98-8829. Truth in Lending  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 65 (Monday, April 6, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 16669-16678]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-8829]
    
    
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    FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
    
    12 CFR Part 226
    
    [Regulation Z; Docket No. R-0992]
    
    
    Truth in Lending
    
    AGENCY: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
    
    ACTION: Final rule; official staff interpretation.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Board is publishing revisions to the official staff 
    commentary to Regulation Z (Truth in Lending). The commentary applies 
    and interprets the requirements of Regulation Z. The update addresses 
    increased rates for open-end plans triggered by events such as late 
    payments or exceeding credit limits. It provides guidance on deferred 
    payment transactions in open-end plans. It also addresses how creditors 
    may determine whether credit is an open-end plan or a closed-end 
    transaction. In addition, the update discusses issues such as the 
    treatment of annuity costs in reverse mortgage transactions and 
    transaction fees imposed on checking accounts with overdraft 
    protection.
    
    DATES: This rule is effective March 31, 1998. Compliance is optional 
    until October 1, 1998.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For Subparts A and B (open-end 
    credit), Jane E. Ahrens, Senior Attorney, or Obrea O. Poindexter, Staff 
    Attorney; for Subparts A, C, and E (closed-end credit and reverse 
    mortgages), Ms. Ahrens or James A. Michaels, Senior Attorney, or 
    Michael E. Hentrel, Staff Attorney; Division of Consumer and Community 
    Affairs, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, at (202) 
    452-3667 or 452-2412; for users of Telecommunications Device for the 
    Deaf (TDD) only, Diane Jenkins at (202) 452-3544.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        The purpose of the Truth in Lending Act (TILA; 15 U.S.C. 1601 et 
    seq.) is to promote the informed use of consumer credit by providing 
    for disclosures about its terms and cost. The act requires creditors to 
    disclose the cost of credit as a dollar amount (the finance charge) and 
    as an annual percentage rate (the APR). Uniformity in creditors' 
    disclosures is intended to assist consumers in
    
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    comparison shopping. The TILA requires additional disclosures for loans 
    secured by a consumer's home and permits consumers to rescind certain 
    transactions that involve their principal dwelling. The act is 
    implemented by the Board's Regulation Z (12 CFR Part 226). The Board's 
    official staff commentary (12 CFR Part 226 (Supp. I)) interprets the 
    regulation, and provides guidance to creditors in applying the 
    regulation to specific transactions. The commentary is a substitute for 
    individual staff interpretations; it is updated periodically to address 
    significant questions that arise.
        In December, the Board published proposed amendments to the 
    commentary to Regulation Z (62 FR 64769, December 9, 1997). The Board 
    received about 110 comments. Most of the comments were from financial 
    institutions, retail merchant associations, and other creditors. About 
    a dozen comments were received from state attorneys general or other 
    agencies, and consumer representatives. Overall, commenters generally 
    supported the proposed amendments. Views were mixed on a few comments, 
    and there was broad industry opposition to the comment addressing the 
    definition of open-end credit.
        Except as discussed below, the commentary is being adopted as 
    proposed; some technical suggestions or concerns raised by commenters 
    are addressed. Compliance is optional until October 1, 1998, the 
    effective date for mandatory compliance.
    
    II. Commentary Revisions
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    Section 226.2--Definitions and Rules of Construction
    
    2(a) Definitions
    
    2(a)(2) Advertisement
    
        Comment 2(a)(2)-1 is adopted as proposed with minor revisions for 
    clarification. The comment clarifies that communications promoting new 
    credit transactions or open-end credit plans, such as promotions to 
    switch from a regular to a premium bank card, are advertisements, 
    including promotions by on-line messages such as on the Internet. 
    Communications encouraging additional or different uses of an existing 
    credit account are not advertisements.
    
    2(a)(18) Downpayment
    
        Under Regulation Z, the term ``downpayment'' refers to an amount 
    paid to a seller to reduce the ``cash price'' in a credit sale 
    transaction. Comment 2(a)(18)-3 gives guidance on how a creditor 
    discloses the downpayment if a trade-in is involved in the sale and if 
    the amount of an existing lien exceeds the value of the trade-in. The 
    comment clarifies that creditors should disclose the downpayment as 
    zero and not a negative amount. The comment addresses a credit sale and 
    financed downpayment treated as a single transaction; it does not 
    affect creditors' ability to disclose them as two transactions.
        Some commenters asked for further clarification about how to 
    reflect costs associated with a ``negative downpayment,'' illustrated 
    in the comment by an automobile with an existing lien of $10,000 and a 
    trade-in value of $8,000; guidance is provided in a revision to comment 
    Sec. 226.18(c)-2.
    
    2(a)(20) Open-end Credit
    
        The proposal addressed two standards for determining whether credit 
    is properly characterized as an open-end plan or a closed-end 
    transaction. Comment 2(a)(20)-3 listed a number of factors that 
    creditors should consider when determining whether they ``reasonably 
    contemplate repeated transactions,'' and comment 2(a)(20)-5 provided 
    guidance on whether a credit line is ``reusable.''
        The Board received a substantial number of comments regarding these 
    proposed revisions. Most of the comments addressing the issue were from 
    industry representatives, and they opposed the proposal. Many industry 
    commenters acknowledged that some credit is improperly characterized as 
    open-end; however, they opposed the proposal on procedural and 
    substantive grounds. Procedurally, some recommended that the Board not 
    address the issue in the commentary. Substantively, commenters 
    expressed concern that the factors appeared to shift the focus from the 
    creditor's plan as a whole to an analysis of individual transactions. 
    Most commenters believed that, as stated, the proposed factors in 
    comment 2(a)(20)-3 were not relevant to determining whether a creditor 
    can reasonably contemplate repeated transactions. They expressed 
    concern that the proposed interpretation could have had unintended 
    consequences, because in attempting to address what can be viewed as a 
    narrow problem, the proposed interpretation could apply to credit 
    products that are legitimately and unquestionably open-end 
    transactions.
        The Board believes that the analysis of whether a creditor 
    reasonably contemplates repeated transactions should be based on the 
    creditor's plan as a whole; the proposal was not meant to shift that 
    focus. While the application of the factors as proposed could be viewed 
    as overly broad, factors such as those articulated in the proposal 
    could bear directly, depending on the facts and circumstances, on a 
    determination of whether credit can properly be characterized as open-
    end. Assume, for example, that a creditor establishes an open-end 
    credit plan primarily for the financing of an infrequently purchased 
    product or service, that the credit limits established for much of its 
    customer base are close to the cost of that product or service, and 
    that the creditor has little hard information of repeated transactions 
    by much of its customer base. Read together, these assumed facts could 
    have direct relevance on the issue of whether the plan comports with 
    the Congress's intent that the Truth in Lending disclosures should show 
    consumers the cost of the credit transaction for ``infrequently 
    purchased products.''
        The Board recognizes that credit granting practices have changed 
    significantly since the TILA was enacted in 1968. There has been a 
    gradual shift to open-end credit products. These products have become 
    commonplace in large measure because of the operational convenience for 
    creditors. They also offer advantages of flexibility to consumers, who 
    can draw on funds incrementally or finance purchases as needed and can 
    repay as their circumstances permit. At the same time, the Board 
    believes that concerns about some transactions being mischaracterized 
    as open-end plans are legitimate concerns. For example, the Board 
    received from nonindustry commenters documentation of transactions 
    being characterized as open-end plans that involved the financing of 
    used automobiles and the door-to-door credit sales of satellite dishes, 
    water treatment systems, and home improvement contracts.
        In seeking to address the legitimate concerns expressed by industry 
    about the proposed interpretation of Truth in Lending while dealing 
    effectively with potential abuses, however, the Board has found it 
    difficult to establish a clear rule that differentiates between 
    spurious and legitimate open-end credit. The Board considered revising 
    the proposal based on the comments received, to narrow the breadth of 
    the factors articulated in the proposal. The Board ultimately 
    determined, however, that to do so without the benefit of further 
    public comment could unnecessarily raise uncertainties for legitimate 
    open-end programs while not reaching the creditor abuses. Consequently, 
    the Board has withdrawn the proposed
    
