and
information about loan approvals and
denials. Inquire at this office regarding the
locations where HMDA data may be
inspected.
2. Additional language for institutions
making the disclosure statement available on
request. An institution that posts a notice
informing the public of the address to which
a request should be sent could include the
following sentence, for example, in its
general notice: ‘‘To receive a copy of these
data send a written request to [address].’’fi
Section 203.6—Enforcement
6(b) Bona fide errors.

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 242 / Friday, December 15, 2000 / Proposed Rules
1. Bona fide error—information from third
parties. An institution that obtains the
property-location information for
applications and loans from third parties
(such as appraisers or vendors of
‘‘geocoding’’ services) is responsible for
ensuring that the information reported on its
HMDA–LAR is correct. [An incorrect entry

VerDate 11<MAY>2000

15:20 Dec 14, 2000

for a census tract number is a bona fide error,
and is not a violation of the act or regulation,
provided that the institution maintains
reasonable procedures to avoid such errors
(for example, by conducting periodic checks
of the information obtained from these third
parties).]

Jkt 194001

PO 00000

Frm 00031

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4700

78685

By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, December 8, 2000.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 00–31796 Filed 12–14–00; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

E:\FR\FM\15DEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 15DEP2