The Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council (FFIEC) member agencies (agencies) promote compliance
with federal consumer protection laws and regulations through supervisory
and outreach programs.
1 The agencies engage in consumer compliance supervision to assess
whether a financial institution is meeting its responsibility to comply
with these requirements.
This Uniform Interagency Consumer Compliance Rating System
(CC Rating System) provides a general framework for assessing risks
during the supervisory process using certain compliance factors and
assigning an overall consumer compliance rating to each federally
regulated financial institution.
2 The primary purpose of the CC Rating System
is to ensure that regulated financial institutions are evaluated in
a comprehensive and consistent manner, and that supervisory resources
are appropriately focused on areas exhibiting risk of consumer harm
and on institutions that warrant elevated supervisory attention.
The CC Rating System is composed of guidance and definitions.
The guidance provides examiners with direction on how to use the definitions
when assigning a consumer compliance rating to an institution. The
definitions consist of qualitative descriptions for each rating category
and include compliance management system (CMS) elements reflecting
risk control processes designed to manage consumer compliance risk
and considerations regarding violations of laws, consumer harm, and
the size, complexity, and risk profile of an institution. The consumer
compliance rating reflects the effectiveness of an institution’s CMS
to ensure compliance with consumer protection laws and regulations
and reduce the risk of harm to consumers.
Principles of the Interagency CC Rating
System The agencies developed the following
principles to serve as a foundation for the CC Rating System.
Risk-based. Recognize and
communicate clearly that CMS vary based on the size, complexity, and
risk profile of supervised institutions.
Transparent. Provide clear distinctions between
rating categories to support consistent application by the agencies
across supervised institutions. Reflect the scope of the review that
formed the basis of the overall rating.
Actionable. Identify areas of strength and direct
appropriate attention to specific areas of weakness, reflecting a risk-based
supervisory approach. Convey examiners’ assessment of the effectiveness
of an institution’s CMS, including its ability to prevent consumer
harm and ensure compliance with consumer protection laws and regulations.
Incent compliance. Incent the institution to establish
an effective consumer compliance system across the institution and
to identify and address issues promptly, including self-identification
and correction of consumer compliance weaknesses. Reflect the potential
impact of any consumer harm identified in examination findings.
Five-Level Rating Scale The CC Rating System is based upon a numeric scale
of 1 through 5 in increasing order of supervisory concern. Thus, 1
represents the highest rating and consequently the lowest degree of
supervisory concern, while 5 represents the lowest rating and the
most critically deficient level of performance, and therefore, the
highest degree of supervisory concern.
3 Ratings of 1 or 2 represent satisfactory or
better performance. Ratings of 3, 4, or 5 indicate performance that
is less than satisfactory. Consistent with the previously described
principles, the rating system incents a financial institution to establish
an effective CMS across the institution, to self-identify risks, and
to take the necessary actions to reduce the risk of noncompliance
and consumer harm.
- The highest rating of 1 is assigned to a financial
institution that maintains a strong CMS and takes action to prevent
violations of law and consumer harm.
- A rating of 2 is assigned to a financial institution
that maintains a CMS that is satisfactory at managing consumer compliance
risk in the institution’s products and services and at substantially
limiting violations of law and consumer harm.
- A rating of 3 reflects a CMS deficient at managing
consumer compliance risk in the institution’s products and services
and at limiting violations of law and consumer harm.
- A rating of 4 reflects a CMS seriously deficient
at managing consumer compliance risk in the institution’s products
and services and/or at preventing violations of law and consumer harm. Seriously deficient indicates fundamental and persistent weaknesses
in crucial CMS elements and severe inadequacies in core compliance
areas necessary to operate within the scope of statutory and regulatory
consumer protection requirements and to prevent consumer harm.
- A rating of 5 reflects a CMS critically deficient
at managing consumer compliance risk in the institution’s products
and services and/or at preventing violations of law and consumer harm. Critically deficient indicates an absence of crucial CMS elements
and a demonstrated lack of willingness or capability to take the appropriate
steps necessary to operate within the scope of statutory and regulatory
consumer protection requirements and to prevent consumer harm.
