[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 24 (Monday, February 7, 2005)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 6329-6334]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-2211]


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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

12 CFR Part 30

[Docket No. 05-02]
RIN 1557-AC93


OCC Guidelines Establishing Standards for Residential Mortgage 
Lending Practices

AGENCY: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury.

ACTION: Appendix to regulations; final guidelines.

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SUMMARY: The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) is 
issuing, as an appendix to part 30 of its regulations, guidelines 
concerning the residential mortgage lending practices of national banks 
and their operating subsidiaries (Guidelines) as a further step to 
protect against national bank involvement in predatory, abusive, 
unfair, or deceptive residential mortgage lending practices. The 
Guidelines describe particular practices inconsistent with sound 
residential mortgage lending practices. They also describe other terms 
and practices that may be conducive to predatory, abusive, unfair, or 
deceptive lending practices, depending on the circumstances, and which, 
accordingly, warrant a heightened degree of care by lenders. In 
addition, the Guidelines address the steps that banks should take to 
mitigate risks associated with their purchase of residential mortgage 
loans and use of mortgage brokers to originate loans. The Guidelines 
focus on the substance of activities and practices, not on the creation 
of policies. The standards contained in the Guidelines are enforceable 
pursuant to section 39 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act and the 
implementing process set forth in part 30 of the OCC's regulations.

EFFECTIVE DATE: April 8, 2005.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For questions concerning the 
Guidelines, contact Michael Bylsma, Director, Community and Consumer 
Law Division, (202) 874-5750, Michele Meyer, Special Counsel, 
Legislative & Regulatory Activities Division, (202) 874-5090, or Rick 
Freer, National Bank Examiner, Compliance, (202) 874-4428, 250 E 
Street, SW., Washington, DC 20219.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Background

    National banks are authorized by statute to engage in real estate 
lending activities, subject to the requirements of Federal law,\1\ and 
national banks' real estate lending is closely supervised and 
comprehensively regulated under a regulatory framework that includes a 
wide variety of Federal laws and regulations designed to ensure the 
protection of consumers of banks' residential mortgage products and 
services.\2\
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    \1\ 12 U.S.C. 371(a); and see 12 CFR part 34 (OCC rules 
governing real estate lending and appraisals implementing 12 U.S.C. 
1828(o)).
    \2\ Federal consumer protection laws and regulations that apply 
with respect to the residential real estate lending activities of 
national banks and their operating subsidiaries include: the Federal 
Trade Commission Act, 15 U.S.C. 41 et seq.; the Truth in Lending 
Act, 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.; the Home Ownership and Equity 
Protection Act, 15 U.S.C. 1639 et seq.; the Fair Housing Act, 42 
U.S.C. 3601 et seq.; the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 15 U.S.C. 
1691 et seq.; the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, 12 U.S.C. 
1261 et seq.; the Flood Disaster Protection Act, 42 U.S.C. 4001 et 
seq.; the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, 12 U.S.C. 2801 et seq.; the 
Fair Credit Reporting Act, 15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq., as recently 
amended by the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003, 
Pub. L. 108-159, 111 Stat. 1952; the Fair Debt Collection Practices 
Act, 15 U.S.C. 1692 et seq.; and the privacy provisions of Title V 
of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, 15 U.S.C. 6801 et seq.
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    Fair treatment of customers is fundamental to sound banking 
practices

[[Page 6330]]