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    revisions to the commentary at this time, except with regard to an 
    objective analysis which was addressed by proposed factor E.
        Each creditor's credit product may differ based on the type of 
    business, the nature or variety of products or services available for 
    purchase, and the creditor's relationship with its customers. Even so, 
    the determination of whether a creditor can reasonably contemplate 
    repeated transactions requires an objective analysis. Accordingly, 
    comment 2(a)(20)-3 has been revised to clarify this interpretation by 
    adding a direct reference to the need for an objective analysis in 
    reaching a determination regarding repeated transactions. 2(a)(24) 
    Residential Mortgage Transaction
        The comments are adopted as proposed. Comment 2(a)(24)-5 is revised 
    from the existing comment for clarity, without substantive change. 
    Comment 2(a)(24)-7 clarifies that the definition of a residential 
    mortgage transaction includes a loan for financing the construction of 
    a primary dwelling on land already owned by the consumer.
    Section 226.4--Finance Charge
    
    4(a) Definition
    
    4(a)(2) Special Rule: Closing Agent Charges
    
        Comment 4(a)(2)-2 is revised to address charges to conduct a 
    closing for a real estate-secured transaction. The addition is intended 
    to reflect the rule for excluding closing costs from the finance charge 
    under Sec. 226.4(c)(7); creditors may exclude from the finance charge a 
    lump-sum settlement or closing fee that includes a charge for 
    conducting or attending a closing if the lump-sum fee is primarily for 
    services listed in Sec. 226.4(c)(7). The entire lump-sum may be 
    excluded from the finance charge even if it includes incidental costs 
    for services that are otherwise considered finance charges. The comment 
    clarifies that charges attributed to conducting or attending the 
    closing are finance charges and may not be excluded from the finance 
    charge unless the charge is incidental to the lump-sum closing fee.
    
    4(b) Examples of Finance Charges
    
    Paragraph 4(b)(2)
    
        Comment 4(b)(2)-1, adopted as proposed with minor revisions, 
    clarifies that a service charge on a checking or other transaction 
    account with a credit feature is a finance charge only if the charge 
    exceeds the charge for a similar account without a credit feature. In 
    the proposal, a sentence in the existing commentary regarding 
    participation fees was inadvertently deleted; the error has been 
    corrected.
        Commenters requested that the comment clarify that charges 
    excludable under Sec. 226.4(c)(3)--charges imposed on an account in 
    cases where the institution has not agreed in writing to pay overdraft 
    items--are not required to be included as finance charges under 
    Sec. 226.4(b)(2); clarifying language has been added.
    
    4(d) Insurance
    
        In response to commenters, comment 4(d)-1 has been revised to 
    clarify that for purposes of Sec. 226.4(d), references to insurance 
    also include debt cancellation coverage unless the context indicates 
    otherwise.
        Comment 4(d)-11 has been adopted as proposed with minor revisions 
    for clarity. Under Sec. 226.4(d), amounts paid for insurance or debt-
    cancellation coverage may be excluded from the finance charge if the 
    creditor discloses the fee or premium for the initial term of coverage, 
    among other conditions. Comment 4(d)-11 clarifies that the initial term 
    is based on the period that the insurer or creditor is initially 
    obligated to provide coverage. Comment 4(d)-12 clarifies that where the 
    fee or premium for the coverage is assessed periodically and the 
    consumer is under no obligation to continue making the payments, 
    creditors have the option of providing disclosures on the basis of one 
    year of coverage. Creditors also have this option if the initial term 
    of the insurance is not clear.
        In response to requests for guidance, comments 4(d)-4 and 4(d)-12 
    have been revised to address disclosures for open-end plans where the 
    amounts of coverage and periodic premiums are based on outstanding 
    balances. Comment 4(d)-4 clarifies that creditors providing disclosures 
    for open-end plans on a unit-cost basis must base the cost on the 
    initial term of coverage, unless one of the options in comment 4(d)-12 
    is available. Comment 4(d)-12 provides that its alternatives apply to 
    creditors offering credit insurance or debt cancellation coverage for 
    open-end plans or closed-end transactions. In addition, the comment 
    clarifies that creditors with open-end plans may base their cost 
    disclosures on periods less than one year, in some cases.
    
    Subpart B--Open-end Credit
    
    Section 226.5a--Credit and Charge Card Applications and Solicitations
    
    5a(b) Required Disclosures
    
    5a(b)(1) Annual Percentage Rate
    
        Comment 5a(b)(1)-7 provides guidance on disclosing penalty rates--
    an increase in the rate upon a specific event such as the consumer's 
    making a late payment or exceeding the credit limit. The proposal 
    required card issuers to disclose the increased rate, along with the 
    condition for increasing the rate. The comment is adopted with some 
    modification. Commenters expressed concern that requiring penalty rates 
    along with the condition for imposing such rates would increase the 
    length of the disclosures required by Sec. 226.5a. They believe the 
    detail required by the proposal is inconsistent with the abbreviated 
    information otherwise required to be disclosed for credit card 
    applications and solicitations. Although information about penalty 
    rates may add to the disclosure, the Board believes that the rate and 
    the specified event or events that trigger a rate increase are 
    important terms that assist consumers in comparing credit offers and 
    deciding whether to apply for a credit card account. To address the 
    concerns, however, the comment is modified to permit issuers using the 
    tabular format to disclose the rate and the specified event or events 
    that trigger an increased rate in the table, or to disclose the rate in 
    the table along with an asterisk that refers to an explanation of the 
    specified event or events disclosed outside the table.
        Commenters also expressed concern that the comment would prevent a 
    risk-based approach to increasing the initial rate. Creditors often 
    increase rates to cover the expenses associated with accounts that 
    become delinquent or otherwise do not perform in accord with the 
    contract. Moreover, several commenters said it would be impossible to 
    disclose the increased rate at the time of disclosure since a number of 
    factors used to determine whether a rate will increase are based on 
    consumer behavior, which may be reflected in a credit score.
        Upon further analysis and after consideration of the comments 
    received, a modified approach has been adopted. If the rate cannot be 
    determined at the time of disclosure, issuers may include a description 
    of the specified event or events that may result in an increased rate. 
    Providing only a general description of the condition, such as stating 
    that the rate will increase if the consumer ``fails to remain in good 
    standing,'' is not an adequate description. In addition, a sentence has 
    been added to clarify that the disclosure need not be as specific as 
    that required in Sec. 226.6(a)(2). Creditors may list some of the 
    considerations described in the contract that are used to determine the 
    rate without providing a detailed
    
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    explanation of all the factors that the creditor may take into 
    consideration when increasing the rate.
    
