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Welcome to the Utah Housing Coalition HMDA Training

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So prices will be reported for some, but not all, home loans. ... Last year 19% of all home-loan originations were subprime, up from just 5% in 1994. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Welcome to the Utah Housing Coalition HMDA Training


1
Welcome to the Utah Housing Coalition HMDA
Training
  • Presenter
  • Anita Garrett, CRCM

2
HOME MORTGAGE DISCLOSURE ACT (HMDA) REGULATION C
  • Overview

3
Scope of Presentation
  • The history and purpose of the HMDA data
    collection
  • The new pricing data
  • Its impact on fair lending evaluations
  • Its impact on affordable housing
  • How the data can be used to monitor an
    institution's lending programs and explore new
    lending opportunities.

4
HMDA Background
  • Enacted by Congress in 1975
  • Implemented by Federal Reserve Boards Regulation
    C
  • Made permanent in 1988
  • Amended in 1989 to require reporting of data
    about applications received and about applicant
    and borrower characteristics
  • Amended in 2002 to add additional fields,
    including price data.

5
Purpose of HMDA
  • Makes information publicly available that shows
    whether financial institutions are serving
    housing credit needs of their neighborhoods and
    communities
  • Helps identify possible discriminatory lending
    patterns and assists regulatory agencies in
    enforcing compliance with nondiscrimination
    statutes
  • Provides private investors and public agencies
    with information to guide investments in housing

6
What are the HMDA data?
  • HMDA data cover home purchase and home
    improvement loans and refinancings, and contain
    information about loan originations, loan
    purchases, and denied, incomplete or withdrawn
    applications. With some exceptions, for each
    transaction the lender reports data about
  • the loan (or application)
  • the disposition of the application
  • the property to which the loan relates, and
  • the applicant's ethnicity, race, sex, and income.

7
The New Price Data
  • The 2002 Amendment, which added the new price
    data, was enacted in order to keep pace with
    changes in the industry in recent years,
    including
  • Technological advancements and the practice of
    credit scoring resulting in new strategies for
    analyzing, underwriting, and pricing mortgage
    loans.
  • The reassessment of the nature of mortgage
    lending abuses.

8
The New Price Data
  • In general, the price data are the adjusted
    annual percentage rates (APRs) of higher-priced
    loans, loans with rates that exceed certain
    thresholds set by the Federal Reserve Board.
  • They take the form of a rate spread.

9
The New Price Data
  • Lenders must report the spread (difference)
    between the annual percentage rate on a loan and
    the rate on Treasury securities of comparable
    maturity but only for loans with spreads above
    designated thresholds.
  • So prices will be reported for some, but not all,
    home loans.

10
The Impact on Fair Lending Evaluations
  • According to the Federal Reserve, only 2 of the
    8,853 lenders that submitted data had a
    statistically significant difference in the
    incidence of higher-priced loans after
    accounting for factors included in the HMDA
    data.
  • Source HMDA Data Explain Most Variations in
    Price, American Banker, Wednesday, September
    14, 2005

11
The Impact on Fair Lending Evaluations
  • Some of those discrepancies could be explained by
    other factors not contained in the data, such as
  • Borrowers Credit History
  • Debt-to-Income Ratio
  • Ratio of the Loan Amount to the Value of the
    Property

12
The Impact on Affordable Housing
13
The Mortgage Loan Spectrum
14
  • Last year 19 of all home-loan originations were
    subprime, up from just 5 in 1994.
  • Source HMDA Data Explain Most Variations in
    Price, American Banker, Wednesday, September
    14, 2005

15
The Need For Financial Education
  • Several recent studies of consumer behavior
    suggest that borrowers with poor credit ratings
    are at a disadvantage for a number of reasons--in
    particular, a lack of financial education. But
    even more troubling is evidence that many of
    these borrowers assume that their credit standing
    is worse than it actually is and, as a result,
    don't shop and negotiate for the best terms
    possible.

16
Working Together . . .
  • Using HMDA information, lenders and community
    groups can work together to identify the
    particular segments of their communities that may
    need additional financial education or, perhaps,
    new, more-competitive products.

17
Public Availability of HMDA Data
  • Data must be maintained on a LAR in a format
    prescribed by Regulation C
  • A modified register must be made available to the
    public upon request (application or loan number,
    application date and action date removed to
    protect applicants privacy)

18
Data Submission
  • HMDA data must be submitted to the Banks
    regulatory agency by March 1 each year
  • March 31st is the earliest date that data from
    the previous calendar year are publicly available

19
Disclosure Statement
  • A Disclosure Statement is prepared by the FFIEC
    using HMDA data submitted by the institution.
  • The Institution must make the Statement available
    to the public upon request.
  • The Disclosure Statement must remain available to
    the public for five years.

20
Aggregate Tables
  • Aggregate Tables are prepared by FFIEC and made
    available at a central data depository in each
    MSA.
  • They are also available online at www.FFIEC.gov.

21
In Summary
  • A cooperative review of the HMDA data between
    lenders and community groups can
  • Identify credit demand that might otherwise have
    been overlooked
  • Encourage the establishment of partnerships
    between lenders and community organizations to
    meet credit needs and
  • Identify geographic areas where financial
    education is needed.

22
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