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Federal Register Citations

Interagency Guidance on Nontraditional Mortgage Products.

    [Federal Register: December 29, 2005 (Volume 70, Number 249)]
   [Notices]              
   
   [Page 77249-77257]
   From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
   [DOCID:fr29de05-136]                        
   
   
   =======================================================================
   
   DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
   
   Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
   
   [Docket No. 05-21]
   
   FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
   
   [Docket No. OP-1246]
   
   FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
   
   DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
   
   Office of Thrift Supervision
   
   [No. 2005-56]
   
   NATIONAL CREDIT UNION ADMINISTRATION
   

   Interagency Guidance on Nontraditional Mortgage Products
   
   AGENCIES: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury (OCC); 
   Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board); Federal 
   Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC); Office of Thrift Supervision, 
   Treasury (OTS); and National Credit Union Administration (NCUA).
   
   ACTION: Proposed guidance with request for comment.
   
   -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   SUMMARY: The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS, and NCUA (the Agencies), request 
   comment on this proposed Interagency Guidance on Nontraditional 
   Mortgage Products (Guidance). The Agencies expect institutions to 
   effectively assess and manage the risks associated with their credit 
   activities, including those associated with nontraditional mortgage 
   loan products. Institutions should use this guidance in their efforts 
   to ensure that their risk management and consumer protection practices 
   adequately address these risks.
   
   DATES: Comments must be submitted on or before February 27, 2006.
   
   ADDRESSES: The Agencies will jointly review all of the comments 
   submitted. Therefore, interested parties may send comments to any of 
   the Agencies and need not send comments (or copies) to all of the 
   Agencies. Please consider submitting your comments by e-mail or fax 
   since paper mail in the Washington area and at the Agencies is subject 
   to delay. Interested parties are invited to submit comments to:
   OCC: You should include ``OCC'' and Docket Number 05-21 in 
   your 
   comment. You may submit your comment by any of the following methods:
  
   * Federal eRulemaking Portal:
   <a href="http://www.regulations.gov">
   http://www.regulations.gov</a>. 
   
   Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
  
   * OCC Web site:
   <a href="http://www.occ.treas.gov">
   http://www.occ.treas.gov</a>. Click on ``Contact 
   
   the OCC,'' scroll down and click on ``Comments on Proposed 
   Regulations.''
  
   * E-Mail Address: <a href="mailto:regs.comments@occ.treas.gov">
   regs.comments@occ.treas.gov</a>.
  
   * Fax: (202) 874-4448.
  
   * Mail: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E 
   Street, SW., Mail Stop 1-5, Washington, DC 20219.
  
   * Hand Delivery/Courier: 250 E Street, SW., Attn: Public 
   Information Room, Mail Stop 1-5, Washington, DC 20219.
   Instructions: All submissions received must include the 
   agency name 
   (OCC) and docket number for this notice. In general, the OCC will enter 
   all comments received into the docket without change, including any 
   business or personal information that you provide.
   You may review comments and other related materials by any of 
   the 
   following methods:
  
   * Viewing Comments Personally: You may personally inspect 
   and photocopy comments at the OCC's Public Information Room, 250 E 
   Street, SW., Washington, DC. You can make an appointment to inspect 
   comments by calling (202) 874-5043.
  
   * Viewing Comments Electronically: You may request that we 
   send you an electronic copy of comments via e-mail or mail you a CD-ROM 
   containing electronic copies by contacting the OCC at
   <a href="mailto:regs.comments@occ.treas.gov">
   regs.comments@occ.treas.gov</a>.
   
  
   * Docket Information: You may also request available 
   background documents and project summaries using the methods described 
   above.
   Board: You may submit comments, identified by Docket No. 
   OP-1246, 
   by any of the following methods:
  
   * Agency Web site:
   <a href="http://www.federalreserve.gov">
   http://www.federalreserve.gov</a> Follow the instructions for submitting 
   comments at
   <a href="http://www.federalreserve.gov/">
   http://www.federalreserve.gov/</a>.
   
  
   * Federal eRulemaking Portal:
   <a href="http://www.regulations.gov">
   http://www.regulations.gov</a>. 
   
   Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
  
   * E-mail: <a href="mailto:regs.comments@federalreserve.gov">
   regs.comments@federalreserve.gov</a>. Include the 
   docket number in the subject line of the message.
  
   * Fax: 202/452-3819 or 202/452-3102.
  
   * Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors 
   of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue, 
   NW., Washington, DC 20551.
   All public comments are available from the Board's Web site 
   at 
   <a href="http://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm">
   http://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm</a> as 
   submitted, 
   
   unless modified for technical reasons.
   
   [[Page 77250]]
   
   Accordingly, your comments will not be edited to remove any identifying 
   or contact information. Public comments may also be viewed in 
   electronic or paper form in Room MP-500 of the Board's Martin Building 
   (20th and C Streets, NW.) between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on weekdays.
   FDIC: You may submit comments by any of the following 
   methods:
  
   * Agency Web site:
   <a href="http://">
   http://</a> www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/
   
   federal/propose.html. Follow the instructions for submitting comments 
   on the Agency Web site.
  
   * E-Mail: <a href="mailto:Comments@FDIC.gov">Comments@FDIC.gov</a>.
  
   * Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary, Attention: 
   Comments, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW., 
   Washington, DC 20429.
  
   * Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard station at the rear of the 
   550 17th Street Building (located on F Street) on business days between 
   7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
   Instructions: All submissions received must include the 
   agency 
   name. All comments received will be posted without change to
   <a href="/regulations/laws/federal/propose.html">
   http://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/propose.html</a>
including any 
   
   personal information provided.
   OTS: You may submit comments, identified by docket number 
   2005-56, 
   by any of the following methods:
  
   * Federal eRulemaking Portal:
   <a href="http://www.regulations.gov">
   http://www.regulations.gov</a>. 
   
   Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
  
   * E-mail address: <a href="mailto:regs.comments@ots.treas.gov">
   regs.comments@ots.treas.gov</a>. Please 
   include docket number 2005-56 in the subject line of the message and 
   include your name and telephone number in the message.
  
   * Fax: (202) 906-6518.
  
   * Mail: Regulation Comments, Chief Counsel's Office, Office
   
   of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552, 
   Attention: No. 2005-56.
  
   * Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard's Desk, East Lobby Entrance,
   
   1700 G Street, NW., from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on business days. Address 
   envelope as follows: Attention: Regulation Comments, Chief Counsel's 
   Office, Attention: No. 2005-56.
   Instructions: All submissions received must include the 
   agency name 
   and docket number for this proposed Guidance. All comments received 
   will be posted without change to the OTS Internet site at
   <a href="http://www.ots.treas.gov/pagehtml.cfm?catNumber=67&an=1">
   http://www.ots.treas.gov/pagehtml.cfm?catNumber=67&amp;an=1</a>
   , including any 
   
   personal information provided.
   Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents 
   or 
   comments received, go to
   <a href="http://www.ots.treas.gov/pagehtml.cfm?catNumber=67&an=1">
   http://www.ots.treas.gov/pagehtml.cfm?catNumber=67&amp;an=1</a>.
In addition, you may inspect comments 
   
   at the OTS's Public Reading Room, 1700 G Street, NW., by appointment. 
   To make an appointment for access, call (202) 906-5922, send an e-mail 
   to <a href="mailto:public.info@ots.treas.gov">public.info@ots.treas.gov</a>, 
   or send a facsimile transmission to (202) 
   906-7755. (Prior notice identifying the materials you will be 
   requesting will assist us in serving you.) We schedule appointments on 
   business days between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. In most cases, appointments 
   will be available the next business day following the date we receive a 
   request.
   NCUA: You may submit comments by any of the following 
   methods:
  
   * Federal eRulemaking Portal:
   <a href="http://www.regulations.gov">
   http://www.regulations.gov</a>. 
   
   Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
  
   * NCUA Web site:
   <a href="http://www.ncua.gov/RegulationsOpinionsLaws/proposed_regs/proposed_regs.html">
   http://www.ncua.gov/RegulationsOpinionsLaws/proposed_regs/proposed_regs.html</a>.
Follow the 
   
   instructions for submitting comments.
  
   * E-mail: Address to <a href="mailto:regcomments@ncua.gov">
   regcomments@ncua.gov</a>. Include ``[Your 
   name] Comments on Interagency Guidance on Nontraditional Mortgages'' in 
   the e-mail subject line.
  
   * Fax: (703) 518-6319. Use the subject line described above
   
   for e-mail.
  
   * Mail: Address to Mary Rupp, Secretary of the Board, 
   National Credit Union Administration, 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, 
   Virginia 22314-3428.
  
   * Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as mail address.
   
   FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: OCC: Gregory Nagel, National Bank 
   Examiner/Credit Risk Specialist, Credit Risk Policy, (202) 874-5170; or 
   Michael S. Bylsma, Director, or Stephen Van Meter, Assistant Director, 
   Community and Consumer Law Division, (202) 874-5750.
   Board: Brian Valenti, Supervisory Financial Analyst, (202) 
   452-
   3575; or Virginia Gibbs, Senior Supervisory Financial Analyst, (202) 
   452-2521; or Sabeth I. Siddique, Assistant Director, (202) 452-3861
   Division of Banking Supervision and Regulation; Minh-Duc T. Le, Senior 
   Attorney, Division of Consumer and Community Affairs, (202) 452-3667
   or Andrew Miller, Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 452-3428. For users of 
   Telecommunications Device for the Deaf (``TDD'') only, contact (202) 
   263-4869.
   FDIC: James Leitner, Senior Examination Specialist, (202) 
   898-6790, 
   or April Breslaw, Chief, Compliance Section, (202) 898-6609, Division 
   of Supervision and Consumer Protection; or Ruth R. Amberg, Senior 
   Counsel, (202) 898-3736, or Richard Foley, Counsel, (202) 898-3784
   Legal Division.
   OTS: William Magrini, Senior Project Manager, (202) 906-5744
   or 
   Maurice McClung, Program Manager, Market Conduct, Consumer Protection 
   and Specialized Programs, (202) 906-6182; and Richard Bennett, Counsel, 
   Banking and Finance, (202) 906-7409.
   NCUA: Cory Phariss, Program Officer, Examination and 
   Insurance, 
   (703) 518-6618.
   
   SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 
   
   I. Background
   
   In recent years, consumer demand and secondary market 
   appetite have 
   grown rapidly for mortgage products that allow borrowers to defer 
   payment of principal and, sometimes, interest. These products, often 
   referred to as nontraditional mortgage loans, including ``interest-
   only'' mortgages and ``payment option'' adjustable-rate mortgages have 
   been available in similar forms for many years. Nontraditional mortgage 
   loans offer payment flexibility and are an effective and beneficial 
   financial management tool for some borrowers. These products allow 
   borrowers to exchange lower payments during an initial period for 
   higher payments during a later amortization period as compared to the 
   level payment structure found in traditional fixed-rate mortgage loans. 
   In addition, institutions are increasingly combining these loans with 
   other practices, such as making simultaneous second-lien mortgages and 
   allowing reduced documentation in evaluating the applicant's 
   creditworthiness. While innovations in mortgage lending can benefit 
   some consumers, these layering practices can present unique risks that 
   institutions must appropriately measure, monitor and control.
   The Agencies recognize that many of the risks associated with
   
   nontraditional mortgage loans exist in other adjustable-rate mortgage 
   products, but our concern is elevated with nontraditional products due 
   to the lack of principal amortization and potential accumulation of 
   negative amortization. The Agencies are also concerned that these 
   products and practices are being offered to a wider spectrum of 
   borrowers, including some who may not otherwise qualify for traditional 
   fixed-rate or other adjustable-rate mortgage loans, and who may not 
   fully understand the associated risks.
   Regulatory experience with nontraditional mortgage lending 
   programs 
   has shown that prudent management of these programs requires increased 
   attention in product
   
   [[Page 77251]]
   
   development, underwriting, compliance, and risk management functions. 
   As with all activities, the Agencies expect institutions to effectively 
   assess and manage the risks associated with nontraditional mortgage 
   loan products. The Agencies have developed this proposed Guidance to 
   clarify how institutions can offer these products in a safe and sound 
   manner, and in a way that clearly discloses the potential risks that 
   borrowers may assume. The Agencies will carefully scrutinize 
   institutions' lending programs, including policies and procedures, and 
   risk management processes in this area, recognizing that a number of 
   different, but prudent practices may exist. Remedial action will be 
   requested from institutions that do not adequately measure, monitor, 
   and control risk exposures in loan portfolios. Further, the agencies 
   will seek to consistently implement the guidance.
   
   II. Principal Elements of the Guidance
   
   Prudent lending practices include the maintenance of sound 
   loan 
   terms and underwriting standards. Institutions should assess current 
   loan terms and underwriting guidelines and implement any necessary 
   changes to ensure prudent practices. In connection with underwriting 
   standards, the proposed Guidance addresses:
  
   * Appropriate borrower repayment analysis, including 
   consideration of comprehensive debt service in the qualification 
   process;
  
   * The potential for collateral-dependent loans, which could
   
   arise when a borrower is overly reliant on the sale or refinancing of 
   the property when loan amortization begins;
  
   * Mitigating factors that support the underwriting decision
   
   in circumstances involving a combination of nontraditional mortgage 
   loans and reduced documentation;
  
   * Below market introductory interest rates;
  
   * Lending to subprime borrowers; and
  
   * Loans secured by non owner-occupied properties.
   The proposed Guidance also describes appropriate portfolio 
   and risk 
   management practices for institutions that offer nontraditional 
   mortgage products. These practices include the development of policies 
   and internal controls that address, among other matters, product 
   attributes, portfolio and concentration limits, third-party 
   originations, and secondary market activities. In connection with risk 
   management practices, the Guidance also proposes that institutions 
   should:
  