    5a(b)(9) Late-Payment Fee and 5a(b)(10) Over-the-Limit Fee
    
        The proposal would have required that the late-payment and the 
    over-the-limit disclosure, required under Sec. 226.5a contain a 
    reference to the APR disclosure required under Sec. 226.5a(b)(1), where 
    the APR will increase due to a late payment or exceeding the credit 
    limit. Upon further analysis and given the tabular format requirements 
    of Sec. 226.5a, the link seems unnecessary. Accordingly, the proposed 
    comments are withdrawn.
    Section 226.6--Initial Disclosure Statement
    
    6(a) Finance Charge
    
    6(a)(2) Annual Percentage Rate
    
        Comment 6(a)(2)-11 clarifies that if the APR will increase upon a 
    specific event or events (such as the consumer's making a late payment 
    or exceeding the credit limit), the creditor must include the increased 
    rate in the disclosures required under Sec. 226.6(a)(2) with the 
    condition that will trigger the increase. This comment is similar to 
    the proposal; a few modifications have been made, in response to 
    comments, along the same lines as the modifications to comment 
    5a(b)(1)-7.
    Section 226.7--Periodic Statement
        Creditors extending open-end credit offer a variety of payment 
    plans that permit consumers to avoid finance charges if the purchase 
    balance is paid by a certain date. For example, under some plans 
    finance charges are only imposed if consumers do not pay the purchase 
    balance in full by a specified date. In others, finance charges are 
    imposed on the purchase balance, but consumers receive rebates of any 
    finance charges attributable to the purchase if the purchase balance is 
    paid in full by the specified date.
        Comment 7-3 gives guidance on the type of deferred payment program 
    illustrated in the first example. In response to comments, language is 
    added to emphasize that the comment addresses only a particular type of 
    deferred payment feature, and is not intended to preclude creditors 
    from offering other types. To ease compliance, three cross-references 
    to the comment are added to provisions of Sec. 226.7 addressing 
    balances to which periodic rates are applied, the amount of the finance 
    charge, and free-ride periods; a similar cross-reference is added under 
    Sec. 226.5(b)(2), which addresses the timing of periodic statements for 
    open-end plans offering free-ride periods.
        In response to comments, language is added providing sample 
    descriptions for balance and finance charge amounts during the deferral 
    period, and additional examples of how creditors may comply with the 
    timing requirements for periodic statements for open-end plans offering 
    free-ride periods. The comment also addresses periodic rates that may 
    be applied to the deferred payment purchase.
    Section 226.14--Determination of Annual Percentage Rate 14(c) Annual
    
    Percentage Rate for Periodic Statements
    
        Comments 14(c)-5 and 14(c)-10 are adopted substantially as 
    proposed. Comment 14(c)-5 addresses the calculation of the APRs for 
    multifeatured plans that charge transaction fees in addition to 
    periodic rates. In response to requests for guidance, the comment 
    clarifies that creditors may separately consider each feature in 
    calculating the denominator.
        Multifeatured plans are defined to include plans with features such 
    as purchases, cash advances, or overdraft checking, or plans with 
    groups of transactions with different pricing structures. Some 
    creditors offer cash advances with fees that vary if the cash advance 
    is obtained by check, at a proprietary ATM, or at a foreign financial 
    institution. They treat each fee structure as a ``feature.'' (See 
    comment 7-1.) Creditors may disclose APRs separately for each feature 
    or may state a composite APR for the whole plan. Appendix F gives 
    instructions for calculating the APR when the finance charge includes 
    interest and transaction fees. Appendix F requires creditors to include 
    in the denominator: (1) the balance subject to a transaction fee, plus 
    (2) the balance subject to periodic rates, less the amount of the 
    balance subject to a transaction charge (but not less than zero). The 
    appendix is silent on calculating the denominator when separate 
    features are involved.
        Comment 14(c)-5 clarifies that separate features may be considered 
    in calculating the denominator. Comments were mixed on whether 
    ``feature'' should be defined with more precision. The comment does not 
    attempt to define ``feature'' for purposes of the APR calculation, so 
    long as the creditor has a reasonable basis for creating the 
    distinction. There is no evidence at this time that further limitations 
    on operational or pricing considerations are necessary to guard against 
    distinctions among account services that artificially lower the APR on 
    a consumer's periodic statement.
        A commenter requested that Appendix F be amended to include an 
    example of the guidance provided in comment 14(c)-5. Such an amendment 
    will be considered in a future rulemaking amending Regulation Z or its 
    appendices.
        The proposal requested comment on whether a creditor should 
    separately disclose the balances related to each feature under 
    Sec. 226.7(e), if features are treated separately for purposes of 
    calculating the denominator in the APR computation. The commentary is 
    silent on additional separate balance disclosure requirements under 
    7(e). Nearly all commenters addressing the issue were opposed to an 
    additional requirement; they said it would be costly for creditors to 
    reconfigure their periodic statements and confusing for consumers to 
    receive periodic statements showing several balances. No separate 
    balance requirements under Sec. 226.7(e) relating to multifeatured 
    plans have been added.
        Comment 14(c)-10 addresses the treatment of fees imposed on 
    transactions that occur late in a billing cycle and are impracticable 
    to post until the following billing cycle. The comment is revised to 
    provide broader guidance for calculating the APR when finance charges 
    posted in the billing cycle include charges relating to activity in 
    prior cycles, such as adjustments relating to error resolution. It is 
    intended to provide uniformity and simplify compliance for the variety 
    of circumstances under which adjustments may occur.
        The comment differs from the proposal in two respects. Comment 
    14(c)-10 does not contain the proposed requirement to disclose an APR 
    equal to the largest periodic rate that may be imposed on the account 
    when adjustments from prior cycles would produce a negative APR in the 
    current cycle. Commenters expressed concern that the requirement, which 
    currently applies to creditors imposing transaction fees in addition to 
    periodic rate finance charges, would create costly programming changes 
    for creditors that impose finance charges solely due to periodic rates 
    and are not required to make that calculation. Creditors must disclose 
    on each periodic statement any periodic rate that may be applied during 
    the billing cycle and the corresponding APR. The corresponding APR 
    adequately informs consumers about the cost of credit under the plan in 
    the occasional billing cycle that a consumer may receive a negative APR 
    due to a finance charge adjustment.
    
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        The comment includes an alternative disclosure when a finance 
    charge debited to the account in the current billing cycle relates to 
    activity for which a finance charge was debited to the account in a 
    previous billing cycle (for example, if the finance charge relates to 
    an adjustment such as the resolution of a billing error dispute, or an 
    unintentional posting error, or a payment by check that was later 
    returned unpaid for insufficient funds or other reasons). In response 
    to concerns by commenters, as an alternative to the general 
    interpretation set forth in the comment, the comment permits creditors 
    to disclose the finance charge adjustment on the periodic statement. 
    Creditors identifying the adjustment on the periodic statement would 
    not include the finance charge adjustment in the numerator or in 
    balances associated with the finance charge adjustment in the 
    denominator when calculating the annual percentage rate for the current 
    billing cycle .
    