and the OCC has taken a number of measures in recent years to assure 
that the lending practices of national banks reflect that standard. In 
particular, in February, 2003, we issued two advisory letters alerting 
national banks to practices that may be considered predatory or abusive 
and advising national banks on measures to avoid such practices. The 
advisories addressed national banks' mortgage origination activity, as 
well as purchases of loans and use of third-party brokers to conduct 
mortgage lending.\3\ In January, 2004, we added to our rules an express 
prohibition on making mortgage loans based predominantly on the bank's 
realization of foreclosure or liquidation value of the collateral, 
without regard to the borrower's ability to repay the loan according to 
its terms, a prohibition that goes to the heart of predatory lending. 
In that same rulemaking, we also added provisions prohibiting banks 
from engaging in unfair or deceptive practices within the meaning of 
section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, 15 U.S.C. 45.\4\ In 
addition to establishing standards by regulation and in guidance, our 
overall approach includes taking prompt enforcement action to remedy 
abusive practices if we find that they have occurred.\5\
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    \3\ OCC Advisory Letter 2003-2, ``Guidelines for National Banks 
to Guard Against Predatory and Abusive Lending Practices'' (Feb. 21, 
2003) and OCC Advisory Letter 2003-3, ``Avoiding Predatory and 
Abusive Lending Practices in Brokered and Purchased Loans'' (Feb. 
21, 2003).
    \4\ 69 FR at 1917 (to be codified at 12 CFR 34.3). Through 
amendments to other provisions of our rules, both the anti-predatory 
lending standard and the prohibition against unfair or deceptive 
practices also apply to national banks' non-real estate lending. A 
number of commenters on these amendments lauded the content of the 
Advisory Letters but questioned their enforceability.
    \5\ A listing of enforcement actions taken recently by the OCC 
is available on our Web site in the ``Popular FOIA Requests'' 
section at http://www.occ.treas.gov/foia/foiadocs.htm.
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    In order to enhance our ability to apply the guidance described in 
our February, 2003 advisory letters, we are now adopting the core 
elements of that guidance in the form of guidelines for residential 
mortgage lending standards, in a new Appendix C to part 30 of our 
regulations. These standards further the OCC's goal of ensuring that 
national banks and their operating subsidiaries are not involved 
directly or indirectly through loans that they purchase or make through 
intermediaries, in predatory or abusive residential mortgage lending 
practices. The Guidelines incorporate and implement the principles of, 
but do not replace, the February, 2003 advisory letters. The advisories 
remain in effect as supervisory guidance that provides supplemental 
context and explanation of the issues addressed in these Guidelines. 
Like the advisories, the Guidelines apply to national banks and, 
pursuant to OCC regulations, to their operating subsidiaries.\6\ The 
Guidelines focus on the substance of activities and practices, not on 
the creation of policies. The Guidelines are enforceable pursuant to 
the process provided in Section 39 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act 
(FDIA) and part 30.
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    \6\ 12 CFR 5.34(e) (operating subsidiaries may conduct only 
those activities permissible for the parent national bank; operating 
subsidiaries' authorized activities are subject to the same terms 
and conditions as apply to the parent bank).
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Enforcement of the Guidelines

