1. Coverage. Section 226.19(b) applies to all closed-end variable-rate
transactions that are secured by the consumer’s principal dwelling
and have a term greater than one year. The requirements of this section
apply not only to transactions financing the initial acquisition of
the consumer’s principal dwelling, but also to any other closed-end
variable-rate transaction secured by the principal dwelling. Closed-end
variable-rate transactions that are not secured by the principal dwelling,
or are secured by the principal dwelling but have a term of one year
or less, are subject to the disclosure requirements of section 226.18(f)(1)
rather than those of section 226.19(b). (Furthermore, “shared-equity”
or “shared-appreciation” mortgages are subject to the disclosure requirements
of section 226.18(f)(1) rather than those of section 226.19(b) regardless
of the general coverage of those sections.) For purposes of this section,
the term of a variable-rate demand loan is determined in accordance
with the commentary to section 226.17(c)(5). In determining whether
a construction loan that may be permanently financed by the same creditor
is covered under this section, the creditor may treat the construction
and the permanent phases as separate transactions with distinct terms
to maturity or as a single combined transaction. For purposes of the
disclosures required under section 226.18, the creditor may nevertheless
treat the two phases either as separate transactions or as a single
combined transaction in accordance with section 226.17(c)(6). Finally,
in any assumption of a variable-rate transaction secured by the consumer’s
principal dwelling with a term greater than one year, disclosures
need not be provided under sections 226.18(f)(2)(ii) or 226.19(b).
2. Timing. A creditor
must give the disclosures required under this section at the time
an application form is provided or before the consumer pays a nonrefundable
fee, whichever is earlier.
i. Intermediary agent or broker. In cases
where a creditor receives a written application through an intermediary
agent or broker, however, footnote 45b provides a substitute timing
rule requiring the creditor to deliver the disclosures or place them
in the mail not later than three business days after the creditor
receives the consumer’s written application. (See comment 19(b)-3
for guidance in determining whether or not the transaction involves
an intermediary agent or broker.) This three-day rule also applies
where the creditor takes an application over the telephone.
ii. Telephone request. In cases where the consumer merely requests an application over
the telephone, the creditor must include the early disclosures required
under this section with the application that is sent to the consumer.
iii. Mail solicitations. In cases where the creditor solicits applications through the mail,
the creditor must also send the disclosures required under this section
if an application form is included with the solicitation.
iv. Conversion. In cases
where an open-end credit account will convert to a closed-end transaction
subject to this section under a written agreement with the consumer,
disclosures under this section may be given at the time of conversion.
(See the commentary to section 226.20(a) for information on the timing
requirements for 226.19(b)(2) disclosures when a variable-rate feature
is later added to a transaction.)
v. Form of electronic disclosures provided on or
with electronic applications. Creditors must provide the disclosures
required by this section (including the brochure) on or with a blank
application that is made available to the consumer in electronic form,
such as on a creditor’s Internet website. Creditors have flexibility
in satisfying this requirement. Methods creditors could use to satisfy
the requirement include, but are not limited to, the following examples:
A.
The disclosures could automatically appear on the screen when the
application appears.
B.
The
disclosures could be located on the same web page as the application
(whether or not they appear on the initial screen), if the application
contains a clear and conspicuous reference to the location of the
disclosures and indicates that the disclosures contain rate, fee,
and other cost information, as applicable.
C.
Creditors could provide a link to the electronic disclosures on
or with the application as long as consumers cannot bypass the disclosures
before submitting the application. The link would take the consumer
to the disclosures, but the consumer need not be required to scroll
completely through the disclosures.
D.
The
disclosures could be located on the same web page as the application
without necessarily appearing on the initial screen, immediately preceding
the button that the consumer will click to submit the application.
Whatever method is used, a creditor need not
confirm that the consumer has read the disclosures.