   * Maintain performance measures and management reporting 
   systems that provide warning of potential or increasing risks;
  
   * Maintain an allowance for loan and lease losses (ALLL) at
   
   a level appropriate for portfolio credit quality and conditions 
   affecting collectibility;
  
   * Maintain capital levels that reflect nontraditional 
   mortgage portfolio characteristics and the effect of stressed economic 
   conditions on collectibility; and
  
   * Apply sound practices in valuing the mortgage servicing 
   rights of nontraditional mortgages.
   Finally, the proposed Guidance describes consumer protection
   
   concerns that may be raised by nontraditional mortgage loan products, 
   particularly that borrowers may not fully understand the terms of these 
   products. Nontraditional mortgage loan products are more complex than 
   traditional fixed-rate products and adjustable rate products and 
   present greater risks of payment shock and negative amortization. 
   Institutions should ensure that consumers are provided clear and 
   balanced information about the relative benefits and risks of these 
   products, at a time that will help consumers' decision-making 
   processes. The proposed Guidance discusses applicable laws and 
   regulations and then describes recommended practices for communications 
   with and the provision of information to consumers. These recommended 
   practices address promotional materials and product descriptions, 
   information on monthly payment statements, and the avoidance of 
   practices that obscure significant risks to the consumer or raise 
   similar concerns. The proposed Guidance also describes control systems 
   that should be used to ensure that actual practices are consistent with 
   policies and procedures.
   When finalized, the Guidance would apply to all banks and 
   their 
   subsidiaries, bank holding companies and their nonbank subsidiaries, 
   savings associations and their subsidiaries, savings and loan holding 
   companies and their subsidiaries, and credit unions.
   
   III. Request for Comment
   
   Comment is requested on all aspects of the proposed Guidance.
   
   Interested commenters are also asked to address specifically the 
   proposed Guidance on comprehensive debt service qualification 
   standards, which provides that the analysis of borrowers' repayment 
   capacity should include an evaluation of their ability to repay the 
   debt by final maturity at the fully indexed rate, assuming a fully 
   amortizing repayment schedule. For products with the potential for 
   negative amortization, the repayment analysis should include the 
   initial loan amount plus any balance increase that may accrue through 
   the negative amortization provision. In this regard, comment is 
   specifically requested on the following:
   (1) Should lenders analyze each borrower's capacity to repay 
   the 
   loan under comprehensive debt service qualification standards that 
   assume the borrower makes only minimum payments? What are current 
   underwriting practices and how would they change if such prescriptive 
   guidance is adopted?
   (2) What specific circumstances would support the use of the
   
   reduced documentation feature commonly referred to as ``stated income'' 
   as being appropriate in underwriting nontraditional mortgage loans? 
   What other forms of reduced documentation would be appropriate in 
   underwriting nontraditional mortgage loans and under what 
   circumstances? Please include specific comment on whether and under 
   what circumstances ``stated income'' and other forms of reduced 
   documentation would be appropriate for subprime borrowers.
   (3) Should the Guidance address the consideration of future 
   income 
   in the qualification standards for nontraditional mortgage loans with 
   deferred principal and, sometimes, interest payments? If so, how could 
   this be done on a consistent basis? Also, if future events such as 
   income growth are considered, should other potential events also be 
   considered, such as increases in interest rates for adjustable rate 
   mortgage products?
   The text of the proposed Interagency Guidance on 
   Nontraditional 
   Mortgage Products follows:
   
   Interagency Guidance on Nontraditional Mortgage Products
   
   Residential mortgage lending has traditionally been a 
   conservatively managed business with low delinquencies and losses and 
   reasonably stable underwriting standards. In the past few years, there 
   has been a growing consumer demand, particularly in high priced real 
   estate markets, for residential mortgage loan products that allow 
   borrowers to defer repayment of principal and, sometimes, interest. 
   These mortgage products, often referred to as nontraditional mortgage 
   loans, include ``interest-only'' mortgages where a borrower pays no 
   loan principal for the first few years of the loan and ``payment 
   option'' adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) where a borrower has
   
   [[Page 77252]]
   
   flexible payment options with the potential for negative 
   amortization.\1\ More recently, nontraditional mortgage loan products 
   are being offered to a wider spectrum of borrowers who may not 
   otherwise qualify for more traditional mortgage loans and may not fully 
   understand the associated risks.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \1\ Interest-only and payment option ARMs are variations of
   
   conventional ARMs, hybrid ARMs, and fixed rate products. Refer to 
   the Appendix for additional information on interest-only and payment 
   option ARM loans.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Many of these nontraditional mortgage loans are also being
   
   underwritten with less stringent or no income and asset verification 
   requirements (``reduced documentation'') and are increasingly combined 
   with simultaneous second-lien loans.\2\ These risk-layering practices, 
   combined with the broader marketing of nontraditional mortgage loans, 
   expose financial institutions to increased risk relative to traditional 
   mortgage loans.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \2\ Refer to the Appendix for additional information on 
   reduced 
   documentation and simultaneous second-lien loans.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Given the potential for heightened risk levels, management 
   should 
   carefully consider and appropriately mitigate exposures created by 
   these loans. To manage the risks associated with nontraditional 
   mortgage loans, management should:
  
   * Ensure that loan terms and underwriting standards are 
   consistent with prudent lending practices, including consideration of a 
   borrower's repayment capacity;
  
   * Recognize that many nontraditional mortgage loans, 
   particularly when combined with risk-layering features, are untested in 
   a stressed environment and, therefore, warrant strong risk management 
   standards, capital levels commensurate with the risk, and an allowance 
   for loan and lease losses that reflects the collectibility of the 
   portfolio; and
  
   * Ensure that consumers have information to clearly 
   understand loan terms and associated risks prior to making a product 
   choice.
   As with all activities, the Office of the Comptroller of the
   
   Currency (OCC), the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
   (Board), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the Office 
   of Thrift Supervision (OTS) and the National Credit Union 
   Administration (NCUA) (collectively, the Agencies) expect institutions 
   to effectively assess and manage the increased risks associated with 
   nontraditional mortgage loan products.\3\
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \3\ Refer to Interagency Guidelines Establishing Standards 
   for 
   Safety and Soundness. For each Agency, those respective guidelines 
   are addressed in: 12 CFR Part 30 Appendix A (OCC); 12 CFR Part 208 
   Appendix D-1 (Board); 12 CFR Part 364 Appendix A (FDIC); 12 CFR Part 
   570 Appendix A (OTS); and 12 U.S.C. 1786 (NCUA).
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Institutions should use this guidance in their efforts to 
   ensure 
   that their risk management practices adequately address these risks. 
   The Agencies will carefully scrutinize institutions' risk management 
   processes, policies, and procedures in this area. Remedial action will 
   be requested from institutions that do not adequately manage these 
   risks. Further, the Agencies will seek to consistently implement this 
   guidance.
   
