Purpose Recent examinations of institutions engaging in credit
card lending have disclosed a wide variety of account-management,
risk-management, and loss-allowance practices, a number of which were
deemed inappropriate. This interagency guidance communicates the agencies’
expectations for prudent practices in these areas.
The agencies recognize that some institutions
may require time to implement changes in policies, practices, and
systems in order to achieve full consistency with the guidance on
credit card account management. Such institutions should work with
their primary federal regulator to ensure implementation of needed
changes as promptly as possible.
With respect to income-recognition and loss-allowance
practices for credit card lending, the guidance reflects generally
accepted accounting principles (GAAP), existing interagency policies
on loss allowances, and current call report and Thrift Financial Report
instructions.
1 The agencies expect continued
and ongoing compliance with GAAP and these reporting instructions.
Applicability of Guidance The account-management and loss-allowance principles
described herein are generally applicable to all institutions under
the agencies’ supervision that offer credit card programs. The risk
profile of the institution, the strength of internal controls (including
internal audit and risk management), the quality of management reporting,
and the adequacy of charge-off policies and loss-allowance methodologies
will be factored into the agencies’ assessment of the overall adequacy
of these account-management practices. Regulatory scrutiny and risk-management
expectations for certain practices, such as negative amortization
of over-limit accounts, will be greater for higher-risk portfolios
and portfolio segments, including those that are subprime.
Wherever such practices are deemed
inadequate or imprudent, regulators will require immediate corrective
action.
Account Management, Risk
Management, and Loss-Allowance Practices The agencies expect institutions to fully test, analyze, and support
their account management practices, including credit-line management
and pricing criteria, for prudence prior to broad implementation of
those practices. Credit card lenders should review their practices
and initiate changes where appropriate.
Credit-Line Management When assigning initial credit lines and/or significantly
increasing existing credit lines, lenders should carefully consider
the repayment capacity of borrowers. When inadequately analyzed and
managed, practices such as multiple-card strategies and liberal line-increase
programs can increase the risk profile of a borrower quickly and result
in rapid and significant portfolio deterioration.
Credit-line assignments should be managed conservatively
using proven credit criteria. The agencies expect institutions to
test, analyze, and document line-assignment and line-increase criteria
prior to broad implementation. Support for credit-line management
should include documentation and analysis of decision factors such
as repayment history, risk scores, behavior scores, or other relevant
criteria.
Institutions can significantly increase credit exposure
by offering customers additional cards, including store-specific private-label
cards and affinity-relationship cards, without considering the entire
relationship. In extreme cases, some institutions have granted additional
cards to borrowers already experiencing payment problems on existing
cards. The agencies expect institutions that offer multiple credit lines
to have sufficient internal controls and management information systems
(MIS) to aggregate related exposures and analyze performance prior
to offering additional credit lines.
Over-Limit Practices Account-management practices that do not adequately control
authorization and provide for timely repayment of over-limit amounts
may significantly increase the credit-risk profile of the portfolio.
While prudent over-limit practices are important for all credit card
accounts, they are especially important for subprime accounts, where
liberal over-limit tolerances and inadequate repayment requirements
can magnify the high-risk exposure to the lending institution, and
deficient reporting and loss-allowance methodologies can understate
the credit risk.
Over-limit practices at all institutions should be carefully
managed and should focus on reasonable control and timely repayment
of amounts that exceed established credit limits. Management information
systems for all institutions should be sufficient to enable management
to identify, measure, manage, and control the unique risks associated
with over-limit accounts. Over-limit authorization on open-end accounts,
particularly those that are subprime, should be restricted and subject
to appropriate policies and controls. The objective should be to ensure
that the borrower remains within prudent established credit limits
that increase the likelihood of responsible credit management.
