98-19143. Disclosures for Adjustable-Rate Mortgage Loans

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 137 (Friday, July 17, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 38461-38463]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-19143]
    
    
    
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    Federal Register / Vol. 63, No. 137 / Friday, July 17, 1998 / Rules 
    and Regulations
    
    [[Page 38461]]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
    
    Office of Thrift Supervision
    
    12 CFR Part 560
    
    [No. 98-70]
    RIN 1550-AB12
    
    
    Disclosures for Adjustable-Rate Mortgage Loans
    
    AGENCY: Office of Thrift Supervision, Treasury.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) is issuing a final rule 
    revising adjustable-rate mortgage loan (ARM) disclosure requirements 
    for savings associations. In the interim final rule, the OTS conformed 
    its ARM disclosure rule text to recent changes to related disclosure 
    provisions in Regulation Z, which was issued by the Federal Reserve 
    Board (FRB) under the Truth in Lending Act (TILA). In today's final 
    rule, the OTS replaces its existing rule with a simple cross-reference 
    to the Regulation Z disclosure provisions. The rule also makes minor 
    technical changes. This substitution does not affect the rule's 
    function of promoting safe and sound lending by savings associations 
    nor OTS's enforcement of its provisions.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: Effective date: July 17, 1998. Compliance date: 
    Compliance is optional until October 1, 1998.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Susan Miles, Attorney, (202) 906-6798, 
    Regulations and Legislation Division, Chief Counsel's Office, Office of 
    Thrift Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        To assist borrowers in making informed decisions on the cost of 
    credit, the OTS and FRB have issued regulations imposing disclosure 
    requirements on creditors issuing ARMs. The FRB disclosure rules at 12 
    CFR Part 226 implement TILA 1 and are commonly referred to 
    as Regulation Z. Regulation Z applies to all lenders subject to TILA, 
    including savings associations. Regulation Z, however, specifically 
    states that information provided in accordance with the variable rate 
    regulations of other federal agencies, such as the OTS, may be 
    substituted for the disclosures required by Regulation Z.2 
    To this extent, Regulation Z incorporates the OTS ARM disclosure rule 
    at 12 CFR 560.210, and the OTS rule serves as an implementing 
    regulation of TILA.
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        \1\ 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.
        \2\ 12 CFR 226.19(b) n. 45a and 226.20(c) n. 45c.
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        Section 560.210 applies to ARMs with a term of more than one year 
    that are secured by property occupied by or to be occupied by the 
    borrower. This rule was first issued by the OTS's predecessor agency, 
    the Federal Home Loan Bank Board (FHLBB) under the agency's authority 
    under the Home Owners' Loan Act (HOLA) 3 to ensure that 
    savings associations operate in a safe and sound manner. The FHLBB 
    believed the regulation was necessary because ``[s]afe and sound 
    lending using ARMs requires that the borrower have a full understanding 
    of the type of obligation being incurred in order to make a reasonable 
    and meaningful decision concerning ability to repay.'' 4 The 
    OTS continues to consider promoting safe and sound lending an important 
    function of this regulation.
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        \3\ 12 U.S.C. 1463(a) and 1464(a).
        \4\ 50 FR 32005 (Aug. 8, 1985).
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        Although the original FHLBB regulation was more detailed than 
    Regulation Z, the disclosures required under OTS regulations have been 
    identical to those required under Regulation Z since 1988. Under 
    Regulation Z, if a variable rate transaction exceeds a term of one year 
    and is secured by the consumer's principal dwelling, the creditor must 
    provide various initial disclosures for each variable rate program in 
    which the consumer is interested.5 Until recently amended, 
    Regulation Z required an institution to provide: (1) A fifteen-year 
    historical example, based on a $10,000 loan amount, illustrating how 
    payments and the loan balance would have been affected by interest rate 
    changes implemented according to the terms of the loan program; and (2) 
    The maximum interest rate and payment for a $10,000 loan, originated at 
    the most recent interest rate shown in the historical example assuming 
    the maximum periodic increases in rates and payments under the loan, 
    and the initial interest rate and payment for that loan.
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        \5\ 12 CFR 226.19(b)(2) (1997).
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        Section 2105 of the Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork 
    Reduction Act of 1996 (EGRPRA) 6 amended section 128(a) of 
    TILA to permit a creditor to elect to provide a statement that periodic 
    rates may substantially increase or decrease (together with the maximum 
    interest rate and payment amount based on a $10,000 loan amount), in 
    lieu of the historical example. On December 1, 1997, the FRB published 
    a final rule implementing section 2105 of EGRPRA.
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        \6\ Pub. L. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009 (September 30, 1996).
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        On January 8, 1998, the OTS published an interim final rule making 
    identical amendments to Sec. 560.210.7 Under the OTS interim 
    final rule, a savings association may provide either the historical 
    example or the maximum interest rate and payment. If the savings 
    association chooses the maximum interest rate and payment option, 
    however, it must also provide the initial rate and payment amount and a 
    statement that the periodic rate may increase or decrease 
    substantially.
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        \7\ 63 FR 1051.
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        Consistent with the FRB final rule, the OTS interim rule also 
    modified how the interest rate is calculated under the maximum interest 
    rate and payment option. Before the interim final rule, a savings 
    association calculated the maximum interest rate using ``the most 
    recent interest rate shown in the historical example.'' Since a savings 
    association is not required to provide the historical example when it 
    elects the maximum interest rate and payment option, the interim final 
    rule provided for the disclosure of ``the initial interest rate (index 
    value plus margin, adjusted by the amount of any discount or premium) 
    in effect as of an identified month and year for the particular loan 
    program.''
        Similarly, before the interim final rule, the OTS required a 
    savings association to explain how a customer could calculate payments 
    for the loan
    