    The OCC is issuing these Guidelines pursuant to Section 39 of the 
FDIA.\7\ Section 39 authorizes the OCC to prescribe safety and 
soundness standards in the form either of a regulation or guidelines. 
These standards currently include, among others, operational and 
managerial standards for insured depository institutions that relate to 
internal controls, information systems, and audit systems; loan 
documentation; credit underwriting; interest rate exposure; and asset 
growth. Section 39 also provides, without qualification, that ``each 
appropriate Federal banking agency'' may prescribe ``such other 
operational and managerial standards'' as it ``determines to be 
appropriate.''
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    \7\ 12 U.S.C. 1831p-1. Section 39 was enacted as part of the 
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991, 
Public Law 102-242, section 132(a), 105 Stat. 2236, 2267-70 (Dec. 
19, 1991) (FDICIA).
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    Section 39 prescribes different consequences depending on whether 
the standards it authorizes are issued by regulation or guidelines. 
Pursuant to Section 39, if a national bank fails to meet a standard 
prescribed by regulation, the OCC must require it to submit a plan 
specifying the steps it will take to comply with the standard. If a 
national bank fails to meet a standard prescribed by guideline, the OCC 
has the discretion to decide whether to require the submission of such 
a plan.\8\ Issuing these residential mortgage lending practices 
standards by guideline rather than regulation provides the OCC with the 
flexibility to pursue the course of action that is most appropriate, 
taking into consideration the specific circumstances of a national 
bank's noncompliance with one or more standards, and the bank's self-
corrective and remedial responses.
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    \8\ See 12 U.S.C. 1831p-1(e)(1)(A)(i) and (ii). In either case, 
however, the statute authorizes the issuance of an order and the 
subsequent enforcement of that order in court, independent of any 
other enforcement action that may be available in a particular case.
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    The Guidelines incorporate key provisions of the February, 2003 
advisory letters and describe certain practices the OCC believes are 
inconsistent with sound residential mortgage lending practices. They 
also describe other terms and practices that may be conducive to 
predatory, abusive, unfair, or deceptive lending, and which, 
accordingly, warrant a heightened degree of care by lenders. The 
Guidelines thus incorporate the central principles and considerations 
contained in the February, 2003 advisories into a framework that 
specifically provides for their enforcement on a case-by-case basis 
under the framework provided by Section 39 and part 30 of our 
regulations.
    The enforcement remedies prescribed by Section 39 are implemented 
in procedural rules contained in part 30 of the OCC's rules. Under 
these provisions, the OCC may initiate the part 30 process when we 
determine, by examination or otherwise, that a national bank has failed 
to meet the standards set forth in the Guidelines.\9\ Upon making that 
determination, we may request, through a supervisory letter or in a 
report of examination, that the national bank submit a compliance plan 
to the OCC detailing the steps the bank will take to correct the 
deficiencies and the time within which it will take those steps. This 
request is termed a Notice of Deficiency. Upon receiving a Notice of 
Deficiency from the OCC, the national bank must submit a compliance 
plan to the OCC for approval within 30 days.
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    \9\ The procedures governing the determination and notification 
of failure to satisfy a standard prescribed pursuant to Section 39, 
the filing and review of compliance plans, and the issuance, if 
necessary, of orders appear in our regulations at 12 CFR 30.3, 30.4, 
and 30.5, respectively.
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    If a national bank fails to submit an acceptable compliance plan, 
or fails materially to comply with a compliance plan approved by the 
OCC, the OCC may issue a Notice of Intent to Issue an Order pursuant to 
Section 39 (Notice of Intent). The bank then has 14 days to respond to 
the Notice of Intent. After considering the bank's response, the OCC 
may issue the order, decide not to issue the order, or seek additional 
information from the bank before making a final decision. 
Alternatively, the OCC may issue an order without providing the bank 
with a Notice of Intent. In such a case, the bank may appeal after-the-
fact to the OCC and the OCC has 60 days to consider the appeal and 
render a final decision. When the OCC issues an order, a bank is deemed 
to be in non-compliance with part 30.

[[Page 6331]]

Orders are formal, public documents, and they may be enforced in 
district court or through the assessment of civil money penalties under 
12 U.S.C. 1818.

Description of the OCC's Residential Mortgage Lending Practices 
Guidelines

    The Guidelines consist of three parts. Part I provides an 
introduction to the Guidelines and explains their scope and 
application. Part II sets forth general standards for residential 
mortgage lending practices. Part III describes the implementation of 
those standards. We have also made technical conforming amendments to 
the part 30 regulations to add references to new Appendix C, which 
contains the Guidelines, where appropriate.

Part I: Introduction

    Part I describes the purpose of the Guidelines, which is to protect 
against involvement by national banks and their operating subsidiaries, 
either directly or through loans that they purchase or make through 
intermediaries, in predatory or abusive residential mortgage lending 
practices that are injurious to bank customers and that expose the bank 
to credit, compliance, reputation, and other risks associated with 
abusive lending practices. The Guidelines apply to residential mortgage 
lending by national banks, federal branches and agencies of foreign 
banks, and operating subsidiaries of such entities, except for brokers, 
dealers, persons providing insurance, investment companies, and 
investment advisers, all of which are functionally regulated pursuant 
to various provisions of law. For purposes of the Guidelines, a 
residential mortgage loan is any loan or other extension of credit made 
to one or more individuals for personal, family, or household purposes 
and secured by an owner-occupied, 1-4 family residential dwelling, 
including a cooperative unit or mobile home.
    The Guidelines are enforceable, pursuant to Section 39 of the FDIA 
and part 30 of our rules, as we have described. However, as set forth 
in Part I, nothing in the Guidelines in any way limits the authority of 
the OCC to address unsafe or unsound practices or conditions, unfair or 
deceptive practices, or other violations of law. Thus, for example, a 
bank's failure to comply with the standards set forth in these 
Guidelines also may be actionable under section 8 of the FDIA if the 
failure constitutes an unsafe or unsound practice, or under section 5 
of the Federal Trade Commission Act if it is an unfair or deceptive 
practice.