    Subpart C--Closed-end Credit
    
    Section 226.18--Content of Disclosures
    
    18(c) Itemization of Amount Financed
    
        Comment 18(c)-2 is revised in response to requests for guidance by 
    creditors offering credit sales when downpayments involve a trade-in 
    and an existing lien that exceeds the value of the trade-in. (See 
    comment 2(a)(18)-3, where a consumer owes $10,000 on an existing 
    automobile loan and the trade-in value of the automobile is $8,000, 
    leaving a $2,000 deficit.)
        The amount by which the lien exceeds the trade-in value would be 
    reflected in the amount financed. (See Sec. 226.18(b).) Assuming the 
    cash price for the new car was $20,000, the amount financed would be 
    $22,000 ($20,000 representing the cash price plus $2,000 representing 
    the excess of the lien over the trade-in value financed by the 
    creditor).
        The regulation provides great flexibility for disclosing the 
    itemization of amount financed. Comment 18(c)-2.iii. (numbered to 
    comply with Federal Register publication rules) is revised to clarify 
    that any amounts financed by the creditor and representing the excess 
    of the lien over the trade-in value ($2,000 in this example) must 
    appear in the itemization of the amount financed. However, creditors 
    may also add other categories to explain, in this example, the 
    consumer's trade-in value of $8,000, the creditor's payoff of the 
    existing lien of $10,000, and the resulting amount of $2,000 included 
    in the amount financed.
    
    18(g) Payment Schedule
    
        Section 226.18(g) requires creditors to disclose the timing of 
    payments. To meet this requirement, creditors may list all of the 
    payment due dates. Creditors also have the option of specifying the 
    ``period of payments'' scheduled to repay the obligation. Comment 
    18(g)-4 clarifies the requirements for creditors choosing this option.
        As a general rule, creditors that do not disclose all of the 
    payment due dates must disclose the payment intervals, such as 
    ``monthly'' or ``bi-weekly,'' and the calendar date that the beginning 
    payment is due. For example, a creditor may disclose that payments are 
    due ``monthly beginning on July 1, 1998.'' This information, when 
    combined with the number of payments, is necessary to define the 
    repayment period and enable a consumer to determine all of the payment 
    due dates.
        Some commenters viewed the inclusion of a beginning-payment date as 
    a new requirement that is more appropriate for a regulatory revision 
    than an interpretation in the commentary. The Board believes that the 
    new comment merely interprets and clarifies the existing requirement in 
    Sec. 226.18(g). The staff is aware that creditors could reasonably have 
    interpreted the statutory requirement for specifying the ``period of 
    payments'' in different ways. Because of confusion in this area, 
    comment 18(g)-4 has been added to explain creditors' disclosure 
    responsibilities.
        Several commenters provided examples of transactions where the 
    beginning-payment date is unknown and difficult to determine at the 
    time disclosures are made. For example, a consumer may become obligated 
    on a credit contract that contemplates the delayed disbursement of 
    funds based on a contingent event, such as the completion of home 
    repairs. Disclosures may also accompany loan checks that are sent by 
    mail, in which case the initial disbursement and repayment dates are 
    solely within the consumer's control. These commenters believe that a 
    narrative explanation of the events that will trigger the first payment 
    due date would be more helpful to consumers than an estimated calendar 
    date.
        Comment 18(g)-4 has been revised to address these concerns. In such 
    cases, the creditor may use an estimated beginning-payment date and 
    label the disclosure as an estimate pursuant to Sec. 226.17(c). 
    Alternatively, the disclosure may refer to the occurrence of a 
    particular event, for example, by disclosing that the beginning payment 
    is due ``30 days after the first loan disbursement.'' This information 
    also may be included with an estimated date to explain the basis for 
    the creditor's estimate. See Comment 17(a)(1)-5(iii).
    
    Subpart E--Special Rules for Certain Home Mortgage Transactions
    
    Section 226.32--Requirements for Certain Closed-end Home Mortgages
    
    32(a) Coverage
    
    32(a)(1)(ii)
    
        Creditors must follow the rules in Sec. 226.32 if the total points 
    and fees payable by the consumer at or before loan closing exceed the 
    greater of $400 or 8 percent of the total loan amount. The Board is 
    required to adjust the $400 amount each year. The adjusted amounts for 
    1997 ($424), published on December 12, 1996 (61 FR 65317), and 1998 
    ($435), published on February 9, 1998 (63 FR 6474), are added to 
    comment 32(a)(1)(ii)-2.
    Section 226.33--Requirements for Reverse Mortgages
    
    33(c) Projected Total Cost of Credit
    
    33(c)(1) Costs to Consumer
    
        Under 226.33, the disclosed cost of a reverse mortgage transaction 
    must contain all costs and charges paid by the consumer, including the 
    cost of any annuity, whether the annuity purchase is mandatory or 
    voluntary or whether it is made through the creditor or a third party. 
    Comment 33(c)(1)-2 provides guidance for determining when an annuity is 
    purchased as part of a reverse mortgage transaction. Some commenters 
    requested that the Board narrow the standard for including annuity 
    costs in the total annual loan cost rate to annuities purchased ``by or 
    through'' the creditor, expressing their concern about accurately 
    disclosing the impact of any annuity consumers may purchase.
        The Board believes that the Congress intended a broad application 
    of the terms ``costs and charges'' when applied to annuities. (60 FR 
    15468, March 24, 1995.) Thus, the comment is adopted as proposed. 
    Creditors may rely on information provided by the consumer concerning 
    their intent to purchase an annuity as a part of the transaction.
    
    List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 226
    
        Advertising, Banks, banking, Consumer protection, Credit, Federal 
    Reserve System, Mortgages, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, 
    Truth in lending.
        For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Board amends 12 CFR 
    Part 226 as follows:
    
    [[Page 16674]]
    
    PART 226--TRUTH IN LENDING (REGULATION Z)
    
        1. The authority citation for part 226 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 3806; 15 U.S.C. 1604 and 1637(c)(5).
    
        2. In Supplement I to Part 226, under Section 226.2--Definitions 
    and Rules of Construction, the following amendments are made:
        a. Under Paragraph 2(a)(2) Advertisement., paragraph 1. is revised;
        b. Under Paragraph 2(a)(18) Downpayment., a new paragraph 3. is 
    added;
        c. Under Paragraph 2(a)(20) Open-end credit., paragraph 3. is 
    revised; and
        d. Under Paragraph (2)(a)(24) Residential mortgage transaction., 
    paragraph 5. is revised and a new paragraph 7. is added.
        The additions and revisions read as follows:
    