3. Intermediary agent or broker. In
certain transactions involving an “intermediary agent or broker,”
a creditor may delay providing disclosures. A creditor may not delay
providing disclosures in transactions involving either a legal agent
(as determined by applicable law) or any other third party that is
not an “intermediary agent or broker.” In determining whether or not
a transaction involves an “intermediary agent or broker” the following
factors should be considered:
- The number of applications submitted by the broker
to the creditor as compared to the total number of applications received
by the creditor. The greater the percentage of total loan applications
submitted by the broker in any given period of time, the less likely
it is that the broker would be considered an “intermediary agent or
broker” of the creditor during the next period.
- The number of applications submitted by the broker
to the creditor as compared to the total number of applications received
by the broker. (This factor is applicable only if the creditor has
such information.) The greater the percentage of total loan applications
received by the broker that is submitted to a creditor in any given
period of time, the less likely it is that the broker would be considered
an “intermediary agent or broker” of the creditor during the next
period.
- The amount of work (such as document preparation)
the creditor expects to be done by the broker on an application based
on the creditor’s prior dealings with the broker and on the creditor’s
requirements for accepting applications, taking into consideration
the customary practice of brokers in a particular area. The more work
that the creditor expects the broker to do on an application, in excess
of what is usually expected of a broker in that area, the less likely
it is that the broker would be considered an “intermediary agent or
broker” of the creditor.
An example of an “intermediary agent or broker”
is a broker who, customarily within a brief time after receiving an
application, inquires about the credit terms of several creditors
with whom the broker does business and submits the application to
one of them. The broker is responsible for only a small percentage
of the applications received by that creditor. During the time the
broker has the application, it might request a credit report and an
appraisal (or even prepare an entire loan package if customary in
that particular area).
4. Other variable-rate regulations. Transactions in which the creditor
is required to comply with and has complied with the disclosure requirements
of the variable-rate regulations of other federal agencies are exempt
from the requirements of section 226.19(b), by virtue of footnote
45a, and are exempt from the requirements of section 226.20(c), by
virtue of footnote 45c. Those variable-rate regulations include the
regulations issued by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board and those issued
by the Department of Housing and Urban Development. The exception
in footnotes 45a and 45c is also available to creditors that are required
by state law to comply with the federal variable-rate regulations
noted above and to creditors that are authorized by title VIII of
the Depository Institutions Act of 1982 (12 USC 3801 et seq.) to make
loans in accordance with those regulations. Creditors using this exception
should comply with the timing requirements of those regulations rather
than the timing requirements of Regulation Z in making the variable-rate
disclosures.
5. Examples
of variable-rate transactions. i. The following transactions,
if they have a term greater than one year and are secured by the consumer’s
principal dwelling, constitute variable-rate transactions subject
to the disclosure requirements of section 226.19(b).
A.
Renewable
balloon-payment instruments where the creditor is both unconditionally
obligated to renew the balloon-payment loan at the consumer’s option
(or is obligated to renew subject to conditions within the consumer’s
control) and has the option of increasing the interest rate at the
time of renewal. (See comment 17(c)(1)-11 for a discussion of conditions
within a consumer’s control in connection with renewable balloon-payment
loans.)
B.
Preferred-rate loans where the terms of the legal obligation provide
that the initial underlying rate is fixed but will increase upon the
occurrence of some event, such as an employee leaving the employ of the creditor,
and the note reflects the preferred rate. The disclosures under section
226.19(b)(1) and 226.19(b)(2)(v), (viii), (ix), and (xii) are not
applicable to such loans.
C.
“Price-level-adjusted mortgages” or other indexed mortgages that
have a fixed rate of interest but provide for periodic adjustments
to payments and the loan balance to reflect changes in an index measuring
prices or inflation. The disclosures under section 226.19(b)(1) are
not applicable to such loans, nor are the following provisions to
the extent they relate to the determination of the interest rate by
the addition of a margin, changes in the interest rate, or interest-rate
discounts: section 226.19(b)(2)(i), (iii), (iv), (v), (vi), (vii),
(viii) and (ix). (See comments 20(c)-2 and 30-1 regarding the inapplicability
of variable-rate adjustment notices and interest-rate limitations
to price-level-adjusted or similar mortgages.)
ii. Graduated-payment mortgages and step-rate transactions
without a variable-rate feature are not considered variable-rate transactions.