Part II: Standards for Residential Mortgage Lending Practices

    Part II of the Guidelines describes two overarching objectives that 
should inform a bank's residential mortgage lending activities. First, 
the bank must be able effectively to manage the various risks--
including credit, legal, compliance, and reputation risks--associated 
with those activities. Second, the bank must not become engaged in 
abusive, predatory, unfair, or deceptive practices, directly, 
indirectly through mortgage brokers or other intermediaries, or through 
purchased loans. These objectives reflect expectations that are 
fundamental to sound banking practices. Different banks may achieve 
these objectives using different methods, however, and the Guidelines 
expressly recognize that the practices a bank follows in its 
residential mortgage lending activities need to be consistent with, and 
appropriate to, its size and complexity and the nature and scope of 
those activities.

Part III: Implementation of Residential Mortgage Lending Practices

    Part III describes standards for the implementation of the 
objectives described in Part II. It comprises six components. First, 
Part III lists and briefly describes specific lending practices 
inconsistent with sound residential mortgage lending practices, 
including practices known as equity stripping, fee packing, and loan 
flipping, refinancing of a special subsidized mortgage on terms adverse 
to the consumer, and encouraging a borrower to breach a contract and 
default on an existing loan in connection with a refinancing of that 
loan. The features of these practices are widely recognized as abusive 
and were addressed by the OCC in our February, 2003 advisory letters.
    Second, Part III describes certain loan terms, conditions and 
features--such as financing single premium insurance, negative 
amortization and mandatory arbitration--that may, under particular 
circumstances, be susceptible to abusive, predatory, unfair or 
deceptive practices, yet may be acceptable and may benefit customers 
under other circumstances. Part III cautions banks to exercise care 
when they offer loans containing these terms, conditions, and features, 
particularly in connection with subprime lending.
    Third, banks that decide to offer loans with the types of features 
just described should take particular account of the circumstances of 
the consumers to whom the loans are offered. Banks should exercise 
heightened diligence if they offer such loans to consumers who are 
elderly, substantially indebted, not financially sophisticated, have 
language barriers, have limited or poor credit histories, or have other 
characteristics that limit their credit choices. In addition, banks 
should apply heightened internal controls and monitoring with regard to 
this type of lending.
    Fourth, banks should provide timely, sufficient, and accurate 
information to consumers concerning the terms and the relative costs, 
risks, and benefits of the loan.
    Fifth, with respect to consumer residential mortgage loans that a 
bank purchases, or makes through a mortgage broker or other 
intermediary, the bank's residential mortgage lending activities also 
should include appropriate measures to mitigate risks. Part III 
provides a number of examples of such measures, including criteria for 
entering into and continuing relationships with intermediaries and 
originators, methods through which the bank may retain appropriate 
controls over mortgage origination functions, and criteria and 
procedures for the bank to take appropriate corrective action if 
necessary.
    Finally, Part III makes clear that a bank's responsibilities for 
maintaining appropriate consumer residential mortgage lending practices 
are ongoing. For example, on a continuing basis, a bank should monitor 
its compliance with applicable law and its internal lending standards, 
and monitor and evaluate its handling of customer complaints. The 
bank's activities also should include appropriate steps for taking 
corrective action in response to failure to adhere to the requirements 
of the law or its internal lending standards, and for making 
adjustments to the bank's activities to enhance their effectiveness or 
to reflect changes in business practices, market conditions, or the 
bank's lines of business, residential mortgage loan programs, or 
customer base.