    SUPPLEMENT I--OFFICIAL STAFF INTERPRETATIONS
    
    * * * * *
    
    Subpart A--General
    
    * * * * *
    
    Section 226.2--Definitions and Rules of Construction
    
         2(a) Definitions.
         (a)(2) Advertisement. 
        1. Coverage. Only commercial messages that promote consumer credit 
    transactions requiring disclosures are advertisements. Messages 
    inviting, offering, or otherwise announcing generally to prospective 
    customers the availability of credit transactions, whether in visual, 
    oral, or print media, are covered by Regulation Z (12 CFR part 226).
        i. Examples include:
        A. Messages in a newspaper, magazine, leaflet, promotional 
    flyer, or catalog.
        B. Announcements on radio, television, or public address system.
        C. On-line messages, such as on the Internet.
        D. Direct mail literature or other printed material on any 
    exterior or interior sign.
        E. Point-of-sale displays.
        F. Telephone solicitations.
        G. Price tags that contain credit information.
        H. Letters sent to customers as part of an organized 
    solicitation of business.
        I. Messages on checking account statements offering auto loans 
    at a stated annual percentage rate.
        J. Communications promoting a new open-end plan or closed-end 
    transaction.
        ii. The term does not include:
        A. Direct personal contacts, such as follow-up letters, cost 
    estimates for individual consumers, or oral or written communication 
    relating to the negotiation of a specific transaction.
        B. Informational material, for example, interest rate and loan 
    term memos, distributed only to business entities.
        C. Notices required by federal or state law, if the law mandates 
    that specific information be displayed and only the information so 
    mandated is included in the notice.
        D. News articles the use of which is controlled by the news 
    medium.
        E. Market research or educational materials that do not solicit 
    business.
        F. Communications about an existing credit account (for example, 
    a promotion encouraging additional or different uses of an existing 
    credit card account).
    * * * * *
         2(a)(18) Downpayment.
    * * * * *
        3. Effect of existing liens. In a credit sale, the 
    ``downpayment'' may only be used to reduce the cash price. For 
    example, when the existing lien on an automobile to be traded in 
    exceeds the value of the automobile, creditors must disclose a zero 
    on the downpayment line rather than a negative number. To 
    illustrate, assume a consumer owes $10,000 on an existing automobile 
    loan and that the trade-in value of the automobile is only $8,000, 
    leaving a $2,000 deficit. The creditor should disclose a downpayment 
    of $0, not -$2,000.
    * * * * *
         2(a)(20) Open-end credit.
    * * * * *
        3. Repeated transactions. Under this criterion, the creditor 
    must reasonably contemplate repeated transactions. This means that 
    the credit plan must be usable from time to time and the creditor 
    must legitimately expect that there will be repeat business rather 
    than a one-time credit extension. The creditor must expect repeated 
    dealings with consumers under the credit plan as a whole and need 
    not believe a consumer will reuse a particular feature of the plan. 
    The determination of whether a creditor can reasonably contemplate 
    repeated transactions requires an objective analysis. Information 
    that much of the creditor's customer base with accounts under the 
    plan make repeated transactions over some period of time is relevant 
    to the determination, particularly when the plan is opened primarily 
    for the financing of infrequently purchased products or services. A 
    standard based on reasonable belief by a creditor necessarily 
    includes some margin for judgmental error. The fact that particular 
    consumers do not return for further credit extensions does not 
    prevent a plan from having been properly characterized as open-end. 
    For example, if much of the customer base of a clothing store makes 
    repeat purchases, the fact that some consumers use the plan only 
    once would not affect the characterization of the store's plan as 
    open-end credit. The criterion regarding repeated transactions is a 
    question of fact to be decided in the context of the creditor's type 
    of business and the creditor's relationship with its customers. For 
    example:
        i. It would be more reasonable for a thrift institution 
    chartered for the benefit of its members to contemplate repeated 
    transactions with a member than for a seller of aluminum siding to 
    make the same assumption about its customers.
        ii. It would be more reasonable for a financial institution to 
    make advances from a line of credit for the purchase of an 
    automobile than for an automobile dealer to sell a car under an 
    open-end plan.
    * * * * *
         2(a)(24) Residential mortgage transaction.
    * * * * *
        5. Acquisition. i. A residential mortgage transaction finances 
    the acquisition of a consumer's principal dwelling. The term does 
    not include a transaction involving a consumer's principal dwelling 
    if the consumer had previously purchased and acquired some interest 
    to the dwelling, even though the consumer had not acquired full 
    legal title.
        ii. Examples of new transactions involving a previously acquired 
    dwelling include the financing of a balloon payment due under a land 
    sale contract and an extension of credit made to a joint owner of 
    property to buy out the other joint owner's interest. In these 
    instances, disclosures are not required under Sec. 226.18(q) or 
    Sec. 226.19(a) (assumability policies and early disclosures for 
    residential mortgage transactions). However, the rescission rules of 
    Secs. 226.15 and 226.23 do apply to these new transactions.
        iii. In other cases, the disclosure and rescission rules do not 
    apply. For example, where a buyer enters into a written agreement 
    with the creditor holding the seller's mortgage, allowing the buyer 
    to assume the mortgage, if the buyer had previously purchased the 
    property and agreed with the seller to make the mortgage payments, 
    Sec. 226.20(b) does not apply (assumptions involving residential 
    mortgages).
    * * * * *
        7. Construction on previously acquired vacant land. A 
    residential mortgage transaction includes a loan to finance the 
    construction of a consumer's principal dwelling on a vacant lot 
    previously acquired by the consumer.
    * * * * *
        3. In Supplement I to Part 226, under Section 226.4--Finance 
    Charge, the following amendments are made:
        a. Under Paragraph 4(a)(2)., paragraph 2. is revised;
        b. Under Paragraph 4(b)(2)., paragraph 1. is revised; and
        c. Under Paragraph 4(d) Insurance and debt cancellation coverage., 
    paragraphs 1., 4., and 11. are revised; paragraph 12. is redesignated 
    as paragraph 13.; and a new paragraph 12. is added.
        The revisions and additions read as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    Section 226.4--Finance Charge
    
        4(a) Definition.
    * * * * *
         4(a)(2) Special rule: closing agent charges.
    * * * * *
    
    [[Page 16675]]
    