   Loan Terms and Underwriting Standards
   
   When an institution offers nontraditional mortgage loan 
   products, 
   underwriting standards should address the effect of a substantial 
   payment increase on the borrower's capacity to repay when loan 
   amortization begins. Moreover, the institution's underwriting standards 
   should comply with the agencies' real estate lending standards and 
   appraisal regulations and associated guidelines.\4\
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \4\ Refer to 12 CFR Part 34--Real Estate Lending and 
   Appraisals, 
   OCC Bulletin 2005-3--Standards for National Banks' Residential 
   Mortgage Lending, AL 2003-7--Guidelines for Real Estate Lending 
   Policies and AL 2003-9--Independent Appraisal and Evaluation 
   Functions (OCC); 12 CFR 208.51 subpart E and Appendix C and 12 CFR 
   Part 225 subpart G (Board); 12 CFR Part 365 and Appendix A, and 12 
   CFR Part 323 (FDIC); 12 CFR 560.101 and Appendix and 12 CFR Part 564 
   (OTS). Also, refer to the 1999 Interagency Guidance on the 
   ``Treatment of High LTV Residential Real Estate Loans'' and the 1994 
   ``Interagency Appraisal and Evaluation Guidelines.'' Federally 
   Insured Credit Unions should refer to 12 CFR Part 722--Appraisals 
   and NCUA 03-CU-17--Appraisal and Evaluation Functions for Real 
   Estate Related Transactions (NCUA).
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Central to prudent lending is the internal discipline to 
   maintain 
   sound loan terms and underwriting standards despite competitive 
   pressures. Institutions are strongly cautioned against ceding 
   underwriting standards to third parties that have different business 
   objectives, risk tolerances, and core competencies. Loan terms should 
   be based on a disciplined analysis of potential exposures and 
   compensating factors to ensure risk levels remain manageable.
   Qualification Standards--Nontraditional mortgage loans can 
   result 
   in significantly higher payment requirements when the loan begins to 
   fully amortize. This increase in monthly mortgage payments, commonly 
   referred to as payment shock, is of particular concern for payment 
   option ARMs where the borrower makes minimum payments that may result 
   in negative amortization. Some institutions manage the potential for 
   excessive negative amortization and payment shock by structuring the 
   initial terms to limit the spread between the introductory interest 
   rate and the fully indexed rate. Nevertheless, an institution's 
   qualifying standards should recognize the potential impact of payment 
   shock, and that nontraditional mortgage loans often are inappropriate 
   for borrowers with high loan-to-value (LTV) ratios, high debt-to-income 
   (DTI) ratios, and low credit scores.
   For all nontraditional mortgage loan products, the analysis 
   of 
   borrowers' repayment capacity should include an evaluation of their 
   ability to repay the debt by final maturity at the fully indexed 
   rate,\5\ assuming a fully amortizing repayment schedule. In addition, 
   for products that permit negative amortization, the repayment analysis 
   should include the initial loan amount plus any balance increase that 
   may accrue from the negative amortization provision. The amount of the 
   balance increase should be tied to the initial terms of the loan and 
   estimated assuming the borrower makes only minimum payments during the 
   deferral period. Institutions should also consider the potential risks 
   that a borrower may face in refinancing the loan at the time it begins 
   to fully amortize, such as prepayment penalties. These more fully 
   comprehensive debt service calculations should be considered when 
   establishing the institution's qualifying criteria.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \5\ The fully indexed rate equals the index rate prevailing 
   at 
   origination plus the margin that will apply after the expiration of 
   an introductory interest rate. The index rate is a published 
   interest rate to which the interest rate on an ARM is tied. Some 
   commonly used indices include the 1-Year Constant Maturity Treasury 
   Rate (CMT), the 6-Month London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), the 
   11th District Cost of Funds (COFI), and the Moving Treasury Average 
   (MTA), a 12-month moving average of the monthly average yields of 
   U.S. Treasury securities adjusted to a constant maturity of one 
   year. The margin is the number of percentage points a lender adds to 
   the index value to calculate the ARM interest rate at each 
   adjustment period. In different interest rate scenarios, the fully 
   indexed rate for an ARM loan based on a lagging index (e.g., MTA 
   rate) may be significantly different from the rate on a comparable 
   30-year fixed-rate product. In these cases, a credible market rate 
   should be used to qualify the borrower and determine repayment 
   capacity.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Furthermore, the analysis of repayment capacity should avoid 
   over-
   reliance on credit scores as a substitute for income verification in 
   the underwriting process. As the level of credit risk increases, either 
   from loan features or borrower characteristics, the importance of 
   actual verification of the borrower's income, assets, and outstanding 
   liabilities also increases.
   
   [[Page 77253]]
   
   Collateral-Dependent Loans--Institutions should avoid the use 
   of 
   loan terms and underwriting practices that may result in the borrower 
   having to rely on the sale or refinancing of the property once 
   amortization begins. Loans to borrowers who do not demonstrate the 
   capacity to repay, as structured, from sources other than the 
   collateral pledged are generally considered unsafe and unsound. 
   Institutions determined to be originating collateral-dependent mortgage 
   loans, may be subject to criticism, corrective action, and higher 
   capital requirements.
   Risk Layering--Nontraditional mortgage loans combined with 
   risk-
   layering features, such as reduced documentation and/or a simultaneous 
   second-lien loan, pose increased risk. When risks are layered, an 
   institution should compensate for this increased risk with mitigating 
   factors that support the underwriting decision and the borrower's 
   repayment capacity. Mitigating factors might include higher credit 
   scores, lower LTV and DTI ratios, credit enhancements, and mortgage 
   insurance. While higher pricing may seem to address the increased risks 
   associated with risk-layering features, it raises the importance of 
   prudent qualification standards discussed above. Further, institutions 
   should fully consider the effect of these risk-layering features on 
   estimated credit losses when establishing their allowance for loan and 
   lease losses (ALLL).
   Reduced Documentation--Institutions are increasingly relying 
   on 
   reduced documentation, particularly unverified income to qualify 
   borrowers for nontraditional mortgage loans. Because these practices 
   essentially substitute assumptions and alternate information for the 
   waived data in analyzing a borrower's repayment capacity and general 
   creditworthiness, they should be used with caution. An institution 
   should consider whether its verification practices are adequate. As the 
   level of credit risk increases, the Agencies expect that an institution 
   will apply more comprehensive verification and documentation procedures 
   to verify a borrower's income and debt reduction capacity.
   Use of reduced documentation in the underwriting process 
   should be 
   governed by clear policy guidelines. Reduced documentation, such as 
   stated income, should be accepted only if there are other mitigating 
   factors such as lower LTV and other more conservative underwriting 
   standards.
   Simultaneous Second-Lien Loans--Simultaneous second-lien 
   loans 
   result in reduced owner equity and higher credit risk. Historically, as 
   combined loan-to-value ratios rise, defaults rise as well. A delinquent 
   borrower with minimal or no equity in a property may have little 
   incentive to work with the lender to bring the loan current to avoid 
   foreclosure. In addition, second-lien home equity lines of credit 
   (HELOCs) typically increase borrower exposure to increasing interest 
   rates and monthly payment burdens. Loans with minimal owner equity 
   should generally not have a payment structure that allows for delayed 
   or negative amortization.
   Introductory Interest Rates--Many institutions offer 
   introductory 
   interest rates that are set well below the fully indexed rate as a 
   marketing tool for payment option ARM products. In developing 
   nontraditional mortgage products, an institution should consider the 
   spread between the introductory rate and the fully indexed rate. Since 
   initial monthly mortgage payments are based on these low introductory 
   rates, there is a greater potential for a borrower to experience 
   negative amortization, increased payment shock, and earlier recasting 
   of the borrower's monthly payments than originally scheduled. In 
   setting introductory rates, institutions should consider ways to 
   minimize the probability of disruptive early recastings and 
   extraordinary payment shock.
   Lending to Subprime Borrowers--Mortgage programs that target
   