CC Rating System Categories
and Assessment Factors CC Rating System—Categories
The CC Rating System is organized under three broad categories:
The Consumer Compliance Rating Definitions below (see table) list the assessment factors considered within each category,
along with narrative descriptions of performance.
The first two categories, Board and Management
Oversight and Compliance Program, are used to assess a financial institution’s
CMS. As such, examiners should evaluate the assessment factors within
these two categories commensurate with the institution’s size, complexity,
and risk profile. All institutions, regardless of size, should maintain
an effective CMS. The sophistication and formality of the CMS typically
will increase commensurate with the size, complexity, and risk profile
of the entity.
Additionally, compliance expectations contained within
the narrative descriptions of these two categories extend to third-party
relationships into which the financial institution has entered. There
can be certain benefits to financial institutions engaging in relationships
with third parties, including gaining operational efficiencies or
an ability to deliver additional products and services, but such arrangements
also may expose financial institutions to risks if not managed effectively.
The prudential agencies, the CFPB, and some states have issued guidance
describing expectations regarding oversight of third-party relationships.
While an institution’s management may make the business decision to
outsource some or all of the operational aspects of a product or service,
the institution cannot outsource the responsibility for complying
with laws and regulations or managing the risks associated with third-party
relationships.
As noted in the Consumer Compliance Rating Definitions,
examiners should evaluate activities conducted through third-party
relationships as though the activities were performed by the institution
itself. Examiners should review a financial institution’s management
of third-party relationships and servicers as part of its overall
compliance program.
The third category, Violations of Law and Consumer Harm,
includes assessment factors that evaluate the dimensions of any identified
violation or consumer harm. Examiners should weigh each of these four
factors—root cause, severity, duration, and pervasiveness—in evaluating
relevant violations of law and any resulting consumer harm.
Board and Management Oversight—Assessment
Factors Under Board and Management Oversight,
the examiner should assess the financial institution’s board of directors
and management, as appropriate for their respective roles and responsibilities,
based on the following assessment factors:
- oversight of and commitment to the institution’s CMS;
- effectiveness of the institution’s change management
processes, including responding timely and satisfactorily to any variety
of change, internal or external, to the institution;
- comprehension, identification, and management of risks
arising from the institution’s products, services, or activities;
and
- self-identification of consumer compliance issues
and corrective action undertaken as such issues are identified.
Compliance Program—Assessment
Factors Under Compliance Program, the
examiner should assess other elements of an effective CMS, based on
the following assessment factors:
- whether the institution’s policies and procedures
are appropriate to the risk in the products, services, and activities
of the institution;
- the degree to which compliance training is current
and tailored to risk and staff responsibilities;
- the sufficiency of the monitoring and, if applicable,
audit to encompass compliance risks throughout the institution; and
- the responsiveness and effectiveness of the consumer
complaint resolution process.
Violations of Law and Consumer
Harm—Assessment Factors Under Violations of Law and Consumer Harm, the examiner should analyze
the following assessment factors:
- the root cause, or causes, of any violations of law
identified during the examination;
- the severity of any consumer harm resulting from
violations;
- the duration of time over which the violations occurred;
and
- the pervasiveness of the violations.
As a result of a violation of law, consumer harm may occur.
While many instances of consumer harm can be quantified as a dollar
amount associated with financial loss, such as charging higher fees
for a product than was initially disclosed, consumer harm may also
result from a denial of an opportunity. For
example, a consumer could be
harmed when a financial institution denies the consumer credit or
discourages an application in violation of the Equal Credit Opportunity
Act,
4 whether or not there is resulting financial
harm.
This category of the Consumer Compliance Rating Definitions
defines four factors by which examiners can assess violations of law
and consumer harm.
Root cause. The root cause assessment factor analyzes
the degree to which weaknesses in the CMS gave rise to the violations.
In many instances, the root cause of a violation is tied to a weakness
in one or more elements of the CMS. Violations that result from critical
deficiencies in the CMS evidence a critical absence of management
oversight and are of the highest supervisory concern.