    [[Page 38462]]
    
    amount based on the most recent payment shown in the historical 
    example. To allow customers to understand the relationship between 
    their transactions and the disclosures made under the maximum interest 
    rate and payment option, the interim final rule permits a savings 
    association to provide a customer with a similar explanation using the 
    initial interest rate. The FRB made a similar change to Regulation Z.
    
    II. Discussion of Comments
    
        The OTS received comments from three commenters: one state-
    chartered savings institution, one federal savings bank, and one law 
    firm. All three commenters supported the substantive changes in the 
    interim final rule. Accordingly, today's final rule incorporates the 
    substantive changes to the ARM disclosure requirements.
        The OTS specifically solicited comment on whether it should delete 
    the text of the disclosure requirements in Sec. 560.210 and rely on the 
    disclosure requirements in Regulation Z. All three commenters urged the 
    OTS to adopt this approach.
        The OTS has deleted the text of the disclosure requirements from 
    the final rule and has substituted appropriate cross-references to 
    Regulation Z. This approach will permit OTS-regulated institutions to 
    immediately comply with all future changes to the Regulation Z 
    disclosures in this area without waiting for the OTS to conform its 
    rule through the rulemaking process.8 Thus, the rule will 
    ensure that all competing lenders are subject to similar regulatory 
    requirements for ARM loans. This approach is consistent with section 
    303 of the Community Development Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994 
    (CDRIA), which instructs each banking agency to review their 
    regulations and remove duplicate requirements and encourages common 
    interagency supervisory policies. Finally, this change more closely 
    conforms OTS rules to those issued by the Office of the Comptroller of 
    the Currency and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. These agencies' 
    rules do not prescribe any ARM disclosures and, instead, rely entirely 
    on Regulation Z.
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        \8\ We note that the recent FRB final rule was effective on 
    November 21, 1997. The OTS's related interim final rule was 
    effective on January 8, 1998.
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        Rather than delete all references to ARM disclosure requirements 
    from the regulations, the OTS has decided to retain appropriate cross-
    references to the disclosure provisions in Regulation Z. This approach, 
    which two commenters supported, preserves the OTS's authority to 
    utilize the full panoply of enforcement actions available under the 
    HOLA and section 8 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDIA) 
    9 when an institution has improperly adjusted ARM interest 
    rates. As noted above, Sec. 560.210 implements both HOLA and TILA. 
    Although TILA authorizes the OTS to utilize the standard enforcement 
    remedies under section 8 of the FDIA, it limits when an agency may 
    require an institution to ``make dollar adjustments'' for errors. Under 
    TILA, the agency is authorized to direct an institution to make dollar 
    adjustments only where an annual percentage rate or finance charge was 
    inaccurately disclosed.10
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        \9\ 12 U.S.C. 1818.
        \10\ 15 U.S.C. 1607(b) & (e)(5).
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        By contrast, the OTS may seek any remedy authorized under the HOLA 
    or section 8 of the FDIA for violations of regulations adopted pursuant 
    to its authority under the HOLA.11 As previously discussed, 
    a long-standing purpose of the disclosure requirements of Sec. 560.210 
    and its predecessor regulations has been promoting safe and sound 
    lending by savings associations through ensuring that borrowers have a 
    full understanding of their obligations and can therefore make 
    reasonable and meaningful decisions about their ability to repay their 
    loans. Thus, when enforcing Sec. 560.210 as a safety and soundness 
    regulation, the agency has a wider array of enforcement tools than 
    would be available if it were solely enforcing violations of TILA. 