   subprime borrowers through tailored marketing, underwriting standards, 
   and risk selection should follow the applicable interagency guidance on 
   subprime lending.\6\ Among other things, the subprime guidance 
   discusses the circumstances under which subprime lending can become 
   predatory or abusive. Additionally, an institution's practice of risk 
   layering for loans to subprime borrowers may significantly increase the 
   risk to both the institution and the borrower. Institutions should pay 
   particular attention to these circumstances, as they design 
   nontraditional mortgage loan products for subprime borrowers.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \6\ Interagency Guidance on Subprime Lending, March 1, 1999, 
   and 
   Expanded Guidance for Subprime Lending Programs, January 31, 2001. 
   Federally Insured Credit Unions should refer to 04-CU-12 `` 
   Specialized Lending Activities (NCUA).
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Non Owner-Occupied Investor Loans--Borrowers financing non 
   owner-
   occupied investment properties should be qualified on their ability to 
   service the debt over the life of the loan. Loan terms should also 
   reflect an appropriate combined LTV ratio that considers the potential 
   for negative amortization and maintains sufficient borrower equity over 
   the life of the loan. Further, nontraditional mortgages to finance non 
   owner-occupied investor properties should require evidence that the 
   borrower has sufficient cash reserves to service the loan in the near 
   term in the event that the property becomes vacant.\7\
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \7\ Federally Insured Credit Unions must comply with 12 CFR 
   Part 
   723 for loans meeting the definition of member business loans.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Portfolio and Risk Management Practices
   
   Institutions should recognize that nontraditional mortgage 
   loans 
   are untested in a stressed environment and, accordingly, should receive 
   higher levels of monitoring and loss mitigation. Moreover, institutions 
   should ensure that portfolio and risk management practices keep pace 
   with the growth and changing risk profile of their nontraditional 
   mortgage loan portfolios. Active portfolio management is especially 
   important for institutions that project or have already experienced 
   significant growth or concentrations of nontraditional products. 
   Institutions that originate or invest in nontraditional mortgage loans 
   should adopt more robust risk management practices and manage these 
   exposures in a thoughtful, systematic manner by:
  
   * Developing written policies that specify acceptable 
   product attributes, production and portfolio limits, sales and 
   securitization practices, and risk management expectations;
  
   * Designing enhanced performance measures and management 
   reporting that provide early warning for increasing risk;
  
   * Establishing appropriate ALLL levels that consider the 
   credit quality of the portfolio and conditions that affect 
   collectibility; and
  
   * Maintaining capital at levels that reflect portfolio 
   characteristics and the effect of stressed economic conditions on 
   collectibility. Institutions should hold capital commensurate with the 
   risk characteristics of their nontraditional mortgage loan portfolios.
   Policies--An institution's policies for nontraditional 
   mortgage 
   lending activity should set forth acceptable levels of risk through its 
   operating practices, accounting procedures, and policy exception 
   tolerances. Policies should reflect appropriate limits on risk layering 
   and should include risk management tools for risk mitigation purposes. 
   Further, an institution should set growth and volume limits by loan 
   type, with special attention for products and product combinations in 
   need of heightened attention due to easing terms or rapid growth.
   Concentrations--Concentration limits should be set for loan 
   types, 
   third-party
   
   [[Page 77254]]
   
   originations, geographic area, and property occupancy status, to 
   maintain portfolio diversification. Concentration limits should also be 
   set on key portfolio characteristics such as loans with high combined 
   LTV and DTI ratios, loans with the potential for negative amortization, 
   loans to borrowers with credit scores below established thresholds, and 
   nontraditional mortgage loans with layered risks. The combination of 
   nontraditional mortgage loans with risk-layering features should be 
   regularly analyzed to determine if excessive concentrations or risks 
   exist. Institutions with excessive concentrations or deficient risk 
   management practices will be subject to elevated supervisory attention 
   and potential examiner criticism to ensure timely remedial action. 
   Further, institutions should consider the effect of employee incentive 
   programs that may result in higher concentrations of nontraditional 
   mortgage loans.
   Controls--An institution's quality control, compliance, and 
   audit 
   procedures should specifically target those mortgage lending activities 
   exhibiting higher risk. For nontraditional mortgage loan products, an 
   institution should have appropriate controls to monitor compliance and 
   exceptions to underwriting standards. The institution's quality control 
   function should regularly review a sample of reduced documentation 
   loans from all origination channels and a representative sample of 
   underwriters to confirm that policies are being followed. When control 
   systems or operating practices are found deficient, business line 
   managers should be held accountable for correcting deficiencies in a 
   timely manner.
   Since many nontraditional mortgage loans permit a borrower to 
   defer 
   principal and, in some cases, interest payments for extended periods, 
   institutions should have strong controls over accruals, customer 
   service and collections. Policy exceptions made by servicing and 
   collections personnel should be carefully monitored to confirm that 
   practices such as re-aging, payment deferrals, and loan modifications 
   are not inadvertently increasing risk. Since payment option ARMs 
   require higher levels of customer support than other mortgage loans, 
   customer service and collections personnel should receive product-
   specific training on the features and potential customer issues.
   Third-Party Originations--Institutions often use third-party
   
   channels, such as mortgage brokers or correspondents, to originate 
   nontraditional mortgage loans. When doing so, an institution should 
   have strong approval and control systems to ensure the quality of 
   third-party originations and compliance with all applicable laws and 
   regulations, with particular emphasis on marketing and borrower 
   disclosure practices. Controls over third parties should be designed to 
   ensure that loans made through these channels reflect the standards and 
   practices used by an institution in its direct lending activities.
   Monitoring procedures should track the quality of loans by 
   both 
   origination source and key borrower characteristics in order to 
   identify problems, such as early payment defaults, incomplete 
   documentation, and fraud. A strong monitoring process should enable 
   management to determine whether third-party originators are producing 
   quality loans. If appraisal, loan documentation, or credit problems are 
   discovered, the institution should take immediate action, which could 
   include terminating its relationship with the third-party.\8\
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \8\ Refer to OCC Bulletin 2001-47--Third-Party Relationships 
   and 
   AL 2000-9--Third-Party Risk (OCC). Federally Insured Credit Unions 
   should refer to 01-CU-20 (NCUA), Due Diligence Over Third-Party 
   Service Providers.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Secondary Market Activity--The sophistication of an 
   institution's 
   secondary market risk management practices should be commensurate with 
   the nature and volume of activity. Institutions with significant 
   secondary market reliance should have comprehensive, formal approaches 
   to risk management.\9\ This should include consideration of the risks 
   to the institution should demand in the secondary markets dissipate.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \9\ Refer to ``Interagency Questions and Answers on Capital
   