Minimum Payment and Negative
Amortization Competitive pressures and
a desire to preserve outstanding balances have led to a general easing
of minimum-payment requirements in recent years. New formulas that
have the effect of further delaying principal repayment are gaining
popularity in the industry. In many instances, the result has been
liberal repayment programs that increase credit risk and mask portfolio
quality. These problems are exacerbated when minimum payments consistently
fall short of covering all finance charges and fees assessed during
the billing cycle and the outstanding balance continues to build (“negative
amortization”). In these cases, the lender is recording uncollected
income by capitalizing the unpaid finance charges and fees into the
account balance owed by the customer. The pitfalls of negative amortization
are magnified when subprime accounts are involved, and even more so
when the condition is prolonged by programmatic, recurring over-limit
fees and other charges that are primarily intended to increase recorded
income for the lender rather than enhance the borrowers’ performance
or their access to credit.
The agencies expect lenders to require minimum payments
that will amortize the current balance over a reasonable period of
time, consistent with the unsecured, consumer-oriented nature of the
underlying debt and the borrower’s documented creditworthiness. Prolonged
negative amortization, inappropriate fees, and other practices that
inordinately compound or protract consumer debt and disguise portfolio
performance and quality raise safety-and-soundness concerns and are
subject to examiner criticism.
Workout and forbearance practices. Institutions
should properly manage workout
2 programs. Areas of concern
involve liberal repayment terms with extended amortizations, high
charge-off rates, moving accounts from one workout program to another,
multiple re-agings, and poor MIS to monitor program performance. Where
workout programs are not managed properly, the agencies will criticize
management and require appropriate corrective action. Such actions
may include adversely classifying entire segments of portfolios, plac
ing
loans on nonaccrual, increasing loss allowances to adequate levels,
and accelerating charge-offs to appropriate time frames.
Temporary-hardship programs that
help borrowers overcome temporary financial difficulties are not considered
workout programs for this guidance. Temporary-hardship programs longer
than a 12-month duration, including renewals, are considered workout
programs.
Repayment
Period. Repayment terms for accounts in workout programs vary
widely among credit card issuers. Practices range from programs designed
to maximize collection of balances owed to programs apparently designed
to maximize income recognition and defer losses. Some institutions’
programs have not reduced interest rates sufficiently to facilitate
timely repayment and assist borrowers in extinguishing indebtedness.
In many cases, reduced minimum-payment requirements in combination
with continued charging of fees and finance charges have extended
repayment periods well beyond reasonable time frames.
Workout programs should be designed
to maximize principal reduction. Workout programs should generally
strive to have borrowers repay credit card debt within 60 months.
Repayment terms for workout programs should be consistent with these
time frames, with exceptions clearly documented and supported by compelling
evidence that less-conservative terms and conditions are warranted.
To meet these time frames, institutions may need to substantially
reduce or eliminate interest rates and fees so that more of the payment
is applied to reduce principal.
Settlements. Institutions sometimes negotiate
settlement agreements with borrowers who are unable to service their
unsecured open-end credit. In a settlement arrangement, the institution
forgives a portion of the amount owed. In exchange, the borrower agrees
to pay the remaining balance either in a lump-sum payment or by amortizing
the balance over a several-month period. Institutions’ charge-off
practices vary widely with regard to settlements.
Institutions should ensure that they establish
and maintain adequate loss allowances for credit card accounts subject
to settlement arrangements. In addition, the FFIEC Uniform Retail
Credit Classification and Account Management Policy states that “actual
credit losses on individual retail loans should be recorded when the
institution becomes aware of the loss.” In general, the amount of
debt forgiven in a settlement arrangement should be classified loss
and charged off immediately. However, a number of issues may make
immediate charge-off impractical. In such cases, institutions may
treat amounts forgiven in settlement arrangements as specific allowances.
3 Upon receipt of the final settlement payment, deficiency
balances should be charged off within 30 days.
Income-Recognition and Loss-Allowance Practices Most institutions use historical net charge-off
rates, based on migration analysis of the roll rates
4 to charge-off, as the
starting point for determining appropriate loss allowances. Institutions
then typically adjust the historical charge-offs for current trends
and conditions and other factors. Recent examinations of credit card
lenders have revealed a variety of income-recognition and loss-allowance
practices. Such practices have resulted in inconsistent estimates
of incurred losses and, accordingly, the inconsistent reporting of
loss allowances.