    Section 8 of the FDIA, for example, permits the OTS to issue cease and 
    desist orders requiring affirmative corrective actions, which may 
    include account adjustments. FDIA also authorizes the OTS to require an 
    institution to make restitution if the institution was unjustly 
    enriched, or acted with reckless disregard.
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        \11\ 12 U.S.C. 1464(d).
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        Changing the format of the regulation to incorporate some 
    provisions of Regulation Z by cross-referencing does not affect this 
    authority. As with other OTS regulations that incorporate regulations 
    of other agencies by cross referencing (e.g., 12 CFR 560.93, 563.43), 
    OTS has the responsibility of enforcing the incorporated regulations as 
    they apply to savings associations. The OTS will continue to enforce 
    violations of Sec. 560.210 using the enforcement remedies provided 
    under the HOLA and FDIA.12
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        \12\ One commenter noted that borrowers have additional 
    enforcement remedies under state law and under RESPA's mortgage loan 
    servicing provisions. See 12 U.S.C. 2605(e)(1)(B). The OTS does not 
    wish to rely on the efforts of the individual plaintiffs to ensure 
    that thrift institutions use safe and sound banking practices and 
    comply with applicable laws and regulation. Rather, the OTS has 
    retained and will exercise the broadest possible enforcement 
    authority permitted under the existing statutes.
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        In the preamble to the interim rule, the OTS observed that 
    Sec. 560.210, on its face, applies to loans secured by a borrower's 
    principal dwelling or by a second home. By contrast, the applicable 
    Regulation Z disclosure requirements at 12 CFR 226.19(b) and 226.20(c) 
    apply only when the secured property serves as the borrower's primary 
    dwelling.13 Two commenters urged the OTS to eliminate 
    coverage for loans secured by second homes.
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        \13\ See e.g., 12 CFR Part 226, Supp. I. Official Staff 
    Interpretation, Section 226.19, Paragraph 19(b), Comment 1.
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        In recent years, the OTS has revised the scope of its ARM 
    disclosure rule to more closely conform to Regulation Z requirements. 
    For example, in the recent Lending and Investment rulemaking, OTS 
    eliminated coverage of ARM loans that are primarily for a business, 
    commercial, or agricultural purpose. The OTS made this revision to 
    minimize the differences between its ARM regulation and Regulation Z 
    and to ensure parity in coverage for all lenders.14 To 
    ensure that the scope of the OTS rule is, and continues to be, 
    coextensive with Regulation Z, the cross-reference in the final rule 
    refers to variable rate transactions as described under 12 CFR 
    226.19(b) and 226.20(c). These transactions are limited to those 
    involving principal residences.
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        \14\ 61 FR 50951, 50962-63 (Sept. 30, 1996). Moreover, we note 
    that the FHLBB's initial ARM disclosure regulation originally 
    specifically excluded the coverage of second homes. 50 FR 32010 
    (August 8, 1985). In 1987, however, the relevant language was 
    deleted without any discussion. 52 FR 3668 (February 5, 1987).
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        In addition to the changes discussed above, the OTS has made minor 
    technical changes to current Sec. 560.210. For example, the new cross-
    references to variable rate mortgage transactions under Regulation Z, 
    permit the deletion of the existing definitions of ``adjustable-rate 
    mortgage loan,'' ``applicant,'' and ``home.''
        The OTS has also deleted current Sec. 560.210(e). This paragraph 
    states that a savings association making a closed- or open-end ARM loan 
    must comply with Regulation Z (12 CFR 226.30) by specifying in their 
    credit contracts the maximum interest rate that may be imposed during 
    the term of the obligation. This section simply reiterates already 
    applicable requirements under Regulation Z, and may be deleted as 
    unnecessary.
    