   Treatment of Recourse, Direct Credit Substitutes, and Residual 
   Interests in Asset Securitizations,'' May 23, 2002; OCC Bulletin 
   2002-22 (OCC); SR letter 02-16 (Board); Financial Institution Letter 
   (FIL-54-2002) (FDIC); and CEO Letter 163 (OTS). See OCC's 
   Comptroller Handbook for Asset Securitization, November 1997. The 
   Board also addressed risk management and capital adequacy of 
   exposures arising from secondary market credit activities in SR 
   letter 97-21. Federally Insured Credit Unions should refer to 12 CFR 
   Part 702 (NCUA).
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   While sale of loans to third parties can transfer a portion 
   of the 
   portfolio's credit risk, an institution continues to be exposed to 
   reputation risk that arises when the credit losses on sold loans or 
   securitization transactions exceed expected losses. In order to protect 
   its reputation in the market, an institution may determine that it is 
   necessary to repurchase defaulted mortgages. It should be noted that 
   the repurchase of mortgage loans beyond the selling institution's 
   contractual obligations is, in the Agencies' view, implicit recourse. 
   Under the Agencies' risk-based capital standards, repurchasing mortgage 
   loans from a sold portfolio or from a securitization in this manner 
   would require that risk-based capital be maintained against the entire 
   portfolio or securitization.\10\ Further, loans sold to third parties 
   typically carry representations and warranties from the institution 
   that these loans were underwritten properly and all legal requirements 
   were satisfied. Therefore, institutions involved in securitization 
   transactions should consider the potential origination-related risks 
   arising from nontraditional mortgage loans, including the adequacy of 
   disclosures to investors.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \10\ Federally Insured Credit Unions should refer to 12 CFR 
   Part 
   702 for their risk based net worth requirements.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Management Information and Reporting--An institution should 
   have 
   the reporting capability to detect changes in the risk profile of its 
   nontraditional mortgage loan portfolio. Reporting systems should allow 
   management to isolate key loan products, risk-layering loan features, 
   and borrower characteristics to allow early identification of 
   performance deterioration. At a minimum, information should be 
   available by loan type (e.g., interest-only mortgage loans and payment 
   option ARMs); the combination of these loans with risk-layering 
   features (e.g., payment option ARM with stated income and interest-only 
   mortgage loans with simultaneous second-lien mortgages); underwriting 
   characteristics (e.g., LTV, DTI, and credit score); and borrower 
   performance (e.g., payment patterns, delinquencies, interest accruals, 
   and negative amortization).
   Portfolio volume and performance results should be tracked 
   against 
   expectations, internal lending standards, and policy limits. Volume and 
   performance expectations should be established at the subportfolio and 
   aggregate portfolio levels. Variance analyses should be performed 
   regularly to identify exceptions to policies and prescribed thresholds. 
   Qualitative analysis should be undertaken when actual performance 
   deviates from established policies and thresholds. Variance analysis is 
   critical to the monitoring of the portfolio's risk characteristics and 
   should be an integral part of an institution's forecasting process to 
   establish and adjust risk tolerance levels.
   Stress Testing--Institutions should perform sensitivity 
   analysis on 
   key portfolio segments to identify and quantify events that may 
   increase risks in a segment or the entire portfolio. This
   
   [[Page 77255]]
   
   should generally include stress tests on key performance drivers such 
   as interest rates, employment levels, economic growth, housing value 
   fluctuations, and other factors beyond the institution's immediate 
   control. Stress tests typically assume rapid deterioration in one or 
   more factors and attempt to estimate the potential influence on default 
   rates and loss severity. Through stress testing, an institution should 
   be able to identify, monitor and manage risk, as well as develop 
   appropriate and cost-effective loss mitigation strategies. The stress 
   testing results should provide direct feedback in determining 
   underwriting standards, product terms, portfolio concentration limits, 
   and capital levels.
   Capital and Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses--Institutions
   
   should establish appropriate allowances for the estimated credit losses 
   in their nontraditional mortgage loan portfolios and hold capital 
   commensurate with the risk characteristics of these portfolios. 
   Moreover, institutions should recognize that the limited performance 
   history of these products, particularly in a stressed environment, 
   increases performance uncertainty. As loan terms evolve and 
   underwriting practices ease, this lack of seasoning may warrant higher 
   capital levels.
   In establishing an appropriate ALLL and considering the 
   adequacy of 
   capital, institutions should segment their nontraditional mortgage loan 
   portfolios into pools with similar credit risk characteristics. The 
   basic segments typically include collateral and loan characteristics, 
   geographic concentrations, and borrower qualifying attributes. Credit 
   risk segments should also distinguish among loans with differing 
   payment and portfolio characteristics, such as borrowers who habitually 
   make only minimum payments, mortgages with existing balances above 
   original balances due to negative amortization, and mortgages subject 
   to sizable payment shock. The objective is to identify key credit 
   quality indicators that affect collectibility for ALLL measurement 
   purposes and important risk characteristics that influence expected 
   performance so that migration into or out of key segments provides 
   meaningful information about future loss exposure for purposes of 
   determining the level of capital to be maintained.
   Further, those institutions with material mortgage banking
   
   activities and mortgage servicing assets should apply sound practices 
   in valuing the mortgage servicing rights of nontraditional mortgages in 
   accordance with interagency guidance.\11\ This guidance requires 
   institutions to follow generally accepted accounting principles and 
   conservatively treat assumptions used in valuing mortgage-servicing 
   rights.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \11\ Refer to the ``Interagency Advisory on Mortgage 
   Banking,'' 
   February 25, 2003, issued by the bank and thrift regulatory 
   agencies. Federally Insured Credit Unions with assets of $10 million 
   or more are reminded they must report and value nontraditional 
   mortgages and related mortgage servicing rights, if any, consistent 
   with generally accepted accounting principles in the Call Reports 
   they file with the NCUA Board.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Consumer Protection Issues
   