Accrued
interest and fees.5 Institutions should evaluate the collectibility of accrued
interest and fees on credit card accounts because a portion of accrued
interest and fees is generally not collectible. Although regulatory
reporting
instructions do not require consumer credit card loans to be placed
on nonaccrual based on delinquency status, the agencies expect all
institutions to employ appropriate methods to ensure that income is
accurately measured. Such methods may include providing loss allowances
for uncollectible fees and finance charges or placing delinquent and
impaired receivables on nonaccrual status. Institutions must account
for the owned portion of accrued interest and fees, including related
estimated losses, separately from the retained interest in accrued
interest and fees from credit card receivables that have been securitized.
Loan-Loss Allowances The allowance for loan and lease losses (ALLL) should
be adequate to absorb credit losses that are probable and estimable
on all loans. While some institutions provide for an ALLL on all loans,
others only provide for an ALLL on loans that are delinquent. Typically,
this practice results in an inadequate ALLL. Institutions should ensure
that their loan-impairment analysis and ALLL methodology, including
the analysis of roll rates, consider the loss inherent in both delinquent
and nondelinquent loans.
Allowances
for Over-Limit Accounts Institutions’
allowance methodologies do not always fully recognize the loss inherent
in over-limit portfolio segments. For example, if borrowers were required
to pay over-limit and other fees, in addition to the minimum monthly
payment amount each month, roll rates and estimated losses may be
higher than indicated in the overall portfolio-migration analysis.
Accordingly, institutions should ensure that their allowance methodology
addresses the incremental losses that may be inherent on over-limit
accounts.
Allowances for Workout
Programs Some institutions’ allowances
do not appropriately provide for the inherent probable loss in workout
programs, particularly where repayment periods are liberal with little
progress on reducing principal. The success of workout programs varies
widely by program and among institutions.
Accounts in workout programs should be segregated for
performance measurement, impairment analysis, and monitoring purposes.
Where multiple workout programs with different performance characteristics
exist, each program should be tracked separately. Adequate allowances
should be established and maintained for each program. Generally,
the allowance allocation should equal the estimated loss in each program
based on historical experience as adjusted for current conditions
and trends. These adjustments should take into account changes in
economic conditions, volume and mix, terms and conditions of each
program, and collections.
Recovery Practices After a loan is
charged off, institutions must properly report any subsequent collections
on the loan.
6 Typically, some or all of such collections
are reported as recoveries to the allowance for loan and lease losses.
Recent examinations have revealed that, in some instances, the total
amount credited to the ALLL as recoveries on an individual loan (which
may have included principal, interest, and fees) exceeded the amount
previously charged off against the ALLL on that loan (which may have
been limited to principal). Such a practice understates an institution’s
net charge-off experience, which is an important indicator of the
credit quality and performance of an institution’s portfolio.
Consistent with regulatory reporting
instructions and prevalent industry practice, recoveries represent
collections on amounts that were previously charged off against the
ALLL. Accordingly, institutions must ensure that the total amount
credited to the ALLL as recoveries on a loan (which may include amounts
representing principal, interest, and fees) is limited to the amount
previously charged off against the ALLL on that loan. Any amounts
collected in excess of this limit should be recognized as income.
Policy Exceptions The agencies recognize that in well-managed programs limited
exceptions to the FFIEC Uniform Retail Credit Classification and Account
Management Policy may be warranted. The basis for granting exceptions
to the policy should be identified and described in the institution’s
policies and procedures. Such policies and procedures should address
the types of exceptions allowed and the circumstances for permitting
them. The volume of accounts granted exceptions should be small and
well controlled, and the performance of accounts granted exceptions
should be closely monitored. Examiners will evaluate whether an institution
uses exceptions prudently. When exceptions are not used prudently,
are not well managed, result in improper reporting, or mask delinquencies
and losses, management will be criticized and corrective action will
be required.
Issued jointly by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the
Office of Thrift Supervision January 8, 2003 (SR-03-1).