6-1177.16
Paragraph 19(b)(1) 1. Substitutes. Creditors
who wish to use publications other than the Consumer Handbook on
Adjustable Rate Mortgages must make a good faith determination
that their brochures are suitable substitutes to the Consumer Handbook. A substitute is suitable if it is, at a minimum, comparable to the Consumer Handbook in substance and comprehensiveness. Creditors
are permitted to provide more detailed information than is contained
in the Consumer Handbook.
2. Applicability. The Consumer Handbook need not be given for variable-rate transactions subject to this
section in which the underlying interest rate is fixed. (See comment
19(b)-5 for an example of a variable-rate transaction where the underlying
interest rate is fixed.)
6-1177.17
Paragraph 19(b)(2) 1. Disclosure for each variable-rate
program. A creditor must provide disclosures to the consumer
that fully describe each of the creditor’s variable-rate loan programs
in which the consumer expresses an interest. If a program is made
available only to certain customers of an institution, a creditor
need not provide disclosures for that program to other consumers who
express a general interest in a creditor’s ARM programs. Disclosures
must be given at the time an application form is provided or before
the consumer pays a nonrefundable fee, whichever is earlier. If program
disclosures cannot be provided because a consumer expresses an interest
in individually negotiating loan terms that are not generally offered,
disclosures reflecting those terms may be provided as soon as reasonably
possible after the terms have been decided upon, but not later than
the time a nonrefundable fee is paid. If a consumer who has received
program disclosures subsequently expresses an interest in other available
variable-rate programs subject to section 226.19(b)(2), or the creditor
and consumer decide on a program for which the consumer has not received
disclosures, the creditor must provide appropriate disclosures as
soon as reasonably possible. The creditor, of course, is permitted
to give the consumer information about additional programs subject
to section 226.19(b) initially.
2. Variable-rate loan program defined. i.
Generally, if the identification, the presence or absence, or the
exact value of a loan feature must be disclosed under this section,
variable-rate loans that differ as to such features constitute separate
loan programs. For example, separate loan programs would exist based
on differences in any of the following loan features:
A.
The
index or other formula used to calculate interest-rate adjustments
B.
The
rules relating to changes in the index value, interest rate, payments,
and loan balance
C.
The presence or absence of, and the amount of, rate or payment caps
D.
The
presence of a demand feature
E.
The possibility of negative amortization
F.
The
possibility of interest-rate carryover
G.
The
frequency of interest-rate and payment adjustments
H.
The
presence of a discount feature
I.
In
addition, if a loan feature must be taken into account in preparing
the disclosures required by section 226.19(b)(2)(viii) and (x), variable-rate
loans that differ as to that feature constitute separate programs
under section 226.19(b)(2).
ii. If, however, a representative value may be given for
a loan feature or the feature need not be disclosed under section
226.19(b)(2), variable-rate loans that differ as to such features
do not constitute separate loan programs. For example, separate loan
programs would not exist based on differences in the following loan
features:
A.
The
amount of a discount
B.
The
amount of a margin
3. Form of program
disclosures. A creditor may provide separate program disclosure
forms for each ARM program it offers or a single disclosure form that
describes multiple programs. A disclosure form may consist of more
than one page. For example, a creditor may attach a separate page
containing the historical payment example for a particular program.
A disclosure form describing more than one program need not repeat
information applicable to each program that is described. For example,
a form describing multiple programs may disclose the information applicable
to all of the programs in one place with the various program features
(such as options permitting conversion to a fixed rate) disclosed
separately. The form, however, must state if any program feature that
is described is available only in conjunction with certain other program
features. Both the separate- and multiple-program disclosures may
illustrate more than one loan maturity or payment amortization—for
example, by including multiple-payment and loan-balance columns in
the historical payment example. Disclosures may be inserted or printed
in the Consumer Handbook (or a suitable substitute) as long
as they are identified as the creditor’s loan-program disclosures.