Severity. The severity assessment factor
of the Consumer Compliance Rating Definitions weighs the type of consumer
harm, if any, that resulted from violations of law. More severe harm
results in a higher level of supervisory concern under this factor.
For example, some consumer protection violations may cause significant
financial harm to a consumer, while other violations may cause negligible
harm, based on the specific facts involved.
Duration. The duration assessment factor considers
the length of time over which the violations occurred. Violations
that persist over an extended period of time will raise greater supervisory
concerns than violations that occur for only a brief period of time.
When violations are brought to the attention of an institution’s management
and management allows those violations to remain unaddressed, such
violations are of the highest supervisory concern.
Pervasiveness. The pervasiveness assessment
factor evaluates the extent of the violation(s) and resulting consumer
harm, if any. Violations that affect a large number of consumers will
raise greater supervisory concern than violations that impact a limited
number of consumers. If violations become so pervasive that they are
considered to be widespread or present in multiple products or services,
the institution’s performance under this factor is of the highest
supervisory concern.
Self-Identification of Violations of Law and Consumer Harm
Strong compliance programs are proactive. They
promote consumer protection by preventing, self-identifying, and addressing
compliance issues in a proactive manner. Accordingly, the CC Rating
System provides incentives for such practices through the definitions
associated with a 1 rating.
The agencies believe that self-identification and prompt
correction of violations of law reflect strengths in an institution’s
CMS. A robust CMS appropriate for the size, complexity, and risk profile
of an institution’s business often will prevent violations or will
facilitate early detection of potential violations. This early detection
can limit the size and scope of consumer harm. Moreover, self-identification
and prompt correction of serious violations represents concrete evidence
of an institution’s commitment to responsibly address underlying risks.
In addition, appropriate corrective action, including both correction
of programmatic weaknesses and full redress for injured parties, limits
consumer harm and prevents violations from recurring in the future.
Thus, the CC Rating System recognizes institutions that consistently
adopt these strategies as reflected in the Consumer Compliance Rating
Definitions.
Evaluating Performance Using the CC Rating Definitions
The consumer compliance rating is derived through an evaluation
of the financial institution’s performance under each of the assessment
factors described above. The consumer compliance rating reflects the
effectiveness of an institution’s CMS to identify and manage compliance
risk in the institution’s products and services and to prevent violations
of law and consumer harm, as evidenced by the financial institution’s
performance under each of the assessment factors.
The consumer compliance rating reflects a comprehensive
evaluation of the financial institution’s performance under the CC
Rating System by considering the categories and assessment factors
in the context of the size, complexity, and risk profile of an institution.
It is not based on a numeric average or any other quantitative calculation.
Specific numeric ratings will not be assigned to any of the 12 assessment
factors. Thus, an institution need not achieve a satisfactory assessment
in all categories in order to be assigned an overall satisfactory
rating. Conversely, an institution may be assigned a less than satisfactory
rating even if some of its assessments were satisfactory.
The relative importance of each
category or assessment factor may differ based on the size, complexity,
and risk profile of an individual institution. Accordingly, one or
more category or assessment factor may be more or less relevant at
one financial institution as compared to another institution. While
the expectations for compliance with consumer protection laws and
regulations are the same across institutions of varying sizes, the
methods for accomplishing an effective CMS may differ across institutions.
The evaluation of an institution’s performance within
the violations of law and consumer harm category of the CC Rating
Definitions considers each of the four assessment factors: root cause,
severity, duration, and pervasiveness. At the levels of 4 and 5 in
this category, the distinctions in the definitions are focused on
the root cause assessment factor rather than severity, duration, and
pervasiveness. This approach is consistent with the other categories
where the difference between a 4 and a 5 is driven by the institution’s
capacity and willingness to maintain a sound consumer compliance system.