Effective Date

    These Guidelines take effect April 8, 2005. The Administrative 
Procedure Act \10\ (APA) requirements for notice and opportunity for 
comment do not apply to the Guidelines. The APA excepts from its notice 
and comment requirements, among other types of issuances, ``general 
statements of policy.'' \11\ General statements of policy

[[Page 6332]]

are ``statements issued by an agency to advise the public prospectively 
of the manner in which the agency proposes to exercise a discretionary 
power.'' \12\ Consistent with this definition, courts have found that 
an issuance is a general statement of policy if it applies 
prospectively and ``leaves the [agency] free to exercise [its] informed 
discretion in the situations that arise.'' \13\
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    \10\ 5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.
    \11\ 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(A).
    \12\ U.S. Department of Justice, Attorney General's Manual on 
the Administrative Procedure Act, at 30 n.3 (1947).
    \13\ Guardian Federal Savings and Loan Ass'n v. Federal Savings 
and Loan Insurance Corp., 589 F.2d 658, 666-67 (D.C. Cir. 1978) 
(concluding that an FSLIC bulletin that used ``directive'' language 
to specify the criteria necessary for a satisfactory audit of a 
savings association was nonetheless a ``general statement of 
policy'' within the meaning of the APA because it preserved the 
FSLIC's discretion to accept a non-conforming audit report or to 
prescribe additional requirements in a particular case). See also 
Chen Zhon Chai v. Carroll, 48 F.3d 1331, 1341 (4th Cir. 1995) (``A 
rule is a general statement of policy if it does not establish a 
binding norm and leaves agency officials free to exercise their 
discretion.'')
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    Although these residential mortgage lending standards build on the 
standards in our 2003 Advisory Letters, their placement within the 
enforcement framework established by Section 39 of the FDIA applies 
prospectively only. Moreover, we are issuing the Guidelines in a form 
that, by the express terms of Section 39, preserves the OCC's 
discretion to require a compliance plan, and, thus, whether to initiate 
the part 30 process in any particular case. For these reasons, we 
conclude that the Guidelines fall within the APA exception for general 
statements of policy and that notice and comment procedures are, 
accordingly, not required.

Regulatory Flexibility Analysis

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) does not apply to a rule for 
which an agency is not required to publish a notice of proposed 
rulemaking. 5 U.S.C. 603.

Executive Order 12866

    The OCC has determined that the Guidelines are not a significant 
regulatory action under Executive Order 12866.

Unfunded Mandates Reform Act Analysis

    The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMA), Public Law 104-4, 
applies only when an agency is required to promulgate a general notice 
of proposed rulemaking or a final rule for which a general notice of 
proposed rulemaking was published. 2 U.S.C. 1532. As noted earlier, the 
OCC has determined that a notice of proposed rulemaking was not 
required for these Guidelines. Accordingly, the OCC concludes that the 
UMA does not require an unfunded mandates analysis of the Guidelines.
    Moreover, the OCC believes that the Guidelines 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, the OCC 
has not prepared a budgetary impact statement or specifically addressed 
the regulatory alternatives considered.

List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 30

    Banks, banking, Consumer protection, National banks, Privacy, 
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.


0
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, part 30 of chapter I of 
title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:

PART 30--SAFETY AND SOUNDNESS STANDARDS

0
1. The authority citation for part 30 is revised to read as follows:

    Authority: 12 U.S.C. 93a, 371, 1818, 1831p, 3102(b); 15 U.S.C. 
1681S, 1681W, 6801, 6805(b)(1).


Sec.  30.1  [Amended]

0
2. Section 30.1(a) is amended by removing ``appendices A and B'' and 
adding in its place ``appendices A, B, and C''.


Sec.  30.2  [Amended]

0
3. In Sec.  30.2, add a final sentence to read as follows: ``The OCC 
Guidelines Establishing Standards for Residential Mortgage Lending 
Practices are set forth in appendix C to this part.''


Sec.  30.3  [Amended]

0
4. Section 30.3(a) is amended by removing ``and the Interagency 
Guidelines Establishing Standards for Safeguarding Customer Information 
set forth in appendix B to this part'' and adding in its place ``the 
Interagency Guidelines Establishing Standards for Safeguarding Customer 
Information set forth in appendix B to this part, or the OCC Guidelines 
Establishing Standards for Residential Mortgage Lending Practices set 
forth in appendix C to this part''.