4. As
applicable. The disclosures required by this section need only
be made as applicable. Any disclosure not relevant to a particular
transaction may be eliminated. For example, if the transaction does
not contain a demand feature, the disclosure required under section
226.19(b)(2)(x) need not be given. As used in this section, “payment”
refers only to a payment based on the interest rate, loan balance,
and loan term and does not refer to payment of other elements such
as mortgage insurance premiums.
5. Revisions. A creditor must revise the disclosures
required under this section once a year as soon as reasonably possible
after the new index value becomes available. Revisions to the disclosures
also are required when the loan program changes.
6-1177.18
Paragraph 19(b)(2)(i) 1. Change in interest rate,
payment, or term. A creditor must disclose the fact that the
terms of the legal obligation permit the creditor, after consummation
of the transaction, to increase (or decrease) the interest rate, payment,
or term of the loan initially disclosed to the consumer. For example,
the disclosures for a variable-rate program in which the interest
rate and payment (but not loan term) can change might read, “Your
interest rate and payment can change yearly.” In transactions where
the term of the loan may change due to rate fluctuations, the creditor
must state that fact.
6-1177.19
Paragraph 19(b)(2)(ii) 1. Identification of index or
formula. If a creditor ties interest-rate changes to a particular
index, this fact must be disclosed, along with a source of information
about the index. For example, if a creditor uses the weekly average
yield on U.S. Treasury securities adjusted to a constant maturity
as its index, the disclosure might read, “Your index is the weekly
average yield on U.S. Treasury securities adjusted to a constant maturity
of one year published weekly in the Wall Street Journal.” If
no particular index is used, the creditor must briefly describe the
formula used to calculate interest-rate changes.
2. Changes at creditor’s discretion. If interest-rate changes are at the creditor’s discretion, this
fact must be disclosed. If an index is internally defined, such as
by a creditor’s prime rate, the creditor should either briefly describe
that index or state that interest-rate changes are at the creditor’s
discretion.
6-1177.2
Paragraph 19(b)(2)(iii) 1. Determination of interest
rate and payment. This provision requires an explanation of how
the creditor will determine the consumer’s interest rate and payment.
In cases where a creditor bases its interest rate on a specific index
and adjusts the index through the addition of a margin, for example,
the disclosure might read, “Your interest rate is based on the index
plus a margin, and your payment will be based on the interest rate,
loan balance, and remaining loan term.” In transactions where paying
the periodic payments will not fully amortize the outstanding balance
at the end of the loan term and where the final payment will equal
the periodic payment plus the remaining unpaid balance, the creditor
must disclose this fact. For example, the disclosure might read, “Your
periodic payments will not fully amortize your loan and you will be
required to make a single payment of the periodic payment plus the
remaining unpaid balance at the end of the loan term.” The creditor,
however, need not reflect any irregular final payment in the historical
example or in the disclosure of the initial and maximum rates and
payments. If applicable, the creditor should also disclose that the
rate and payment will be rounded.
6-1177.21
Paragraph 19(b)(2)(iv) 1. Current margin value and
interest rate. Because the disclosures can be prepared in advance,
the interest rate and margin may be several months old when the disclosures
are delivered. A statement, therefore, is required alerting consumers
to the fact that they should inquire about the current margin value
applied to the index and the current interest rate. For example, the
disclosure might state, “Ask us for our current interest rate and
margin.”
6-1177.22
Paragraph 19(b)(2)(v) 1. Discounted and premium
interest rate. In some variable-rate transactions, creditors
may set an initial interest rate that is not determined by the index
or formula used to make later interest-rate adjustments. Typically,
this initial rate charged to consumers is lower than the rate would
be if it were calculated using the index or formula. However, in some
cases the initial rate may be higher. If the initial interest rate
will be a discount or a premium rate, creditors must alert the consumer
to this fact. For example, if a creditor discounted a consumer’s initial
rate, the disclosure might state, “Your initial interest rate is not
based on the index used to make later adjustments.” (See the commentary
to section 226.17(c)(1) for a further discussion of discounted and
premium variable-rate transactions). In addition, the disclosure must
suggest that consumers inquire about the amount that the program is
currently discounted. For example, the disclosure might state, “Ask
us for the amount our adjustable-rate mortgages are currently discounted.”