In arriving at the final rating, the examiner must balance
potentially differing conclusions about the effectiveness of the financial
institution’s CMS over the individual products, services, and activities
of the organization. Depending on the relative materiality of a product
line to the institution, an observed weakness in the management of
that product line may or may not impact the conclusion about the institution’s
overall performance in the associated assessment factor(s). For example,
serious weaknesses in the policies and procedures or audit program
of the mortgage department at a mortgage lender would be of greater
supervisory concern than those same gaps at an institution that makes
very few mortgage loans and strictly as an accommodation. Greater
weight should apply to the financial institution’s management of material
products with significant potential consumer compliance risk.
An institution may receive a less
than satisfactory rating even when no violations were identified,
based on deficiencies or weaknesses identified in the institution’s
CMS. For example, examiners may identify weaknesses in elements of
the CMS in a new loan product. Because the presence of those weaknesses
left unaddressed could result in future violations of law and consumer
harm, the CMS deficiencies could impact the overall consumer compliance
rating, even if no violations were identified.
Similarly, an institution may receive a 1 or
2 rating even when violations were present, if the CMS is commensurate
with the risk profile and complexity of the institution. For example,
when violations involve limited impact on consumers, were self-identified,
and resolved promptly, the evaluation may result in a 1 or 2 rating.
After evaluating the institution’s performance in the two CMS categories,
Board and Management Oversight and Compliance Program, and the dimensions
of the violations in the third category, the examiner may conclude
that the overall strength of the CMS and the nature of observed violations
viewed together do not present significant supervisory concerns.
Assignment of Ratings by Supervisor(s) The prudential regulators will continue
to assign and update, as appropriate, consumer compliance ratings
for institutions they supervise, including those with total assets
of more than $10 billion.
5 As a member of the FFIEC, the CFPB will also use the CC Rating
System
to assign a consumer compliance rating, as appropriate, for institutions
with total assets of more than $10 billion, as well as for nonbanks
for which it has jurisdiction regarding the enforcement of
federal
consumer financial laws as defined under the Dodd-Frank Act.
6 The prudential regulators will take into consideration any material
supervisory information provided by the CFPB, as that information
relates to covered supervisory activities or covered examinations.
7 Similarly, the CFPB will take into consideration any material
supervisory information provided by prudential regulators in appropriate
supervisory situations.
State regulators maintain supervisory authority to conduct
examinations of state-chartered depository institutions and licensed
entities. As such, states may assign consumer compliance ratings to
evaluate compliance with both state and federal laws and regulations.
States will collaborate and consider material supervisory information
from other state and federal regulatory agencies during the course
of examinations.
Consumer Compliance
Rating Definitions
ASSESSMENT FACTORS TO BE CONSIDERED |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
Board and Management
Oversight Board and management oversight factors should
be evaluated commensurate with the institution’s size, complexity,
and risk profile. Compliance expectations below extend to third-party
relationships. |
Oversight and Commitment |
Board and
management demonstrate strong commitment and oversight to the financial
institution’s compliance management system. |
Board
and management provide satisfactory oversight of the financial institution’s
compliance management system. |
Board and
management oversight of the financial institution’s compliance management
system is deficient. |
Board
and management oversight, resources, and attention to the compliance
management system are seriously deficient. |
Board and management oversight, resources, and attention to the compliance
management system are critically deficient. |
Substantial
compliance resources are provided, including systems, capital, and
human resources commensurate with the financial institution’s size,
complexity, and risk profile. Staff is knowledgeable, empowered, and
held accountable for compliance with consumer laws and regulations. |
Compliance
resources are adequate and staff is generally able to ensure the financial
institution is in compliance with consumer laws and regulations. |
Compliance
resources and staff are inadequate to ensure the financial institution
is in compliance with consumer laws and regulations. |
Compliance
resources and staff are seriously deficient and are ineffective at
ensuring the financial institution’s compliance with consumer laws
and regulations. |
Compliance resources are critically deficient in supporting the financial
institution’s compliance with consumer laws and regulations, and management
and staff are unwilling or incapable of operating within the scope
of consumer protection laws and regulations. |
Management
conducts comprehensive and ongoing due diligence and oversight of
