The Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau (CFPB), the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC),
the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board), the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and the National Credit
Union Administration (NCUA) (collectively, “the agencies”) are issuing
this statement in response to inquiries from creditors about whether
they would be liable under the disparate impact doctrine of the Equal
Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA), 15 U.S.C. 1691
et seq ., and
its implementing regulation, Regulation B, 12 CFR part 1002, by originating
only qualified mortgages as defined under the CFPB’s recent ability-to-repay
and qualified mortgage standards rule, which implements provisions
of the Truth in Lending Act (TILA).
1 The
agencies’ general approach and expectations regarding fair lending,
including the disparate impact doctrine, are summarized in prior guidance.
2
The agencies are issuing this statement to
describe some general principles that will guide supervisory and enforcement
activities with respect to entities within their jurisdiction as the
ability-to-repay rule takes effect in January 2014. In the agencies’
view, the requirements of the ability-to-repay rule and ECOA are compatible.
ECOA and Regulation B promote creditors acting on the basis of their
legitimate business needs.
3 Viewed in
this
context, and for the reasons described below, the agencies do not
anticipate that a creditor’s decision to offer only qualified mortgages
would, absent other factors, elevate a supervised institution’s fair
lending risk.
The CFPB’s ability-to-repay rule implements provisions
of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank
Act) that require creditors to make a reasonable, good faith determination
that a consumer has the ability to repay a mortgage loan before extending
the consumer credit.
4 TILA and the ability-to-repay
rule create a presumption of compliance with the ability-to-repay
requirements for certain “qualified mortgages,” which are subject
to certain restrictions as to risky features, limitations on upfront
points and fees, and specialized underwriting requirements. However,
consistent with the statutory framework, there are several ways to
satisfy the ability-to-repay rule, including making responsibly underwritten
loans that are not qualified mortgages. The CFPB does not believe
that it is possible to define by rule every instance in which a mortgage
is affordable for the borrower. Nonetheless, the agencies recognize
that some creditors might be inclined to originate all or predominantly
qualified mortgages, particularly when the ability-to-repay rule first
takes effect. The rule includes transition mechanisms that encourage
preservation of access to credit during this transition period.
In selecting business models and product offerings, we
expect that creditors would consider demonstrable factors that may
include credit risk, secondary market opportunities, capital requirements,
and liability risk. The ability-to-repay rule does not dictate precisely
how creditors should balance such factors, nor do either TILA or ECOA.
As creditors assess their business models, the agencies understand
that implementation of the ability-to-repay rule, other Dodd-Frank
Act regulations, and other changes in economic and mortgage market
conditions have real world impacts and that creditors may have a legitimate
business need to fine-tune their product offerings over the next few
years in response.
Indeed, the agencies recognize that some creditors’ existing
business models are such that all of the loans they originate will
already satisfy the requirements for qualified mortgages. For instance,
a creditor that has decided to restrict its mortgage lending only
to loans that are purchasable on the secondary market might find that—in
the current market—its loans are qualified mortgages under the transition
provision that gives qualified mortgage status to most loans that
are eligible for purchase, guarantee, or insurance by Fannie Mae,
Freddie Mac, or certain federal agency programs.
With respect to any fair lending risk, the
situation here is not substantially different from what creditors
have historically faced in developing product offerings or responding
to regulatory or market changes. The decisions creditors will make
about their product offerings in response to the ability-to-repay
rule are similar to the decisions that creditors have made in the
past with regard to other significant regulatory changes affecting
particular types of loans. Some creditors, for example, decided not
to offer “higher-priced mortgage loans” after July 2008, following
the adoption of various rules regulating these loans or previously
decided not to offer loans subject to the Home Ownership and Equity
Protection Act after regulations to implement that statute were first
adopted in 1995. We are unaware of any ECOA or Regulation B challenges
to those decisions. Creditors should continue to evaluate fair lending
risk as they would for other types of product selections, including
by carefully monitoring their policies and practices and implementing
effective compliance management systems. As with any other compliance
matter, individual cases will be evaluated on their own merits.
The OCC, the Board, the FDIC, and the NCUA believe that
the same principles described above apply in supervising institutions
for compliance with the Fair Housing Act
(FHA), 42 U.S.C. section
3601
et seq., and its implementing regulation, 24 CFR part
100.
5Interagency policy statement
of Oct. 22, 2013.