In a transaction with a consumer buydown or with a third-party buydown
that will be incorporated in the legal obligation, the creditor should
disclose the program as a discounted variable-rate transaction, but
need not disclose additional information regarding the buydown in
its program disclosures. (See the commentary to section 226.19(b)(2)(viii)
for a discussion of how to reflect the discount or premium in the
historical example or the maximum rate and payment disclosure.)
6-1177.23
Paragraph 19(b)(2)(vi) 1. Frequency. The frequency
of interest-rate and payment adjustments must be disclosed. If interest-rate
changes will be imposed more frequently or at different intervals
than payment changes, a creditor must disclose the frequency and timing
of both types of changes. For example, in a variable-rate transaction
where interest-rate changes are made monthly, but payment changes
occur on an annual basis, this fact must be disclosed. In certain
ARM transactions, the interval between loan closing and the initial
adjustment is not known and may be different from the regular interval
for adjustments. In such cases, the creditor may disclose the initial
adjustment period as a range of the minimum and maximum amount of
time from consummation or closing. For example, the creditor might
state: “The first adjustment to your interest rate and payment will
occur no sooner than 6 months and no later than 18 months after closing.
Subsequent adjustments may occur once each year after the first adjustment.”
(See comments 19(b)(2)(viii)(A)-7 and 19(b)(2)(viii)(B)-4 for guidance
on other disclosures when this alternative disclosure rule is used.)
6-1177.24
Paragraph 19(b)(2)(vii) 1. Rate and payment caps. The creditor must disclose limits on changes (increases or decreases)
in the interest rate or payment. If an initial discount is not taken
into account in applying overall or periodic rate limitations, that
fact must be disclosed. If separate overall or periodic limitations
apply to interest-rate increases resulting from other events, such
as the exercise of a fixed-rate conversion option or leaving the creditor’s
employ, those limitations must also be stated. Limitations do not
include legal limits in the nature of usury or rate ceilings under
state or federal statutes or regulations. (See section 226.30 for
the rule requiring that a maximum interest rate be included in certain
variable-rate transactions.) The creditor need not disclose each periodic
or overall rate limitation that is currently available. As an alternative,
the creditor may disclose the range of the lowest and highest periodic
and overall rate limitations that may be applicable to the creditor’s
ARM transactions. For example, the creditor might state: “The limitation
on increases to your interest rate at each adjustment will be set
at an amount in the following range: between 1 and 2 percentage points
at each adjustment. The limitation on increases to your interest rate
over the term of the loan will be set at an amount in the following
range: between 4 and 7 percentage points above the initial interest
rate.” A creditor using this alternative rule must include a statement
in its program disclosures suggesting that the consumer ask about
the overall rate limitations currently offered for the creditor’s
ARM programs. (See comments 19(b)(2)(viii)(A)-6 and 19(b)(2)(viii)(B)-3
for an explanation of the additional requirements for a creditor using
this alternative rule for disclosure of periodic and overall rate
limitations.)
2. Negative
amortization and interest-rate carryover. A creditor must disclose,
where applicable, the possibility of negative amortization. For example,
the disclosure might state, “If any of your payments is not sufficient
to cover the interest due, the difference will be added to your loan
amount.” Loans that provide for more than one way to trigger negative
amortization are separate variable-rate programs requiring separate
disclosures. (See the commentary to section 226.19(b)(2) for a discussion
on the definition of a variable-rate loan program and the format for
disclosure.) If a consumer is given the option to cap monthly payments
that may result in negative amortization, the creditor must fully
disclose the rules relating to the option, including the effects of
exercising the option (such as negative amortization will occur and
the principal loan balance will increase); however, the disclosure
in section 226.19(b)(2)(viii) need not be provided.