0
5. A new Appendix C is added to part 30 to read as follows:

Appendix C to Part 30--OCC Guidelines Establishing Standards for 
Residential Mortgage Lending Practices

Table of Contents

I. Introduction
    A. Scope
    B. Preservation of Existing Authority
    C. Relationship to Other Legal Requirements
    D. Definitions
II. Standards for Residential Mortgage Lending Practices
    A. General
    B. Objectives
III. Implementation of Residential Mortgage Lending Standards
    A. Avoidance of Particular Loan Terms, Conditions, and Features
    B. Prudent Consideration of Certain Loan Terms, Conditions and 
Features
    C. Enhanced Care to Avoid Abusive Loan Terms, Conditions, and 
Features in Certain Mortgages
    D. Avoidance of Consumer Misunderstanding
    E. Purchased and Brokered Loans
    F. Monitoring and Corrective Action

I. Introduction

    i. These OCC Guidelines for Residential Mortgage Lending Practices 
(Guidelines) set forth standards pursuant to Section 39 of the Federal 
Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C. 1831p-1 (Section 39). The Guidelines 
are designed to protect against involvement by national banks and their 
operating subsidiaries, either directly or through loans that they 
purchase or make through intermediaries, in predatory or abusive 
residential mortgage lending practices that are injurious to bank 
customers and that expose the bank to credit, legal, compliance, 
reputation, and other risks. The Guidelines focus on the substance of 
activities and practices, not the creation of policies. The Guidelines 
are enforceable under Section 39 in accordance with the procedures 
prescribed by the regulations in 12 CFR part 30.
    ii. As the OCC has previously indicated in guidance to national 
banks and in rulemaking proceedings (OCC Advisory Letters 2003-2 and 
2003-3 (Feb. 21, 2003)), many of the abusive practices commonly 
associated with predatory mortgage lending, such as loan flipping and 
equity stripping, will involve conduct that likely violates the Federal 
Trade Commission Act's (FTC Act) prohibition against unfair or 
deceptive acts or practices. 15 U.S.C. 45. In addition, loans that 
involve violations of the FTC Act, or mortgage loans based 
predominantly on the foreclosure or liquidation value of the borrower's 
collateral without regard to the borrower's ability to repay the loan 
according to its terms, will involve violations of OCC regulations 
governing real estate lending activities, 12 CFR 34.3 (Lending Rules).
    iii. In addition, national banks and their operating subsidiaries 
must comply with the requirements and Guidelines affecting appraisals 
of

[[Page 6333]]

residential mortgage loans and appraiser independence. 12 CFR part 34, 
subpart C, and the Interagency Appraisal and Evaluation Guidelines (OCC 
Advisory Letter 2003-9 (October 28, 2003)). For example, engaging in a 
practice of influencing the independent judgment of an appraiser with 
respect to a valuation of real estate that is to be security for a 
residential mortgage loan would violate applicable standards.
    iv. Targeting inappropriate credit products and unfair loan terms 
to certain borrowers also may entail conduct that violates the FTC Act, 
as well as the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) and the Fair Housing 
Act (FHA). 15 U.S.C. 1691 et seq. 42 U.S.C. 3601 et seq. For example, 
``steering'' a consumer to a loan with higher costs rather than to a 
comparable loan offered by the bank with lower costs for which the 
consumer could qualify, on a prohibited basis such as the borrower's 
race, national origin, age, gender, or marital status, would be 
unlawful.
    v. OCC regulations also prohibit national banks and their operating 
subsidiaries from providing lump sum, single premium fees for debt 
cancellation contracts and debt suspension agreements in connection 
with residential mortgage loans. 12 CFR 37.3(c)(2). Some lending 
practices and loan terms, including financing single premium credit 
insurance and the use of mandatory arbitration clauses, also may 
significantly impair the eligibility of a residential mortgage loan for 
purchase in the secondary market.
    vi. Finally, OCC regulations and supervisory guidance on fiduciary 
activities and asset management address the need for national banks to 
perform due diligence and exercise appropriate control with regard to 
trustee activities. See 12 CFR 9.6 (a) and Comptroller's Handbook on 
Asset Management. For example, national banks should exercise 
appropriate diligence to minimize potential reputation risks when they 
undertake to act as trustees in mortgage securitizations.
    A. Scope. These Guidelines apply to the residential mortgage 
lending activities of national banks, federal branches and agencies of 
foreign banks, and operating subsidiaries of such entities (except 
brokers, dealers, persons providing insurance, investment companies, 
and investment advisers).
    B. Preservation of Existing Authority. Neither Section 39 nor these 
Guidelines in any way limits the authority of the OCC to address unsafe 
or unsound practices or conditions, unfair or deceptive practices, or 
other violations of law. The OCC may take action under Section 39 and 
these Guidelines independently of, in conjunction with, or in addition 
to any other enforcement action available to the OCC.
    C. Relationship to Other Legal Requirements. Actions by a bank in 
connection with residential mortgage lending that are inconsistent with 
these Guidelines or Appendix A to this Part 30 may also constitute 
unsafe or unsound practices for purposes of section 8 of the Federal 
Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C. 1818, unfair or deceptive practices 
for purposes of section 5 of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C 45, and the OCC 
Lending Rules, 12 CFR 34.3, or violations of the ECOA and FHA.
    D. Definitions.
    1. Except as modified in these Guidelines, or unless the context 
otherwise requires, the terms used in these Guidelines have the same 
meanings as set forth in sections 3 and 39 of the Federal Deposit 
Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C. 1813 and 1831p-1.
    2. For purposes of these Guidelines, the following definitions 
apply:
    a. Residential mortgage loan means any loan or other extension of 
credit made to one or more individuals for personal, family, or 
household purposes secured by an owner-occupied 1-4 family residential 
dwelling, including a cooperative unit or mobile home.
    b. Bank means any national bank, federal branch or agency of a 
foreign bank, and any operating subsidiary thereof that is subject to 
these Guidelines.