   While nontraditional mortgage loans provide flexibility for
   
   consumers, the Agencies are concerned that consumers may enter into 
   these transactions without fully understanding the product terms. 
   Nontraditional mortgage products have been advertised and promoted 
   based on their near-term monthly payment affordability, and consumers 
   have been encouraged to select nontraditional mortgage products based 
   on the lower monthly payments that such products permit compared with 
   traditional types of mortgages. In addition to apprising consumers of 
   the benefits of nontraditional mortgage products, institutions should 
   ensure that they also appropriately alert consumers to the risks of 
   these products, including the likelihood of increased future payment 
   obligations. Institutions should also ensure that consumers have 
   information that is timely and sufficient for making a sound product 
   selection decision.\12\
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \12\ Institutions also should review the recommendations 
   relating to mortgage lending practices set forth in other sections 
   of this guidance and any other supervisory guidance from their 
   respective primary regulators, including the discussion in the 
   Subprime Lending Guidance referenced in footnote 6 about abusive 
   lending practices.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Concerns and Objectives--More than traditional ARMs, mortgage
   
   products such as payment option ARMs and interest-only mortgages can 
   carry a significant risk of payment shock and negative amortization 
   that may not be fully understood by consumers. For example, consumer 
   payment obligations may increase substantially at the end of an 
   interest-only period or upon the ``recast'' of a payment option ARM. 
   The magnitude of these payment increases may be affected by factors 
   such as the expiration of promotional interest rates, increases in the 
   interest rate index, and negative amortization. Negative amortization 
   also results in lower levels of home equity as compared to a 
   traditional amortizing mortgage product. As a result, it may be more 
   difficult for consumers to refinance these loans. In addition, in the 
   event of a refinancing or a sale of the property, negative amortization 
   may result in the reduction or elimination of home equity, even when 
   the property has appreciated. The concern that consumers may not fully 
   understand these products would be exacerbated by marketing and 
   promotional practices that emphasize potential benefits without also 
   effectively providing complete information about material risks.
   In light of these considerations, institutions should ensure 
   that 
   communications with consumers, including advertisements, oral 
   statements, promotional materials, and monthly statements, are 
   consistent with product terms and payment structures. These 
   communications should also provide clear and balanced information about 
   the relative benefits and risks of these products, including the risk 
   of payment shock and the risk of negative amortization. Clear, 
   balanced, and timely communication to consumers of the risks of these 
   products is important to ensuring that consumers have appropriate 
   information at crucial decision-making points, such as when they are 
   shopping for loans or deciding which monthly payment amount to make. 
   Such communication should help minimize potential consumer confusion 
   and complaints, foster good customer relations, and reduce legal and 
   other risks to the institution.
   Legal Risks--Institutions that offer nontraditional mortgage
   
   products must ensure that they do so in a manner that complies with all 
   applicable laws and regulations. With respect to the disclosures and 
   other information provided to consumers, applicable laws and 
   regulations include the following:
  
   * Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and its implementing 
   regulation, Regulation Z.
  
   * Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act (FTC Act).
   TILA and Regulation Z contain rules governing disclosures 
   that 
   institutions must provide for closed-end mortgages in advertisements, 
   with an application,\13\ before loan consummation, and when interest 
   rates change. Section 5 of the FTC Act prohibits unfair or deceptive 
   acts or practices.\14\
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \13\ These program disclosures apply to ARM products and must 
   be 
   provided at the time an application is provided or before the 
   consumer pays a nonrefundable fee, whichever is earlier.
   \14\ The OCC, the Board, and the FDIC enforce this provision
   
   under the FTC Act and section 8 of the FDI Act. Each of these 
   agencies has also issued supervisory guidance to the institutions 
   under their respective jurisdictions concerning unfair or deceptive 
   acts or practices. See OCC Advisory Letter 2002-3--Guidance on 
   Unfair or Deceptive Acts or Practices, March 22, 2002; Joint Board 
   and FDIC Guidance on Unfair or Deceptive Acts or Practices by State-
   Chartered Banks, March 11, 2004. Federally insured credit unions are 
   prohibited from using any advertising or promotional material that 
   is inaccurate, misleading, or deceptive in any way concerning its 
   products, services, or financial condition. 12 CFR 740.2. The OTS 
   also has a regulation that prohibits savings associations from using 
   advertisements or other representations that are inaccurate or 
   misrepresent the services or contracts offered. 12 CFR 563.27. This 
   regulation supplements its authority under the FTC Act.
   
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   [[Page 77256]]
   
   Institutions should also ensure that they comply with fair 
   lending 
   laws and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA). Other 
   federal laws also apply to these loan products. Moreover, the Agencies 
   note that the sale or securitization of a loan may not affect an 
   institution's potential liability for violations of TILA, RESPA, the 
   FTC Act, or other laws in connection with its origination of the loan. 
   State laws, including laws regarding unfair or deceptive acts or 
   practices, also may be applicable. It is important that institutions 
   have their communications and other acts and practices reviewed by 
   counsel for compliance with all applicable laws. Institutions also 
   should monitor applicable laws and regulations for revisions to ensure 
   that communications continue to be fully compliant.
   
   Recommended Practices
   
   Recommended practices for addressing the risks raised by 
   nontraditional mortgage products include the following:
   Communications with Consumers--As with all communications 
   with 
   consumers, institutions should present important information in a clear 
   manner and format such that consumers will notice it, can understand it 
   to be material, and will be able to use it in their decision-making 
   processes.\15\ Furthermore, when promoting or describing nontraditional 
   mortgage products, institutions should provide consumers with 
   information that will enable them to make informed decisions and to use 
   these products responsibly. Meeting this objective requires appropriate 
   attention to the timing, content, and clarity of information presented 
   to consumers. Thus, institutions should provide consumers with 
   information at a time that will help consumers make product selection 
   and payment decisions. For example, institutions should offer full and 
   fair product descriptions when a consumer is shopping for a mortgage, 
   not just upon the submission of an application or at consummation.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \15\ In this regard, institutions should strive to: (1) Focus 
   on 
   information important to consumer decision making; (2) highlight key 
   information so that it will be noticed; (3) employ a user-friendly 
   and readily navigable format for presenting the information; and (4) 
   use plain language, with concrete and realistic examples. 
   Comparative tables and information describing key features of 
   available loan products, including reduced documentation programs, 
   also may be useful for consumers considering these nontraditional 
   mortgage products and other loan features described in this 
   guidance.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
  
   * Promotional materials and descriptions of these products 
   should provide information that enables consumers to prudently consider 
   the costs, terms, features, and risks of these mortgages in their 
   product selection decisions, including information about:
   