3. Conversion option. If a loan program
permits consumers to convert their variable-rate loans to fixed-rate
loans, the creditor must disclose that the interest rate may increase
if the
consumer converts the loan to a fixed-rate loan. The creditor must
also disclose the rules relating to the conversion feature, such as
the period during which the loan may be converted, that fees may be
charged at conversion, and how the fixed rate will be determined.
The creditor should identify any index or other measure or formula
used to determine the fixed rate and state any margin to be added.
In disclosing the period during which the loan may be converted and
the margin, the creditor may use information applicable to the conversion
feature during the six months preceding preparation of the disclosures
and state that the information is representative of conversion features
recently offered by the creditor. The information may be used until
the program disclosures are otherwise revised. Although the rules
relating to the conversion option must be disclosed, the effect of
exercising the option should not be reflected elsewhere in the disclosures,
such as in the historical example or in the calculation of the initial
and maximum interest rate and payments.
4. Preferred-rate loans. Section 226.19(b)
applies to preferred-rate loans, where the rate will increase upon
the occurrence of some event, such as an employee leaving the creditor’s
employ, whether or not the underlying rate is fixed or variable. In
these transactions, the creditor must disclose the event that would
allow the creditor to increase the rate such as that the rate may
increase if the employee leaves the creditor’s employ. The creditor
must also disclose the rules relating to termination of the preferred
rate, such as that fees may be charged when the rate is changed and
how the new rate will be determined.
6-1177.25
Paragraph 19(b)(2)(viii) 1. Historical example and initial
and maximum interest rates and payments. A creditor may disclose
both the historical example and the initial and maximum interest rates
and payments.
Paragraph 19(b)(2)(viii)(A) 1. Index movement. This section requires a creditor to provide an historical example,
based on a $10,000 loan amount originating in 1977, showing how interest-rate
changes implemented according to the terms of the loan program would
have affected payments and the loan balance at the end of each year
during a 15-year period. (In all cases, the creditor need only calculate
the payments and loan balance for the term of the loan. For example,
in a five-year loan, a creditor would show the payments and loan balance
for the five-year term, from 1977 to 1981, with a zero loan balance
reflected for 1981. For the remaining ten years, 1982-1991, the creditor
need only show the remaining index values, margin, and interest rate
and must continue to reflect all significant loan-program terms such
as rate limitations affecting them.) Pursuant to this section, the
creditor must provide a history of index values for the preceding
15 years. Initially, the disclosures would give the index values from
1977 to the present. Each year thereafter, the revised program disclosures
should include an additional year’s index value until 15 years of
values are shown. If the values for an index have not been available
for 15 years, a creditor need only go back as far as the values are
available in giving a history and payment example. In all cases, only
one index value per year need be shown. Thus, in transactions where
interest-rate adjustments are implemented more frequently than once
per year, a creditor may assume that the interest rate and payment
resulting from the index value chosen will stay in effect for the
entire year for purposes of calculating the loan balance as of the
end of the year and for reflecting other loan-program terms. In cases
where interest-rate changes are at the creditor’s discretion (see
the commentary to section 226.19(b)(2)(ii)), the creditor must provide
a history of the rates imposed for the preceding 15 years, beginning
with the rates in 1977. In giving this history, the creditor need
only go back as far as the creditor’s rates can reasonably be determined.
2. Selection of index
values. The historical example must reflect the method by which
index values are determined under the program. If a creditor uses an average
of index values or any other index formula, the history given should
reflect those values. The creditor should select one date or, when
an average of single values is used as an index, one period and should
base the example on index values measured as of that same date or
period for each year shown in the history. A date or period at any
time during the year may be selected, but the same date or period
must be used for each year in the historical example. For example,
a creditor could use values for the first business day in July or
for the first week ending in July for each of the 15 years shown in
the example.
3. Selection
of margin. For purposes of the disclosure required under section
226.19 (b)(2)(viii)(A), a creditor may select a representative margin
that has been used during the six months preceding preparation of
the disclosures, and should disclose that the margin is one that the
creditor has used recently. The margin selected may be used until
a creditor revises the disclosure form.
