Q9. What price data are
available under HMDA?
A9. The price data take
the form of a “rate spread.” Lenders must report the spread (difference)
between the annual percentage rate (APR) on a loan and the rate on
Treasury securities of comparable maturity—but only for loans with
spreads above designated thresholds. So rate spreads are reported
for some, but not all, reported home loans.
The APR represents the cost of credit to the consumer.
It captures not just the contract-based interest rate on a loan, but
also the points and fees that a consumer pays and other finance charges
such as premiums for private mortgage insurance. Lenders must calculate
and disclose the APR to consumers under a separate law, the Truth
in Lending Act.
Lenders also report price information in the form of a
“flag” indicating whether a loan exceeds the price triggers of the
Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act (HOEPA). Those triggers are
substantially higher than the thresholds for reporting rate spreads.
The rate-spread thresholds and the HOEPA triggers are discussed below
(see Q10, Q20).
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Q10. Which
loans are deemed “higher-priced” and therefore have their prices reported?
A10. A loan’s rate spread (see Q9) must
be reported if the spread exceeds the threshold set by the Board in
Regulation C. For first-lien loans, the threshold is 3 percentage
points above the Treasury security of comparable maturity; for second-lien
loans, which tend to have higher prices, the threshold is 5 percentage
points above the Treasury security of comparable maturity. The Board
chose the thresholds in the belief that they would exclude the vast
majority of prime-rate loans and include the vast majority of subprime-rate
loans. From year to year, however, the proportion of subprime-rate
loans that have their prices reported may vary because of changes
in the interest rate environment (see Q27).
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Q11. Why is the requirement to report price data limited
to higher-priced loans?
A11. The higher-priced
mortgage market has grown substantially in the last decade. Its expansion
has afforded some consumers greater access to home mortgage credit.
The growth of the higher-priced mortgage market, however, has raised
concerns that consumers in this market lack the information needed
to negotiate the best terms and may be vulnerable to unfair or deceptive
practices. Also, the wider range of prices in this market has raised
concerns that price differences may reflect unlawful discrimination
rather than legitimate risk- and cost-related factors.
In contrast, the prime market’s
limited variation in prices helps allay concerns about market efficiency
and consumer protection. Though the prime market is not without risk
of unlawful discrimination or violation of other consumer protection
laws, the banking agencies use their routine examinations of depository
institutions to address that risk (see Q16).
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Q12. Is price information reported on all mortgage loans that
have prices above the price reporting thresholds?
A12. Price information is reported on most, but not all, loans that
have prices above the price reporting thresholds. Under Regulation
C, some loans are not reportable at all, such as home-equity loans
for consolidation of debt (see Q4). Moreover, for certain kinds
of loans that Regulation C requires be reported, a lender need not
report price information. Examples in this category include unsecured
home-improvement loans, assumptions, and loans purchased from other
lenders (though purchased loans would likely have been reported by
the original lenders). Finally, reporting information about home-equity
lines of credit (HELOCs) is optional; a lender opting to report HELOCs
need not report price information.
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Q13. To
the extent the HMDA data indicate that minorities pay more for loans
than whites on average, does that difference prove unlawful discrimination?
A13. No. However, such a disparity may indicate
a need for closer scrutiny. Supervisory and enforcement agencies investigating
disparities typically collect additional information about factors
that may determine loan prices from lenders’ loan files or other sources.
Without information about relevant price determinants, one cannot
draw definitive conclusions about whether particular lenders discriminate
unlawfully or take unfair advantage of consumers. HMDA data include
some potentially relevant determinants of price, such as lien status,
but exclude many other potential determinants, such as borrower credit
history, borrower debt-to-income ratio, and the ratio of the loan
amount to the value of the property securing the loan (loan-to-value
ratio). Therefore, price disparities by race, ethnicity, or sex disclosed
in HMDA data will not alone prove unlawful discrimination.
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Q14. Why aren’t all pricing factors reported in HMDA
data?
A14. In 2002, when the Board adopted
the requirement to report price data and lien status, an important
determinant of loan price, the Board considered adding to HMDA data
other data items relevant to loan pricing, such as loan-to-value ratio.
For each possible new data item, the Board weighed the potential benefit
and burden that would result, such as the costs of collection and
reporting. On the basis of that analysis, which relied in part on
public comments, the Board decided not to add more factors.
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Q15. If HMDA data cannot support definitive conclusions
about whether price differences reflect unlawful discrimination, then
what is the point of requiring disclosure of price data?
A15. Though the price data do not support definitive
conclusions, they are a useful screen, previously unavailable, to
identify lenders, products, applicants, and geographic markets where
price differences among racial or other groups are sufficiently large
to warrant further investigation. Enforcement and supervisory agencies
can use the HMDA price data to better target their resources. HMDA
price data can also be a valuable part of any mortgage lender’s self-evaluation
program.
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Q16. What other tools beside the HMDA price data
are used to detect price discrimination?
A16. The
federal banking agencies analyze HMDA price data in conjunction with
other information to evaluate the potential for price discrimination.
The interagency fair lending examination procedures direct examiners
to identify risk factors for discrimination by reviewing a variety
of information, including an institution’s records, to understand
the institution’s fair lending compliance management program. Examiners
evaluate a lender’s risk of price discrimination based on several
factors, including the relationship between loan pricing and compensation
of loan officers or brokers; the presence of broad pricing discretion;
the use of a system of risk-based pricing that is not empirically
based and statistically sound; substantial disparities among prices
quoted or charged to applicants who differ in their protected characteristics
such as race or ethnicity; and consumer complaints alleging price
discrimination. The HMDA price data are analyzed in conjunction with
these other factors to determine the level of risk of price discrimination.
The level of risk of price discrimination, in turn, is one of the
factors examiners consider when determining the depth and breadth
of a fair lending examination by a federal banking agency.
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Q17. Why do some borrowers pay higher prices than
others?
A17. Many factors affect the price
of a mortgage loan. Some factors, such as a borrower’s credit history,
debt-to-income (DTI) ratio, or the ratio of the loan amount to the
value of the property that secures the loan (LTV), are used by lenders
to set loan prices because they have been shown to predict whether
or not borrowers will pay their loans as agreed. Generally, borrowers
with poor credit histories or high DTI or LTV ratios represent increased
risk of nonpayment, which lenders offset with a higher price to such
borrowers.
Other factors that may affect loan price include the price
the lender pays for the money it lends to borrowers (cost of funds),
the type of loan product and whether its rate and terms are fixed
or variable, whether the lender holds its loans in portfolio or sells
them in the secondary market, and whether the lender extends credit
through its own loan officers or independent brokers. Discretionary
pricing by loan officers and brokers can also produce differing loan
prices, although discretionary pricing is not, by itself, unlawful.
Unfortunately, price disparities may also be the result of unfair
or deceptive behavior by lenders or brokers, or unlawful discrimination
on the basis of race, ethnicity, or sex.
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Q18. How
can a consumer obtain the best price on a loan?
A18. It is important that borrowers shop, compare, and negotiate
the price and other terms of their loans. For more information about
shopping for a mortgage loan, go to www.mymoney.gov or call 1-888-MYMONEY.