HMDA Changes to Enhance Fair-Lending Analysis
Regulatory changes intended to improve the quality and consistency
of data collected on home mortgage loans were approved in January
by the Federal Reserve Board.
The amendments to Regulation C, which implements the Home Mortgage
Disclosure Act (HMDA), require lenders to disclose pricing data
on higher-cost loans, expand the number of non-depository institutions
subject to HMDA's reporting requirements and revise certain
regulatory definitions.
The amendments will take effect for data collection beginning
Jan. 1, 2003.
The Board also requested public comment with respect to certain
items by April 1, 2002.
Regulation C requires depository and for-profit, non-depository
institutions to collect, report and disclose data about applications
for, and originations and purchases of, home mortgage loans and
home improvement loans. Data reported include the type, purpose,
and amount of the loan; the race, ethnicity, sex and income of the
loan applicant; and the location of the property.
Data collected under Regulation C help the public and regulatory
agencies enforce fair-lending laws and are used to determine whether
financial institutions are serving the housing needs of their communities.
The changes to Regulation C will facilitate fair-lending analysis
and enhance understanding of the home mortgage market generally
and the subprime market in particular. The Board took into account
changes in the home mortgage market, including growth in areas such
as subprime lending and loan preapproval programs. At the same time,
the Board has attempted to minimize the increase in the data collection
and reporting burden by limiting proposed changes to those most
likely to have significant benefit.
The final rule:
- requires lenders to report the spread between the annual
percentage rate (APR) and the yield on the comparable Treasury security
for originated loans with APRs that exceed the yield on the security
by a certain threshold. (The Board tentatively set the thresholds
at three percentage points for first-lien loans and five percentage
points for subordinate-lien loans and seeks comment on the appropriateness
of these particular thresholds);
- requires lenders to identify loans subject to the Home Ownership
and Equity Protection Act (see
article on this topic elsewhere in this issue);
- conforms the categories for reporting race and ethnicity to
government-wide standards established by the Office of Management
and Budget and, consistent with those standards, allows applicants
to record more than one race;
- requires lenders to report denials of applications for credit
received through certain preapproval programs and to identify
originated loans initiated through preapproval programs;
- permits, but does not require, lenders to report requests for
preapproval that the lender approves but that applicants do not
pursue;
- expands the coverage of non-depository lenders by adding a
dollar-volume threshold of $25 million to the current loan-percentage
test;
- modifies the definitions of "refinancing" and "home
improvement loan" to generate more consistent, accurate and
useful data; and
- requires lenders to report whether the loan involves a manufactured
home.
The Board also is seeking comments on requiring lenders to ask
telephone applicants their race, ethnicity and sex (lenders already
ask these questions in in-person, mail and Internet applications)
and on requiring lenders to report lien status for applications
and originated loans.
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