4. Amount of discount or premium. For purposes
of the disclosure required under section 226.19(b)(2)(viii)(A), a
creditor may select a discount or premium (amount and term) that has
been used during the six months preceding preparation of the disclosures,
and should disclose that the discount or premium is one that the creditor
has used recently. The discount or premium should be reflected in
the historical example for as long as the discount or premium is in
effect. A creditor may assume that a discount that would have been
in effect for any part of a year was in effect for the full year for
purposes of reflecting it in the historical example. For example,
a 3-month discount may be treated as being in effect for the entire
first year of the example; a 15-month discount may be treated as being
in effect for the first two years of the example. In illustrating
the effect of the discount or premium, creditors should adjust the
value of the interest rate in the historical example, and should not
adjust the margin or index values. For example, if during the six
months preceding preparation of the disclosures the fully indexed
rate would have been 10 percent but the first year’s rate under the
program was 8 percent, the creditor would discount the first interest
rate in the historical example by 2 percentage points.
5. Term of the loan. In
calculating the payments and loan balances in the historical example,
a creditor need not base the disclosures on each term to maturity
or payment amortization that it offers. Instead, disclosures for ARMs
may be based upon terms to maturity or payment amortizations of 5,
15, and 30 years, as follows: ARMs with terms or amortizations from
over 1 year to 10 years may be based on a 5-year term or amortization;
ARMs with terms or amortizations from over 10 years to 20 years may
be based on a 15-year term or amortization; and ARMs with terms or
amortizations over 20 years may be based on a 30-year term or amortization.
Thus, disclosures for ARMs offered with any term from over 1 year
to 40 years may be based solely on terms of 5, 15, and 30 years. Of
course, a creditor may always base the disclosures on the actual terms
or amortizations offered. If the creditor bases the disclosures on
5-, 15-, or 30-year terms or payment amortizations as provided above,
the term or payment amortization used in making the disclosure must
be stated.
6. Rate caps. A creditor using the alternative rule described in comment 19(b)(2)(vii)-1
for disclosure of rate limitations must base the historical example
upon the highest periodic and overall rate limitations disclosed under
section 226.19(b)(2)(vii). In addition, the creditor must state the
limitations used in the historical example. (See comment 19(b)(2)(viii)(B)-3
for an explanation of the use of the highest rate limitation in other
disclosures.)
7. Frequency
of adjustments. In certain transactions, creditors may use the
alternative rule described in comment 19(b)(2)(vi)-1 for disclosure
of the frequency of rate and payment adjustments. In such cases, the
creditor may assume for purposes of the historical example that the
first adjustment occurred at the end of the first full year in which
the adjustment could occur. For example, in an ARM in which the first adjustment
may occur between 6 and 18 months after closing and annually thereafter,
the creditor may assume that the first adjustment occurred at the
end of the first year in the historical example. (See comment 19(b)(viii)(B)(x)-4
for an explanation of how to compute the maximum interest rate and
payment when the initial adjustment period is not known.)
6-1177.26
Paragraph 19(b)(2)(viii)(B) 1. Initial and maximum
interest rates and payments. The disclosure form must state the
initial and maximum interest rates and payments for a $10,000 loan
originated at an initial interest rate (index value plus margin adjusted
by the amount of any discount or premium) in effect as of an identified
month and year for the loan-program disclosure. (See comment 19(b)(2)-5
on revisions to the loan-program disclosure.) In calculating the maximum
payment under this paragraph, a creditor should assume that the interest-rate
increases as rapidly as possible under the loan program, and the maximum
payment disclosed should reflect the amortization of the loan during
this period. Thus, in a loan with 2 percentage point annual (and 5
percentage point overall) interest-rate limitations or “caps,” the
maximum interest rate would be 5 percentage points higher than the
initial interest rate disclosed. Moreover, the loan would not reach
the maximum interest rate until the fourth year because of the 2 percentage
point annual rate limitations, and the maximum payment disclosed would
reflect the amortization of the loan during this period. If the loan
program includes a discounted or premium initial interest rate, the
initial interest rate should be adjusted by the amount of the discount
or premium.