third parties consistent with agency expectations to ensure that the
financial institution complies with consumer protection laws, and
exercises strong oversight of third parties’ policies, procedures,
internal controls, and training to ensure consistent oversight of
compliance responsibilities. |
Management
conducts adequate and ongoing due diligence and oversight of third
parties to ensure that the financial institution complies with consumer
protection laws, and adequately oversees third parties’ policies,
procedures, internal controls, and training to ensure appropriate
oversight of compliance responsibilities. |
Management
does not adequately conduct due diligence and oversight of third parties
to ensure that the financial institution complies with consumer protection
laws, nor does it adequately oversee third parties’ policies, procedures,
internal controls, and training to ensure appropriate oversight of
compliance responsibilities. |
Management
oversight and due diligence over third-party performance, as well
as management’s ability to adequately identify, measure, monitor,
or manage compliance risks, is seriously deficient. |
Management oversight and due diligence of third-party performance
is critically deficient. |
Change Management |
Management
anticipates and responds promptly to changes in applicable laws and
regulations, market conditions, and products and services offered
by evaluating the change and implementing responses across impacted
lines of business. |
Management
responds timely and adequately to changes in applicable laws and regulations,
market conditions, and products and services offered by evaluating
the change and implementing responses across impacted lines of business. |
Management
does not respond adequately and/or timely in adjusting to changes
in applicable laws and regulations, market conditions, and products
and services offered. |
Management’s
response to changes in applicable laws and regulations, market conditions,
or products and services offered is seriously deficient. |
Management fails to monitor and respond to changes in applicable
laws and regulations, market conditions, or products and services
offered. |
Management
conducts due diligence in advance of product changes, considers the
entire life cycle of a product or service in implementing change,
and reviews the change after implementation to determine that actions
taken have achieved planned results. |
Management
evaluates product changes before and after implementing the change. |
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|
|
Comprehension, Identification, and Management of Risk |
Management
has a solid comprehension of and effectively identifies compliance
risks, including emerging risks, in the financial institution’s products,
services, and other activities. |
Management
comprehends and adequately identifies compliance risks, including
emerging risks, in the financial institution’s products, services,
and other activities. |
Management
has an inadequate comprehension of and ability to identify compliance
risks, including emerging risks, in the financial institution’s products,
services, and other activities. |
Management
exhibits a seriously deficient comprehension of and ability to identify
compliance risks, including emerging risks, in the financial institution. |
Management does not comprehend nor identify compliance risks, including
emerging risks, in the financial institution. |
Management
actively engages in managing those risks, including through comprehensive
self-assessments. |
Management
adequately manages those risks, including through self-assessments. |
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|
|
Corrective Action and Self- Identification |
Management
proactively identifies issues and promptly responds to compliance
risk management deficiencies and any violations of laws or regulations,
including remediation. |
Management
adequately responds to and corrects deficiencies and/or violations,
including adequate remediation, in the normal course of business. |
Management
does not adequately respond to compliance deficiencies and violations
including those related to remediation. |
Management
response to deficiencies, violations, and examination findings is
seriously deficient. |
Management is incapable, unwilling, and/or fails to respond to deficiencies,
violations, or examination findings. |
Compliance Program Compliance program factors should be evaluated commensurate
with the institution’s size, complexity, and risk profile. Compliance
expectations below extend to third-party relationships. |
Policies and Procedures |
Compliance
policies and procedures and third-party relationship management programs
are strong, comprehensive, and provide standards to effectively manage
compliance risk in the products, services, and activities of the financial
institution. |
Compliance
policies and procedures and third-party relationship management programs
are adequate to manage the compliance risk in the products, services,
and activities of the financial institution. |
Compliance
policies and procedures and third-party relationship management programs
are inadequate at managing the compliance risk in the products, services,
and activities of the financial institution. |
Compliance
policies and procedures and third-party relationship management programs
are seriously deficient at managing compliance risk in the products,
services, and activities of the financial institution. |
