HOME MORTGAGE DISCLOSURE ACT (HMDA)
The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (or HMDA, pronounced
HUM-duh) is a
United States federal law that requires certain financial
institutions to provide mortgage data to the public. Congress enacted
HMDA in 1975.
WHAT IS HMDA?
|
HMDA grew out of public concern over credit shortages in certain
urban neighborhoods. Congress believed that some financial institutions
had contributed to the decline of some geographic areas by their failure
to provide adequate home financing to qualified applicants on reasonable
terms and conditions. Thus, one purpose of HMDA and Regulation C is to
provide the public with information that will help show whether
financial institutions are serving the housing credit needs of the
neighborhoods and communities in which they are located. A second
purpose is to aid public officials in targeting public investments from
the private sector to areas where they are needed. Finally, the FIRREA
amendments of 1989 require the collection and disclosure of data about
applicant and borrower characteristics to assist in identifying possible
discriminatory lending patterns and enforcing antidiscrimination
statutes.
Purposes[edit]
OF HMDA
As the name implies, HMDA is a disclosure law that relies upon public
scrutiny for its effectiveness. It does not prohibit any specific
activity of lenders, and it does not establish a quota system of
mortgage loans to be made in any
Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) or other geographic area as
defined by the Office of Management and Budget.
|
Who Reports
HMDA Data?[edit]
US financial institutions must report HMDA data to their regulator if
they meet certain criteria, such as having assets above a specific
threshold. The criteria is different for depository and non-depository
institutions and are available on the FFIEC website. In 2012, there were
7,400 institutions that reported a total of 18.7 million HMDA records.
|
Details of the Law[edit]
|
Companies covered under HMDA are required to keep a Loan Application
Register (LAR). Each time someone applies for a home mortgage at an
institution covered by HMDA, the company is required to make a
corresponding entry into the LAR, noting the following information.[citation
needed]
- The date of application
- The loan type (conventional loan,
FHA loan,
VA
loan or a loan guaranteed by the
Farmers Home Administration)
- The type of property involved (single-family, multifamily)
- The purpose of the loan (home purchase, home improvement,
refinancing)
- Owner occupancy of the property (owner occupied or non-owner
occupied)
- The loan amount
- Whether or not the application was a request for pre-approval
- The type of action taken (approved, denied, withdrawn, etc.)
- The date of action taken
- The location (state, county,
MSA and
census tract) of the property
- The ethnicity (Hispanic or non-Hispanic) of the borrower(s)
- The race of the borrower(s)
- The gender of the borrower(s)
- The gross annual income of the borrower(s)
- If the loan was subsequently sold in the
secondary market, the type of entity that purchased it[citation
needed]
- If the loan was denied, the reason why it was denied (this field
is optional for entities not regulated by the
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency)
- Rate Spread (Rate spread is a metric that assists in reporting
if the rate given to the borrower is above a certain threshold of
the prevailing rates at the time of the application)
- If the loan is or is not subject to the
Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act of 1994
- Lien status of the loan (1st or 2nd lien)
|
REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
|
Every March reporting institutions are required to submit their LARs
to the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC), an
interagency body empowered to administer HMDA. Nowadays reporting takes
place electronically. FFIEC screens the data for errors and the releases
it to the public electronically (on CD-ROM and over the internet).
Reporting institutions are also required to disclose their individual
LARs to members of the public upon request. |
EXAMPLES OF DISPARATE HOME MORTGAGE LENDING PRACTICES
|
- HMDA data can be used to identify probable housing
discrimination in various ways. It is important to understand that
in all cases of possible discrimination, the basic regulatory
inquiry revolves around whether a protected class of persons being
denied a loan or offered different terms for reasons other than
objectively acceptable characteristics (e.g. income, collateral).
- If an institution turns down a disproportionate percentage of
applications by certain races (e.g. African Americans), ethnicities
(e.g. Hispanics), or genders (typically women), then there is reason
to suspect that the institution may be discriminating against these
classes of borrowers by unfairly denying them credit.
- Such discrimination is illegal in the United States, but has
grown increasingly rare vis-a-vis the other forms outlined below.
Although well-documented during the period of local bank dominance
in American history, the rise of mass financial institutions since
the early 1990s has led to increasing investor scrutiny regarding
profits, and hence a lower likelihood that a bank can afford to
subsidize such outright discrimination by forgoing loan
originations.
- If an institution has a disproportionately low percentage of
applications by certain races (e.g. African Americans), ethnicities
(e.g. Hispanics) or genders (typically women) then there is reason
to suspect that the institution may be discriminating against these
classes of borrowers by unfairly discouraging them from applying for
mortgage loans. Such discrimination is illegal in the United States.
However, there is tension in this arena between attempts by banks to
attract high quality borrowers and the extent to which borrower
quality corresponds with a protected status. This type of
monitoring, however, has been particularly effective as reducing
implicit or referral based discrimination, where a discriminatory
body, e.g. a local sporting club who quietly favors an all white
membership, is relied upon to recommend applicants. Banks are now
wary of entering such relationships, insofar as they expose the
lender to the liability associated with the discriminatory behavior
of the partner organization.
- If an institution has a disproportionately low percentage of
applications from certain areas, compared to areas immediately
surrounding the area in question, then there is reason to suspect
that the institution is engaging in redlining. However, note that
few banks are found to be in violation of redlining clauses, as many
legally valid pricing or approval models are driven by factors only
have the implicit effect of redlining geographic areas (i.e. insofar
as they areas contain a disproportionate number of poorly qualified
borrowers). Rather, redlining must be quite overt to draw attention
(e.g. using zip codes as a lending criterion).
- If there is a disproportionate prevalence of high-interest loans
to certain classes of borrowers (e.g., Hispanics or women), other
attributes equal, then there is a reason to suspect that the
institution is engaging in price based discrimination. This is the
most active area of compliance monitoring with respect to HMDA data,
since risk management policies at many financial institutions are
quick to identify outright discrimination by lending officers (i.e.
denials based on a protected category).
- Simultaneously, this is the area rifest for contention with
respect to discriminatory claims, since there are market driven
reasons for charging a higher rate that may exhibit discriminatory
patterns. For example, a loan officer may query applicants to see if
they have applied and been approved for a loan at any other banks.
The rate for those that can produce another institution's offer may
then be adjusted accordingly to remain competitive. However, if a
certain ethnic group is less likely to "shop around" for the best
rate, then the mere application of this principal - which is
otherwise non-discriminatory in intent - can produce discriminatory
effects. Many disputes between lenders and regulators in the context
of price discrimination relate to such scenarios. Again, the key
litmus test is whether the objective characteristic being used to
lower or raise the mortgage rate for a given group is substantive in
its own right with respect to the risk or profitability of the
potential loan, rather than mere a proxy for racial discrimination.
POWERPOINT PRESENTATIONS OF hmda public
disclosures in action.
|
|
|
|
- Click above
botton,
-
Click Save to load presentation,
- After
download is complete, Click Open.
|
|
|
|
|