2. Term
of the loan. In calculating the initial and maximum payments,
the creditor need not base the disclosures on each term to maturity
or payment amortization offered under the program. Instead, the creditor
may follow the rules set out in comment 19(b)(2)(viii)(A)-5. If a
historical example is provided under section 226.19(b)(2)(viii)(A),
the terms to maturity or payment amortization used in the historical
example must be used in calculating the initial and maximum payment.
In addition, creditors must state the term or payment amortization
used in making the disclosures under this section.
3. Rate caps. A creditor using the
alternative rule for disclosure of interest-rate limitations described
in comment 19(b)(2)(vii)-1 must calculate the maximum interest rate
and payments based upon the highest periodic and overall rate limitations
disclosed under section 226.19(b)(2)(vii). In addition, the creditor
must state the rate limitations used in calculating the maximum interest
rate and payment. (See comment 19(b)(2)(viii)(A)-6 for an explanation
of the use of the highest rate limitation in other disclosures.)
4. Frequency of adjustments. In certain transactions, a creditor may use the alternative rule
for disclosure of the frequency of rate and payment adjustments described
in comment 19(b)(2)(vi)-1. In such cases, the creditor must base the
calculations of the initial and maximum rates and payments upon the
earliest possible first adjustment disclosed under section 226.19(b)(2)(vi).
(See comment 19(b) (2)(viii)(A)-7 for an explanation of how to disclose
the historical example when the initial adjustment period is not known.)
5. Periodic payment statement. The statement that the periodic payment may increase or decrease
substantially may be satisfied by the disclosure in paragraph 19(b)(2)(vi)
if it states, for example, “your monthly payment can increase or decrease
substantially based on annual changes in the interest rate.”
6-1177.27
Paragraph 19(b)(2)(ix) 1. Calculation of payments. A creditor is required to include a statement on the disclosure
form that explains how a consumer may calculate his or her actual
monthly payments for a loan amount other than $10,000. The example
should be based upon the most recent payment shown in the historical
example or upon the initial interest rate reflected in the maximum rate
and payment disclosure. In transactions in which the latest payment
shown in the historical example is not for the latest year of index
values shown (such as in a five-year loan), a creditor may provide
additional examples based on the initial and maximum payments disclosed
under section 226.19(b)(2)(viii)(B). The creditor, however, is not
required to calculate the consumer’s payments. (See the model clauses
in appendix H-4(C).)
6-1177.28
Paragraph 19(b)(2)(x) 1. Demand feature. If
a variable-rate loan subject to section 226.19(b) requirements contains
a demand feature, as discussed in the commentary to section 226.18(i),
this fact must be disclosed. (Pursuant to section 226.18(i), creditors
would also disclose the demand feature in the standard disclosures
given later.)
6-1177.29
Paragraph
19(b)(2)(xi) 1. Adjustment notices. A creditor must disclose to the consumer
the type of information that will be contained in subsequent notices
of adjustments and when such notices will be provided. (See the commentary
to section 226.20(c) regarding notices of adjustments.) For example,
the disclosure might state, “You will be notified at least 25, but
no more than 120, days before the due date of a payment at a new level.
This notice will contain information about the index and interest
rates, payment amount, and loan balance.” In transactions where there
may be interest-rate adjustments without accompanying payment adjustments
in a year, the disclosure might read, “You will be notified once each
year during which interest-rate adjustments, but no payment adjustments,
have been made to your loan. This notice will contain information
about the index and interest rates, payment amount, and loan balance.”
6-1177.3
Paragraph 19(b)(2)(xii) 1. Multiple loan programs. A creditor that offers multiple variable-rate loan programs is required
to have disclosures for each variable-rate loan program subject to
section 226.19(b)(2). Unless disclosures for all of its variable-rate
programs are provided initially, the creditor must inform the consumer
that other closed-end variable-rate programs exist and that disclosure
forms are available for these additional loan programs. For example,
the disclosure form might state, “Information on other adjustable-rate
mortgage programs is available upon request.”