        2. Required closing agent. If the creditor requires the use of a 
    closing agent, fees charged by the closing agent are included in the 
    finance charge only if the creditor requires the particular service, 
    requires the imposition of the charge, or retains a portion of the 
    charge. Fees charged by a third-party closing agent may be otherwise 
    excluded from the finance charge under Sec. 226.4. For example, a 
    fee that would be paid in a comparable cash transaction may be 
    excluded under Sec. 226.4(a). A charge for conducting or attending a 
    closing is a finance charge and may be excluded only if the charge 
    is included in and is incidental to a lump-sum closing fee excluded 
    under Sec. 226.4(c)(7).
    * * * * *
        4(b) Examples of finance charges.
    * * * * *
        Paragraph 4(b)(2).
        1. Checking account charges. A checking or transaction account 
    charge imposed in connection with a credit feature is a finance 
    charge under Sec. 226.4(b)(2) to the extent the charge exceeds the 
    charge for a similar account without a credit feature. If a charge 
    for an account with a credit feature does not exceed the charge for 
    an account without a credit feature, the charge is not a finance 
    charge under Sec. 226.4(b)(2). To illustrate:
        i. A $5 service charge is imposed on an account with an 
    overdraft line of credit (where the institution has agreed in 
    writing to pay an overdraft), while a $3 service charge is imposed 
    on an account without a credit feature; the $2 difference is a 
    finance charge. (If the difference is not related to account 
    activity, however, it may be excludable as a participation fee. See 
    the commentary to Sec. 226.4(c)(4).)
        ii. A $5 service charge is imposed for each item that results in 
    an overdraft on an account with an overdraft line of credit, while a 
    $25 service charge is imposed for paying or returning each item on a 
    similar account without a credit feature; the $5 charge is not a 
    finance charge.
    * * * * *
        4(d) Insurance and debt cancellation coverage. 
        1. General. Section 226.4(d) permits insurance premiums and 
    charges and debt-cancellation charges to be excluded from the 
    finance charge. The required disclosures must be made in writing. 
    The rules on location of insurance and debt-cancellation disclosures 
    for closed-end transactions are in Sec. 226.17(a). For purposes of 
    Sec. 226.4(d), all references to insurance also include debt 
    cancellation coverage unless the context indicates otherwise.
    * * * * *
        4. Unit-cost disclosures. i. Open-end credit. The premium or fee 
    for insurance or debt cancellation for the initial term of coverage 
    may be disclosed on a unit-cost basis in open-end credit 
    transactions. The cost per unit should be based on the initial term 
    of coverage, unless one of the options under comment 4(d)-12 is 
    available.
        ii. Closed-end credit. One of the transactions for which unit-
    cost disclosures (such as 50 cents per year for each $100 of the 
    amount financed) may be used in place of the total insurance premium 
    involves a particular kind of insurance plan. For example, a 
    consumer with a current indebtedness of $8,000 is covered by a plan 
    of credit life insurance coverage with a maximum of $10,000. The 
    consumer requests an additional $4,000 loan to be covered by the 
    same insurance plan. Since the $4,000 loan exceeds, in part, the 
    maximum amount of indebtedness that can be covered by the plan, the 
    creditor may properly give the insurance cost disclosures on the 
    $4,000 loan on a unit-cost basis.
    * * * * *
        11. Initial term. i. The initial term of the insurance or debt 
    cancellation coverage determines the period for which a premium 
    amount or fee must be disclosed, unless one of the options discussed 
    under comment 4(d)-12 is available. For purposes of Sec. 226.4(d), 
    the initial term is the period for which the insurer or creditor is 
    obligated to provide coverage, even though the consumer may be 
    allowed to cancel the coverage or coverage may end due to nonpayment 
    before that term expires.
        ii. For example:
        A. The initial term of a property insurance policy on an 
    automobile that is written for one year is one year even though 
    premiums are paid monthly and the term of the credit transaction is 
    four years.
        B. The initial term of an insurance policy is the full term of 
    the credit transaction if the consumer pays or finances a single 
    premium in advance.
        12. Initial term; alternative. i. General. A creditor has the 
    option of providing cost disclosures on the basis of one year of 
    insurance or debt cancellation coverage instead of a longer initial 
    term (provided the premium or fee is clearly labeled as being for 
    one year) if:
        A. The initial term is indefinite or not clear; or
        B. The consumer has agreed to pay a premium or fee that is 
    assessed periodically but the consumer is under no obligation to 
    continue the coverage after making the initial payment.
        ii. Open-end plans. For open-end plans, a creditor also has the 
    option of providing unit-cost disclosures on the basis of a period 
    that is less than one year if the consumer has agreed to pay a 
    premium or fee that is assessed periodically, for example monthly, 
    but the consumer is under no obligation to continue the coverage.
        iii. Examples. To illustrate:
        A. A credit life insurance policy providing coverage for a 30-
    year mortgage loan has an initial term of 30 years even though 
    premiums are paid monthly and the consumer is not required to 
    continue the coverage after making the initial payment. The creditor 
    has the option of making disclosures on the basis of coverage for 
    one-year.
    * * * * *
        4. In Supplement I to Part 226, under Section 226.5--General 
    Disclosure Requirements, under Paragraph 5(b)(2)(ii) a new paragraph 4 
    is added as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    Subpart B--Open-End Credit
    
    * * * * *
    
    Section 226.5--General Disclosure Requirements
    
    * * * * *
        5(b) Time of disclosures.
    * * * * *
        Paragraph 5(b)(2)(ii).
    * * * * *
        4. Deferred payment transactions. See comment 7-3(iv).
    * * * * *
        5. In Supplement I to Part 226, under Section 226.5a--Credit and 
    Charge Card Applications and Solicitations, under Paragraph 5a(b)(1) 
    Annual Percentage Rate, a new paragraph 7 is added to read as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    Section 226.5a--Credit and Charge Card Applications and 
    Solicitations
    
    * * * * *
        5a(b) Required Disclosures.
        5a(b)(1) Annual Percentage Rate.
    * * * * *
        7. Increased penalty rates. If the initial rate may increase 
    upon the occurrence of one or more specific events, such as a late 
    payment or an extension of credit that exceeds the credit limit, the 
    card issuer must disclose in the table the initial rate and the 
    increased penalty rate that may apply. If the penalty rate is based 
    on an index and an increased margin, the issuer must also disclose 
    in the table the index and the margin. The issuer must also disclose 
    the specific event or events that may result in imposing the 
    increased rate, such as ``22% APR, if 60 days late.'' If the penalty 
    rate cannot be determined at the time disclosures are given, the 
    issuer must provide an explanation of the specific event or events 
    that may result in imposing an increased rate. In describing the 
    specific event or events that may result in an increased rate, 
    issuers need not be as detailed as for the disclosures required 
    under Sec. 226.6(a)(2). Alternatively, for issuers using a tabular 
    format, the specific event or events may be located outside of the 
    table if the conditions are noted with an asterisk or other means 
    that direct the consumer to the explanation. At its option, the 
    issuer may disclose the period for which the increased rate will 
    remain in effect, such as ``until you make three timely payments.'' 
    The issuer need not disclose an increased rate that is imposed when 
    credit privileges are permanently terminated.
    * * * * *
        6. In Supplement I to Part 226, under Section 226.6--Initial 
    Disclosure Statement, under Paragraph 6(a)(2), a new paragraph 11 is 
    added to read as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    Section 226.6--Initial Disclosure Statement
    
    * * * * *
        6(a) Finance charge.
    * * * * *
    
    [[Page 16676]]
    
        Paragraph 6(a)(2).
    * * * * *
        11. Increased penalty rates. If the initial rate may increase 
    upon the occurrence of one or more specific events, such as a late 
    payment or an extension of credit that exceeds the credit limit, the 
    creditor must disclose the initial rate and the increased penalty 
    rate that may apply. If the penalty rate is based on an index and an 
    increased margin, the issuer must disclose the index and the margin. 
    The creditor must also disclose the specific event or events that 
    may result in the increased rate, such as ``22% APR, if 60 days 
    late.'' If the penalty rate cannot be determined at the time 
    disclosures are given, the creditor must provide an explanation of 
    the specific event or events that may result in the increased rate. 
    At the creditor's option, the creditor may disclose the period for 
    which the increased rate will remain in effect, such as ``until you 
    make three timely payments.'' The creditor need not disclose an 
    increased rate that is imposed when credit privileges are 
    permanently terminated.
    * * * * *
        7. In Supplement I to Part 226, under Section 226.7--Periodic 
    Statement, the following amendments are made:
        a. Under introductory text, a new paragraph 3 is added;
        b. Under Paragraph 7(d) Periodic rates, a new paragraph 7 is added;
        c. Under Paragraph 7(e) Balance on which finance charge computed, a 
    new paragraph 10 is added;
        d. Under Paragraph 7(f) Amount of finance charge, a new paragraph 9 
    is added; and
        e. Under Paragraph 7(j) Free-ride period, a new paragraph 2 is 
    added.
        The additions read as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    Section 226.7--Periodic Statement
    