Compliance policies and procedures and third-party relationship management
programs are critically absent. |
Training |
Compliance
training is comprehensive, timely, and specifically tailored to the
particular responsibilities of the staff receiving it, including those
responsible for product development, marketing, and customer service. |
Compliance
training outlining staff responsibilities is adequate and provided
timely to appropriate staff. |
Compliance
training is not adequately comprehensive, timely, updated, or appropriately
tailored to the particular responsibilities of the staff. |
Compliance
training is seriously deficient in its comprehensiveness, timeliness,
or relevance to staff with compliance responsibilities, or has numerous
major inaccuracies. |
Compliance training is critically absent. |
The compliance
training program is updated proactively in advance of the introduction
of new products or new consumer protection laws and regulations to
ensure that all staff are aware of compliance responsibilities before
roll out. |
The compliance
training program is updated to encompass new products and to comply
with changes to consumer protection laws and regulations. |
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|
|
Monitoring and/or Audit |
Compliance
monitoring practices, management information systems, reporting, compliance
audit, and internal control systems are comprehensive, timely, and
successful at identifying and measuring material compliance risk management
throughout the financial institution. |
Compliance
monitoring practices, management information systems, reporting, compliance
audit, and internal control systems adequately address compliance
risks throughout the financial institution. |
Compliance
monitoring practices, management information systems, reporting, compliance
audit, and internal control systems do not adequately address risks
involving products, services, or other activities including, timing
and scope. |
Compliance
monitoring practices, management information systems, reporting, compliance
audit, and internal controls are seriously deficient in addressing
risks involving products, services, or other activities. |
Compliance monitoring practices, management information systems,
reporting, compliance audit, or internal controls are critically absent. |
Programs
are monitored proactively to identify procedural or training weaknesses
to preclude regulatory violations. Program modifications are made
expeditiously to minimize compliance risk. |
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Consumer Complaint Response |
Processes
and procedures for addressing consumer complaints are strong. Consumer
complaint investigations and responses are prompt and thorough. |
Processes
and procedures for addressing consumer complaints are adequate. Consumer
complaint investigations and responses are generally prompt and thorough. |
Processes
and procedures for addressing consumer complaints are inadequate.
Consumer complaint investigations and responses are not thorough or
timely. |
Processes
and procedures for addressing consumer complaints and consumer complaint
investigations are seriously deficient. |
Processes and procedures for addressing consumer complaints are critically
absent. Meaningful investigations and responses are absent. |
Management
monitors consumer complaints to identify risks of potential consumer
harm, program deficiencies, and customer service issues and takes
appropriate action. |
Management
adequately monitors consumer complaints and responds to issues identified. |
Management
does not adequately monitor consumer complaints. |
Management
monitoring of consumer complaints is seriously deficient. |
Management exhibits a disregard for complaints or preventing consumer
harm. |
Violations of Law and
Consumer Harm |
Root Cause |
The violations
are the result of minor weaknesses, if any, in the compliance risk-
management system. |
Violations
are the result of modest weaknesses in the compliance risk- management
system. |
Violations
are the result of material weaknesses in the compliance risk- management
system. |
Violations
are the result of serious deficiencies in the compliance risk- management
system. |
Violations are the result of critical deficiencies in the compliance
risk- management system. |
Severity |
The type
of consumer harm, if any, resulting from the violations would have
a minimal impact on consumers. |
The type
of consumer harm resulting from the violations would have a limited
impact on consumers. |
The type
of consumer harm resulting from the violations would have a considerable
impact on consumers. |
The type of consumer harm resulting from the violations would have
a serious impact on consumers. |
Duration |
The violations
and resulting consumer harm, if any, occurred over a brief period
of time. |
The violations
and resulting consumer harm, if any, occurred over a limited period
of time. |
The violations
and resulting consumer harm, if any, occurred over an extended period
of time. |
The violations and resulting consumer harm, if any, have been long-standing
or repeated. |
Pervasiveness |
The violations
and resulting consumer harm, if any, are isolated in number. |
The violations
and resulting consumer harm, if any, are limited in number. |
The violations
and resulting consumer harm, if any, are numerous. |
The violations and resulting consumer harm, if any, are widespread
or in multiple products or services. |
Uniform interagency
rating system, effective March 31, 2017.