What Your Declines
and Withdrawals Say About You
The regular review of the declines and withdrawals is a
common practice at the banks. In fact a
secondary review of decline notices and withdrawals is a standard part of a
strong compliance management
program. The typical review includes
making sure that notices are given on a timely basis, to the appropriate
parties and that notices include the
proper reasons for the declination.
We believe that you can use the information from this
process to unlock a treasure trove of information about your bank and how it
relating to the community that it serves.
But we believe that
there are several other what if we expanded the use of the information that we
collected here ? What if we started
using this information to do analysis of how we are doing with overall compliance
Basic Requirements
of all banks
The Community Reinvestment Act, The Equal Credit Opportunity
Act, Fair Lending laws, the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, and the Unfair
Deceptive Abusive Acts or Practices Act all come together in a pantheon of laws
aimed at shaping the way banks relate to
the communities they serve. On separate
occasions, we have discussed the origin
of a number of these laws. We have
always maintained that all of these laws were enacted as a result of bad behavior by certain
institutions. And while there is plenty
of disagreement about the overall efficiency of these laws, but they are in
fact here to stay.
There are several common
from each of these regulations;
·
Customers are to be treated fairly at all points
of contact with the bank
·
Loan applicants are to be judged on a basis that
is objective
·
Customers are to be kept informed of the basis
for credit decisions
·
Banks products should reflect the needs of the
communities in which they are located
·
The experience of customers who apply for
mortgage products must be transparent
·
All members of the community should be
encouraged to become customers
Trying to meet all of these goals while still running a
profitable operation can be a daunting task indeed. However, for banks that are proactive and
that have a strong commitment to compliance, meeting the goals of these
regulations is a part of the overall strategic plan. Further, we believe that there are steps
that banks can take to enhance the overall monitoring of the progress towards
meeting these goals . The declines and
withdrawals are a prime example.
Granted that some of the information that is required for banks to collect by HMDA is otherwise
prohibited. For example, you cannot ask
an applicant for a small business loan his race or ethnicity. That is unless, you are conducting a
self-assessment of your overall compliance.
To be precise Regulation B says at 202.5 (b) (1)
Self-test. A creditor may inquire about the race,
color, religion, national origin, or sex of an applicant or any other person in
connection with a credit transaction for the purpose of conducting a self-test
that meets the requirements of §202.15. A creditor that makes such an inquiry
shall disclose orally or in writing, at the time the information is requested,
that:
(i) The applicant will not be required to
provide the information;
(ii) The creditor is requesting the information to monitor
its compliance with the federal Equal Credit Opportunity Act;
(iii) Federal law prohibits the creditor from discriminating
on the basis of this information, or on the basis of an applicant's decision
not to furnish the information; and
(iv) If applicable, certain information will be collected
based on visual observation or surname if not provided by the applicant or
other person
In case you are wondering, section
202.15 is designed to encourage
self-testing and it states, that the results of self-testing are
privileged. The basic requirement here
is that when you do find problems they
must be appropriately address. You
should also know that the fact that you did a self-test is NOT privileged. Therefore, if you perform a self-test and do
not want to share the results with the regulator, that is your right. However, it is also a red flag to the
regulator.
We believe that this provision of the regulation coupled
with the fact that you already have a structure in place to collect the
necessary information presents an outstanding opportunity.
Withdrawals
Currently banks that are HMDA reporters are required to keep
information on mortgage borrowers that withdraw their applicants before the
process is completed. In addition
information is required to be kept for loans that were approved and offered to
the applicant, but rejected. This
information can be used for a number of purposes. For example,
a high level of withdrawals can be an indication that the loan process
is taking too long to reach a decision.
High withdrawals rates could also indicate that the pricing at your bank
is not competitive.
We suggest that with a little extra analysis, this same
information could tell you about the experience
of minorities and women. Are
women withdrawing at a higher rate than men?
The same question could be asked about minority applicants. You could determine if applicants from low
to moderate income tracts have the same experience as those form medium income
and high income tracts. It is important
to point at that the lack of minority or women applicants
also tells a story!
Declines
Both HMDA and the ECOA require lenders to keep information
about declines. However, only HMDA
requires that information about the borrowers race, ethnicity and gender should
be kept. Again, this information is
generally used for a few purposes such as determining whether applications are
being notified in a timely manner as required by the regulations. In addition, the decline files are generally
used for the purpose of determining that the proper reasons for the declination
have been given to the customer.
Here again, we note that with a minimal adjust to the
information that is collected, you could
collect information about the experiences of women and minorities. In addition, you could get important
information about the experiences of people within low to moderate income
tracts. This information would also help
the bank to determine whether certain loan parameters are disproportionately
impacting a certain segment of the community.
Using information form declines and withdrawals, your bank
can also get a much better idea of where in the assessment area, your customers
are coming form. If certain areas are
being missed, the conversation about why and what can be done can begin.
Of course we are not suggesting that by doing an empirical
comparison between the withdrawals and denials of women versus men or
minorities versus nonminority will tell a complete story. It will help you to start asking the right
questions and in so doing, get you to
the point of better compliance. By
addressing the questions raised by this analysis you direct resources to the
highest areas of risk in compliance while improving your overall standing in
your community. This information could lead to surveys
questionnaires, focus groups or whatever innovations are appropriate.
We have included a form on the website that
might useful in developing this analysis.
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