    [[Page 38463]]
    
    III. Effective Date
    
        The OTS has determined that there is good cause to dispense with a 
    30-day delayed effective date under 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3). The revised 
    disclosure requirements reduce regulatory confusion by conforming the 
    OTS disclosure rules under the HOLA more closely to those of the FRB 
    under TILA. The changes do not have an adverse impact on savings 
    associations because they reduce regulatory burden. Moreover, the 
    substantive changes to disclosure requirements were immediately 
    effective upon publication of the interim rule in January, 1998 and 
    many institutions have already adopted the changes. Accordingly, OTS-
    regulated institutions will not require additional time to adjust their 
    policies or practices to comply with the rule.
        The OTS has also determined, for the reasons stated in the 
    preceding paragraph, that good cause exists to adopt an effective date 
    that is before date that would otherwise be required by section 302 of 
    CDRIA (i.e., the first day of the calendar quarter after the date of 
    publication).
        Accordingly, the final rule is effective immediately. However, like 
    the FRB rule, compliance with the OTS rule is optional until October 1, 
    1998.
    
    IV. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
    
        The collections of information contained in this final rule were 
    submitted to and approved by the Office of Management and Budget in 
    accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)) 
    under OMB Control Number 1550-0078.
        Comments on all aspects of this information collection above should 
    be sent to the Office of Management and Budget, Paperwork Reduction 
    Project (1550-0078), Washington, DC 20503, with copies to the Office of 
    Thrift Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW, Washington, DC 20552.
        Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, no persons are required 
    to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a valid 
    OMB control number. The valid OMB control number assigned to the 
    collection of information in this final rule is displayed at 12 CFR 
    506.1(b).
        The collection of information requirements in this final rule are 
    found at 12 CFR 560.210. The OTS needs the disclosures requirements to 
    ensure that savings associations comply with a statutory TILA 
    requirement and to otherwise supervise safe and sound lending by 
    savings associations. The likely respondents/recordkeepers are OTS-
    regulated savings associations.
    
    V. Executive Order 12866
    
        The Director of the OTS has determined that this final rule does 
    not constitute a ``significant regulatory action'' for the purposes of 
    Executive Order 12866.
    
    VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
    
        Pursuant to section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the 
    OTS certifies that this final rule will not have a significant economic 
    impact on a substantial number of small entities. The final rule will 
    not impose any additional burdens or requirements. Rather, it reduces 
    the disclosures required for ARMs and eases the compliance burden on 
    all savings associations, including small savings associations. 
    Accordingly, a regulatory flexibility analysis is not required.
    
    VII. Unfunded Mandates Act of 1995
    
        The OTS has determined that the requirements of this final rule 
    will not result in expenditures by State, local, and tribal 
    governments, or by the private sector, of more than $100 million in any 
    one year. Accordingly, a budgetary impact statement is not required 
    under section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Act of 1995, as codified at 
    2 U.S.C. 1571(a).
    
    List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 560
    
        Consumer protection, Investments, Manufactured homes, Mortgages, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Savings associations.
    
        Accordingly, the Office of Thrift Supervision amends title 12, 
    chapter V, of the Code of Federal Regulations as set forth below:
    
    PART 560--LENDING AND INVESTMENT
    
        1. The authority citation for part 560 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1462, 1462a, 1463, 1464, 1467a, 1701j-3, 
    1828, 3803, 3806; 42 U.S.C. 4106.
    
        2. Section 560.210 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 560.210  Disclosures for variable rate transactions.
    
        A savings association must provide the initial disclosures 
    described at 12 CFR 226.19(b) and the adjustment notices described at 
    12 CFR 226.20(c) for variable rate transactions, as described in those 
    regulations. The OTS administers and enforces those provisions for 
    savings associations.
    
        Dated: July 14, 1998.
    
    By the Office of Thrift Supervision.
    Ellen Seidman,
    Director.
    [FR Doc. 98-19143 Filed 7-16-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6720-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
07/17/1998
Department:
Thrift Supervision Office
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
98-19143
Pages:
38461-38463 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
No. 98-70
RINs:
1550-AB12: Disclosures for Adjustable-rate Mortgage Loans, Adjustment Notices, and Interest-rate Caps
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/1550-AB12/disclosures-for-adjustable-rate-mortgage-loans-adjustment-notices-and-interest-rate-caps
PDF File:
98-19143.pdf
CFR: (1)
12 CFR 560.210