II. Standards for Residential Mortgage Lending Practices

    A. General. A bank's residential mortgage lending activities should 
reflect standards and practices consistent with and appropriate to the 
size and complexity of the bank and the nature and scope of its lending 
activities.
    B. Objectives. A bank's residential mortgage lending activities 
should reflect standards and practices that:
    1. Enable the bank to effectively manage the credit, legal, 
compliance, reputation, and other risks associated with the bank's 
consumer residential mortgage lending activities.
    2. Effectively prevent the bank from becoming engaged in abusive, 
predatory, unfair, or deceptive practices, directly, indirectly through 
mortgage brokers or other intermediaries, or through purchased loans.

III. Implementation of Residential Mortgage Lending Standards

    A. Avoidance of Particular Loan Terms, Conditions, and Features. A 
bank should not become involved, directly or indirectly in residential 
mortgage lending activities involving abusive, predatory, unfair or 
deceptive lending practices, including, but not limited to:
    1. Equity Stripping and Fee Packing. Repeat refinancings where a 
borrower's equity is depleted as a result of financing excessive fees 
for the loan or ancillary products.
    2. Loan Flipping. Repeat refinancings under circumstances where the 
relative terms of the new and refinanced loan and the cost of the new 
loan do not provide a tangible economic benefit to the borrower.
    3. Refinancing of Special Mortgages. Refinancing of a special 
subsidized mortgage that contains terms favorable to the borrower with 
a loan that does not provide a tangible economic benefit to the 
borrower relative to the refinanced loan.
    4. Encouragement of Default. Encouraging a borrower to breach a 
contract and default on an existing loan prior to and in connection 
with the consummation of a loan that refinances all or part of the 
existing loan.
    B. Prudent Consideration of Certain Loan Terms, Conditions and 
Features. Certain loan terms, conditions and features, may, under 
particular circumstances, be susceptible to abusive, predatory, unfair 
or deceptive practices, yet may be appropriate and acceptable risk 
mitigation measures, consistent with safe and sound lending, and 
benefit customers under other circumstances. A bank should prudently 
consider the circumstances, including the characteristics of a targeted 
market and applicable consumer and safety and soundness safeguards, 
under which the bank will engage directly or indirectly in making 
residential mortgage loans with the following loan terms, conditions 
and features:
    1. Financing single premium credit life, disability or unemployment 
insurance.
    2. Negative amortization, involving a payment schedule in which 
regular periodic payments cause the principal balance to increase.
    3. Balloon payments in short-term transactions.
    4. Prepayment penalties that are not limited to the early years of 
the loan, particularly in subprime loans.
    5. Interest rate increases upon default at a level not commensurate 
with risk mitigation.
    6. Call provisions permitting the bank to accelerate payment of the 
loan under circumstances other than the borrower's default under the 
credit agreement or to mitigate the bank's exposure to loss.