    * * * * *
        3. Deferred payment transactions. Creditors offer a variety of 
    payment plans for purchases that permit consumers to avoid finance 
    charges if the purchase balance is paid in full by a certain date. 
    The following provides guidance for one type of deferred payment 
    plan where, for example, no finance charge is imposed on a $500 
    purchase made in January if the $500 balance is paid by March 31.
        i. Periodic rates. Under Sec. 226.7(d), creditors must disclose 
    each periodic rate that may be used to compute the finance charge. 
    Under some plans with a deferred payment feature, if the deferred 
    payment balance is not paid by the payment due date, finance charges 
    attributable to periodic rates applicable to the billing cycles 
    between the date of purchase and the payment due date (January 
    through March in this example) may be imposed. Periodic rates that 
    may apply to the deferred payment balance ($500 in this example) if 
    the balance is not paid in full by the payment due date must appear 
    on periodic statements for the billing cycles between the date of 
    purchase and the payment due date. However, if the consumer does not 
    pay the deferred payment balance by the due date, the creditor is 
    not required to identify, on the periodic statement disclosing the 
    finance charge for the deferred payment balance, periodic rates that 
    have been disclosed in previous billing cycles between the date of 
    purchase and the payment due date.
        ii. Balances subject to periodic rates. Under Sec. 226.7(e), 
    creditors must disclose the balances subject to periodic rates 
    during a billing cycle. The deferred payment balance ($500 in this 
    example) is not subject to a periodic rate for billing cycles 
    between the date of purchase and the payment due date. Periodic 
    statements sent for those billing cycles should not include the 
    deferred payment balance in the balance disclosed under 
    Sec. 226.7(e). At the creditor's option, this amount may be 
    disclosed on periodic statements provided it is identified by a term 
    other than the term used to identify the balance disclosed under 
    Sec. 226.7(e) (such as ``deferred payment balance''). During any 
    billing cycle in which a periodic rate finance charge on the 
    deferred payment balance is debited to the account, the balance 
    disclosed under Sec. 226.7(e) should include the deferred payment 
    balance for that billing cycle.
        iii. Amount of finance charge. Under Sec. 226.7(f), creditors 
    must disclose finance charges imposed during a billing cycle. For 
    some deferred payment purchases, the creditor may impose a finance 
    charge from the date of purchase if the deferred payment balance 
    ($500 in this example) is not paid in full by the due date, but 
    otherwise will not impose finance charges for billing cycles between 
    the date of purchase and the payment due date. Periodic statements 
    for billing cycles preceding the payment due date should not include 
    in the finance charge disclosed under Sec. 226.7(f) the amounts a 
    consumer may owe if the deferred payment balance is not paid in full 
    by the payment due date. In this example, the February periodic 
    statement should not identify as finance charges interest 
    attributable to the $500 January purchase. At the creditor's option, 
    this amount may be disclosed on periodic statements provided it is 
    identified by a term other than ``finance charge'' (such as 
    ``contingent finance charge'' or ``deferred finance charge''). The 
    finance charge on a deferred payment balance should be reflected on 
    the periodic statement under Sec. 226.7(f) for the billing cycle in 
    which the finance charge is debited to the account.
        iv. Free-ride period. Assuming monthly billing cycles ending at 
    month-end and a free-ride period ending on the 25th of the following 
    month, here are four examples illustrating how a creditor may comply 
    with the requirement to disclose the free-ride period applicable to 
    a deferred payment balance ($500 in this example) and with the 14-
    day rule for mailing or delivering periodic statements before 
    imposing finance charges (see Sec. 226.5):
        A. The creditor could include the $500 purchase on the periodic 
    statement reflecting account activity for February and sent on March 
    1 and identify March 31 as the payment due date for the $500 
    purchase. (The creditor could also identify March 31 as the payment 
    due date for any other amounts that would normally be due on March 
    25.)
        B. The creditor could include the $500 purchase on the periodic 
    statement reflecting activity for March and sent on April 1 and 
    identify April 25 as the payment due date for the $500 purchase, 
    permitting the consumer to avoid finance charges if the $500 is paid 
    in full by April 25.
        C. The creditor could include the $500 purchase and its due date 
    on each periodic statement sent during the deferred payment period 
    (January, February, and March in this example).
        D. If the due date for the deferred payment balance is March 7 
    (instead of March 31), the creditor could include the $500 purchase 
    and its due date on the periodic statement reflecting activity for 
    January and sent on February 1, the most recent statement sent at 
    least 14 days prior to the due date.
    * * * * *
        7(d) Periodic rates. 
    * * * * *
        7. Deferred payment transactions. See comment 7-3(i).
        7(e) Balance on which finance charge computed. 
    * * * * *
        10. Deferred payment transactions. See comment 7-3(ii).
        7(f) Amount of finance charge. 
    * * * * *
        9. Deferred payment transactions. See comment 7-3(iii).
    * * * * *
        7(j) Free-ride period. 
    * * * * *
        2. Deferred payment transactions. See comment 7-3(iv).
    * * * * *
        8. In Supplement I to Part 226, under Section 226.14--Determination 
    of Annual Percentage Rate, under Paragraph 14(c) Annual percentage rate 
    for periodic statements., paragraph 5. and paragraph 10. are revised to 
    read as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    Section 226.14--Determination of Annual Percentage Rate
    
    * * * * *
        14(c) Annual percentage rate for periodic statements. 
    * * * * *
        5. Transaction charges. i. Section 226.14(c)(3) transaction 
    charges include, for example:
        A. A loan fee of $10 imposed on a particular advance.
        B. A charge of 3% of the amount of each transaction.
        ii. The reference to avoiding duplication in the computation 
    requires that the amounts of transactions on which transaction 
    charges were imposed not be included both in the amount of total 
    balances and in the ``other amounts on which a finance charge was 
    imposed'' figure. In a multifeatured plan, creditors may consider 
    each bona fide feature separately in the calculation of the 
    denominator. A creditor has considerable flexibility in defining 
    features for open-end plans, as long as the creditor has a 
    reasonable
    
    [[Page 16677]]
    
    basis for the distinctions. For further explanation and examples of 
    how to determine the components of this formula, see appendix F.
    * * * * *
        10. Prior-cycle adjustments. i. The annual percentage rate 
    reflects the finance charges imposed during the billing cycle. 
    However, finance charges imposed during the billing cycle may relate 
    to activity in a prior cycle. Examples of circumstances when this 
    may occur are:
        A. A cash advance occurs on the last day of a billing cycle on 
    an account that uses the transaction date to figure finance charges, 
    and it is impracticable to post the transaction until the following 
    cycle.
        B. An adjustment to the finance charge is made following the 
    resolution of a billing error dispute.
        C. A consumer fails to pay the purchase balance under a deferred 
    payment feature by the payment due date, and finance charges are 
    imposed from the date of purchase.
        ii. Finance charges relating to activity in prior cycles should 
    be reflected on the periodic statement as follows:
        A. If a finance charge imposed in the current billing cycle is 
    attributable to periodic rates applicable to prior billing cycles 
    (such as when a deferred payment balance was not paid in full by the 
    payment due date and finance charges from the date of purchase are 
    now being debited to the account, or when a cash advance occurs on 
    the last day of a billing cycle on an account that uses the 
    transaction date to figure finance charges and it is impracticable 
    to post the transaction until the following cycle), and the creditor 
    uses the quotient method to calculate the annual percentage rate, 
    the numerator would include the amount of any transaction charges 
    plus any other finance charges posted during the billing cycle. At 
    the creditor's option, balances relating to the finance charge 
    adjustment may be included in the denominator if permitted by the 
    legal obligation, if it was impracticable to post the transaction in 
    the previous cycle because of timing, or if the adjustment is 
    covered by comment 14(c)10.11.B.
        B. If a finance charge debited to the account relates to 
    activity for which a finance charge was debited to the account in a 
    previous billing cycle, for example, if the finance charge relates 
    to an adjustment such as the resolution of a billing error dispute, 
    or an unintentional posting error, or a payment by check that was 
    later returned unpaid for insufficient funds or other reasons, the 
    creditor shall at its option:
        1. Calculate the annual percentage rate in accord with comment 
    14(c)10.11.A, or
        2. Disclose the finance charge adjustment on the periodic 
    statement and calculate the annual percentage rate for the current 
    billing cycle without including the finance charge adjustment in the 
    numerator and balances associated with the finance charge adjustment 
    in the denominator.
    * * * * *
        9. In Supplement I to Part 226, under Section 226.18--Content of 
    Disclosures, the following amendments are made:
        a. Under Paragraph 18(c) Itemization of amount financed., paragraph 
    2. is revised; and
        b. Under Paragraph 18(g) Payment schedule., the 18(g) heading is 
    revised, and a new paragraph 4. is added.
        The revisions and addition read as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    Supbart C-Closed-End Credit
    