   --Payment Shock. Institutions should apprise consumers of potential 
   increases in their payment obligations (e.g., in both dollar and 
   percentage terms), including situations in which interest rates or 
   negative amortization reach a contractual limit. For example, product 
   descriptions could specifically state the maximum monthly payment a 
   consumer would be required to pay under a hypothetical loan example 
   once amortizing payments are required and the interest rate and 
   negative amortization caps have been reached.\16\ Information provided 
   to consumers also could clearly describe when structural payment 
   changes will occur (e.g., when introductory rates expire, or when 
   amortizing payments are required), and what the new payment amount 
   would be or how it would be calculated. As applicable, these 
   descriptions could indicate that the new payment amount may be required 
   sooner, and may be even higher than the amount indicated, due to 
   factors such as negative amortization or increases in the interest rate 
   index.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \16\ Consumers also should be apprised of other material 
   changes 
   in payment obligations, such as balloon payments.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   --Negative Amortization. When negative amortization is possible under 
   the terms of the loan, consumers should be apprised of the potential 
   consequences of increasing principal balances and decreasing home 
   equity. For example, product descriptions should include, with sample 
   payment schedules, corresponding examples showing the effect of those 
   payments on the consumer's loan balance and home equity.
   --Prepayment Penalties. If the institution may impose a penalty in the 
   event that the consumer prepays the mortgage, consumers should be 
   alerted to this fact, and to the amount of any such penalty.\17\
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \17\ Federal credit unions are prohibited from imposing 
   prepayment penalties. 12 CFR 701.21(c)(6).
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   --Cost of Reduced Documentation Loans. If an institution offers both 
   reduced and full documentation loan programs and there is a pricing 
   premium attached to the reduced documentation program, consumers should 
   be alerted to this fact.
   
  
   * Monthly statements that are provided to consumers on 
   payment option ARMs should provide information that enables consumers 
   to make responsible payment choices, including information about the 
   consequences of selecting various payment options on the current 
   principal balance. Institutions should present each payment option 
   available, explain each option, and note the impact of each choice. For 
   example, the monthly payment statement should contain an explanation, 
   as applicable, next to the minimum payment amount that this payment 
   would result in an increase to the consumer's outstanding loan balance 
   due to negative amortization. Payment statements also could provide the 
   consumer's current loan balance, what portion of the consumer's 
   previous payment was allocated to principal and to interest, and, if 
   applicable, the amount by which the principal balance increased. 
   Institutions should avoid leading payment option ARM borrowers to 
   select the minimum payment (for example, through the format or content 
   of monthly statements).
  
   * Institutions also should avoid practices that obscure 
   significant risks to the consumer. For example, if an institution 
   advertises or promotes a nontraditional mortgage by emphasizing the 
   comparatively lower initial payments permitted for these loans, the 
   institution also should provide clear and comparably prominent 
   information alerting the consumer, as relevant, that these payment 
   amounts will increase, that a balloon payment may be due, and that the 
   loan balance will not decrease and may even increase due to the 
   deferral of interest and/or principal payments. Similarly, institutions 
   should avoid such practices as promoting payment patterns that are 
   structurally unlikely to occur.\18\ Such practices could raise legal 
   and other risks for institutions, as described more fully above.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \18\ For example, marketing materials for payment option ARMs
   
   may promote low predictable payments until the recast date. At the 
   same time, the minimum payments may be so low that negative 
   amortization caps would be reached and higher payment obligations 
   would be triggered before the scheduled recast, even if interest 
   rates remain constant.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
  
   * Institutions also should avoid such practices as: 
   Unwarranted assurances or
   
   [[Page 77257]]
   
   predictions about the future direction of interest rates (and, 
   consequently, the borrower's future obligations); inappropriate 
   representations about the ``cash savings'' to be realized from 
   nontraditional mortgage products in comparison with amortizing 
   mortgages; statements suggesting that initial minimum payments in a 
   payment option ARM will cover accrued interest (or principal and 
   interest) charges; and misleading claims that interest rates or payment 
   obligations for these products are ``fixed.''
   Control Systems--Institutions also should develop and use 
   strong 
   control systems to ensure that actual practices are consistent with 
   their policies and procedures, for loans that the institution 
   originates internally, those that it originates through mortgage 
   brokers and other third parties, and those that it purchases. 
   Institutions should design control systems to address compliance and 
   fair disclosure concerns as well as the safety and soundness 
   considerations discussed above. Lending personnel should be trained so 
   that they are able to convey information to consumers about product 
   terms and risks in a timely, accurate, and balanced manner. Lending 
   personnel should be monitored through, for example, call monitoring or 
   mystery shopping, to determine whether they are conveying appropriate 
   information. Institutions should review consumer complaints to identify 
   potential compliance, reputation, and other risks. Attention also 
   should be paid to appropriate legal review and to using compensation 
   programs that do not improperly encourage originators to direct 
   consumers to particular products.
   Appendix: Terms Used in this Document
   Interest-only Mortgage Loan--A nontraditional mortgage on 
   which, 
   for a specified number of years (e.g., three or five years), the 
   borrower is required to pay only the interest due on the loan during 
   which time the rate may fluctuate or may be fixed. After the interest-
   only period, the rate may be fixed or fluctuate based on the prescribed 
   index and payments include both principal and interest.
   Payment Option ARM--A nontraditional mortgage that allows the
   
   borrower to choose from a number of different payment options. For 
   example, each month, the borrower may choose a minimum payment option 
   based on a ``start'' or introductory interest rate, an interest-only 
   payment option based on the fully indexed interest rate, or a fully 
   amortizing principal and interest payment option based on either a 15-
   year or 30-year loan term plus any required escrow payments. The 
   minimum payment option can be less than the interest accruing on the 
   loan, resulting in negative amortization. The interest-only option 
   avoids negative amortization but does not provide for principal 
   amortization. After a specified number of years, or if the loan reaches 
   a certain negative amortization cap, the required monthly payment 
   amount is recast to require payments that will fully amortize the 
   outstanding balance over the remaining loan term.
   Reduced Documentation--A loan feature that is commonly 
   referred to 
   as ``low doc/no doc,'' ``no income/no asset,'' ``stated income'' or 
   ``stated assets.'' For mortgage loans with this feature, an institution 
   sets reduced or minimal documentation standards to substantiate the 
   borrower's income and assets.
   Simultaneous Second-Lien Loan--A lending arrangement where 
   either a 
   closed-end second-lien or a home equity line of credit (HELOC) is 
   originated simultaneously with the first lien mortgage loan, typically 
   in lieu of a higher down payment.
   This concludes the text of the proposed Interagency Guidance 
   on 
   Nontraditional Mortgage Products.
   
   Dated: December 19, 2005.
   John C. Dugan,
   Comptroller of the Currency.
   
   By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
   System, December 19, 2005.
   Jennifer J. Johnson,
   Secretary of the Board.
   
   Dated at Washington, DC, the 19th day of December, 2005.
   
   By order of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
   Robert E. Feldman,
   Executive Secretary.
   
   Dated: December 19, 2005.
   
   By the Office of Thrift Supervision.
   John M. Reich,
   Director.
   
   By the National Credit Union Administration on December 20,
   
   2005.
   Rodney E. Hood,
   Vice Chairman.
   [FR Doc. 05-24562 Filed 12-28-05; 8:45 am]
   
   BILLING CODE 4810-33-P

Last Updated: December 29, 2005