[[Page 6334]]

    7. Absence of an appropriate assessment and documentation of the 
consumer's ability to repay the loan in accordance with its terms, 
commensurate with the type of loan, as required by Appendix A of this 
part.
    8. Mandatory arbitration clauses or agreements, particularly if the 
eligibility of the loan for purchase in the secondary market is thereby 
impaired.
    9. Pricing terms that result in the loan's being subject to the 
provisions of the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act. 15 U.S.C. 
1639 et seq.
    10. Original principal balance of the loan in excess of appraised 
value.
    11. Payment schedules that consolidate more than two periodic 
payments and pay them in advance from the loan proceeds.
    12. Payments to home improvement contractors under a home 
improvement contract from the proceeds of a residential mortgage loan 
other than by an instrument payable to the consumer, jointly to the 
consumer and the contractor, or through an independent third party 
escrow agent.
    C. Enhanced Care to Avoid Abusive Loan Terms, Conditions, and 
Features in Certain Mortgages. A bank may face heightened risks when it 
solicits or offers loans to consumers who are not financially 
sophisticated, have language barriers, or are elderly, or have limited 
or poor credit histories, are substantially indebted, or have other 
characteristics that limit their credit choices. In connection with 
such consumers, a bank should exercise enhanced care if it employs the 
residential mortgage loan terms, conditions, and features described in 
paragraph B of this section III, and should also apply appropriate 
heightened internal controls and monitoring to any line of business 
that does so.
    D. Avoidance of Consumer Misunderstanding. A bank's residential 
mortgage lending activities should include provision of timely, 
sufficient, and accurate information to a consumer concerning the terms 
and costs, risks, and benefits of the loan. Consumers should be 
provided with information sufficient to draw their attention to these 
key terms.
    E. Purchased and Brokered Loans. With respect to consumer 
residential mortgage loans that the bank purchases, or makes through a 
mortgage broker or other intermediary, the bank's residential mortgage 
lending activities should reflect standards and practices consistent 
with those applied by the bank in its direct lending activities and 
include appropriate measures to mitigate risks, such as the following:
    1. Criteria for entering into and continuing relationships with 
intermediaries and originators, including due diligence requirements.
    2. Underwriting and appraisal requirements.
    3. Standards related to total loan compensation and total 
compensation of intermediaries, including maximum rates, points, and 
other charges, and the use of overages and yield-spread premiums, 
structured to avoid providing an incentive to originate loans with 
predatory or abusive characteristics.
    4. Requirements for agreements with intermediaries and originators, 
including with respect to risks identified in the due diligence 
process, compliance with appropriate bank policies, procedures and 
practices and with applicable law (including remedies for failure to 
comply), protection of the bank against risk, and termination 
procedures.
    5. Loan documentation procedures, management information systems, 
quality control reviews, and other methods through which the bank will 
verify compliance with agreements, bank policies, and applicable laws, 
and otherwise retain appropriate oversight of mortgage origination 
functions, including loan sourcing, underwriting, and loan closings.
    6. Criteria and procedures for the bank to take appropriate 
corrective action, including modification of loan terms and termination 
of the relationship with the intermediary or originator in question.
    F. Monitoring and Corrective Action. A bank's consumer residential 
mortgage lending activities should include appropriate monitoring of 
compliance with applicable law and the bank's lending standards and 
practices, periodic monitoring and evaluation of the nature, quantity 
and resolution of customer complaints, and appropriate evaluation of 
the effectiveness of the bank's standards and practices in 
accomplishing the objectives set forth in these Guidelines. The bank's 
activities also should include appropriate steps for taking corrective 
action in response to failures to comply with applicable law and the 
bank's lending standards, and for making adjustments to the bank's 
activities as may be appropriate to enhance their effectiveness or to 
reflect changes in business practices, market conditions, or the bank's 
lines of business, residential mortgage loan programs, or customer 
base.

    Dated: January 31, 2005.
Julie L. Williams,
Acting Comptroller of the Currency.
[FR Doc. 05-2211 Filed 2-4-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-33-P