    * * * * *
    
    Section 226.18--Content of Disclosures
    
    * * * * *
        18(c) Itemization of amount financed. 
    * * * * *
        2. Additional information. Section 226.18(c) establishes only a 
    minimum standard for the material to be included in the itemization 
    of the amount financed. Creditors have considerable flexibility in 
    revising or supplementing the information listed in Sec. 226.18(c) 
    and shown in model form H-3, although no changes are required. The 
    creditor may, for example, do one or more of the following:
        i. Include amounts that reflect payments not part of the amount 
    financed. For example, escrow items and certain insurance premiums 
    may be included, as discussed in the commentary to Sec. 226.18(g).
        ii. Organize the categories in any order. For example, the 
    creditor may rearrange the terms in a mathematical progression that 
    depicts the arithmetic relationship of the terms.
        iii. Add categories. For example, in a credit sale, the creditor 
    may include the cash price and the downpayment. If the credit sale 
    involves a trade-in of the consumer's car and an existing lien on 
    that car exceeds the value of the trade-in amount, the creditor may 
    disclose the consumer's trade-in value, the creditor's payoff of the 
    existing lien, and the resulting additional amount financed.
        iv. Further itemize each category. For example, the amount paid 
    directly to the consumer may be subdivided into the amount given by 
    check and the amount credited to the consumer's savings account.
        v. Label categories with different language from that shown in 
    Sec. 226.18(c). For example, an amount paid on the consumer's 
    account may be revised to specifically identify the account as 
    ``your auto loan with us.''
        vi. Delete, leave blank, mark ``N/A'' or otherwise not 
    inapplicable categories in the itemization. For example, in a credit 
    sale with no prepaid finance charges or amounts paid to others, the 
    amount financed may consist of only the cash price less downpayment. 
    In this case, the itemization may be composed of only a single 
    category and all other categories may be eliminated.
    * * * * *
        18(g) Payment schedule. 
    * * * * *
        4. Timing of payments. i. General rule. Section 226.18(g) 
    requires creditors to disclose the timing of payments. To meet this 
    requirement, creditors may list all of the payment due dates. They 
    also have the option of specifying the ``period of payments'' 
    scheduled to repay the obligation. As a general rule, creditors that 
    choose this option must disclose the payment intervals or frequency, 
    such as ``monthly''or ``bi-weekly,'' and the calendar date that the 
    beginning payment is due. For example, a creditor may disclose that 
    payments are due ``monthly beginning on July 1, 1998.'' This 
    information, when combined with the number of payments, is necessary 
    to define the repayment period and enable a consumer to determine 
    all of the payment due dates.
        ii. Exception. In a limited number of circumstances, the 
    beginning-payment date is unknown and difficult to determine at the 
    time disclosures are made. For example, a consumer may become 
    obligated on a credit contract that contemplates the delayed 
    disbursement of funds based on a contingent event, such as the 
    completion of home repairs. Disclosures may also accompany loan 
    checks that are sent by mail, in which case the initial disbursement 
    and repayment dates are solely within the consumer's control. In 
    such cases, if the beginning-payment date is unknown the creditor 
    may use an estimated date and label the disclosure as an estimate 
    pursuant to Sec. 226.17(c). Alternatively, the disclosure may refer 
    to the occurrence of a particular event, for example, by disclosing 
    that the beginning payment is due ``30 days after the first loan 
    disbursement.'' This information also may be included with an 
    estimated date to explain the basis for the creditor's estimate. See 
    Comment 17(a)(1)-5(iii).
    * * * * *
        10. In Supplement I to Part 226, under Section 226.32--Requirements 
    for Certain Closed-End Home Mortgages, under Paragraph 32(a)(1)(ii), 
    paragraph 2. is revised to read as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    Subpart E--Special Rules for Certain Home Mortgage Transactions
    
    * * * * *
    
    Section 226.32--Requirements for Certain Closed-End Home Mortgages
    
        32(a) Coverage. 
    * * * * *
        Paragraph 32(a)(1)(ii). 
    * * * * *
        2. Annual adjustment of $400 amount. A mortgage loan is covered 
    by Sec. 226.32 if the total points and fees payable by the consumer 
    at or before loan consummation exceed the greater of $400 or 8 
    percent of the total loan amount. The $400 figure is adjusted 
    annually by the Board; the adjusted figure becomes effective on 
    January 1 of the following year. The Board will publish adjustments 
    after the June figures become available each year. The adjustment 
    for the upcoming year will be included in any proposed commentary 
    published in the fall, and incorporated into the commentary the 
    following spring. The adjusted figures are:
        i. For 1996, $412, reflecting a 3.00 percent increase in the 
    CPI-U from June 1994 to June 1995, rounded to the nearest whole 
    dollar.
        ii. For 1997, $424, reflecting a 2.9 percent increase in the 
    CPI-U from June 1995 to June 1996, rounded to the nearest whole 
    dollar.
    
    [[Page 16678]]
    
        iii. For 1998, $435, reflecting a 2.5 percent increase in the 
    CPI-U from June 1996 to June 1997, rounded to the nearest whole 
    dollar.
    * * * * *
        11. In Supplement I to Part 226, under Section 226.33--Requirements 
    for Reverse Mortgages, under Paragraph 33(c)(1) Costs to consumer, in 
    paragraph 2., a new sentence is added at the end of the paragraph to 
    read as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    Section 226.33--Requirements for Reverse Mortgages
    
    * * * * *
        33(c) Projected total cost of credit. 
        Paragraph 33(c)(1) Costs to consumer. 
    * * * * *
        2. Annuity costs. * * * For example, this includes the costs of 
    an annuity that a creditor offers, arranges, assists the consumer in 
    purchasing, or that the creditor is aware the consumer is purchasing 
    as a part of the transaction.
    * * * * *
        By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
    System, acting through the Secretary of the Board under delegated 
    authority, March 31, 1998.
    William W. Wiles,
    Secretary of the Board.
    [FR Doc. 98-8829 Filed 4-3-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6210-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
3/31/1998
Published:
04/06/1998
Department:
Federal Reserve System
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule; official staff interpretation.
Document Number:
98-8829
Dates:
This rule is effective March 31, 1998. Compliance is optional until October 1, 1998.
Pages:
16669-16678 (10 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Regulation Z, Docket No. R-0992
PDF File:
98-8829.pdf
CFR: (9)
12 CFR 226.19(a)
12 CFR 226.20(b)
12 CFR 226.4(b)(2)
12 CFR 226.5(b)(2)
12 CFR 226.18(c)
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