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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 246 / Wednesday, December 23, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Because no notice of proposed
rulemaking is required, the Regulatory
Flexibility Act does not require an
initial or final regulatory flexibility
analysis.
5 U.S.C. 603(a), 604(a).
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
3506;
5 CFR 1320), the agency reviewed this
final rule. No collections of information
pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction
Act are contained in the final rule.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 1003
Banking, Banks, Credit unions,
Mortgages, National banks, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements,
Savings associations.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Bureau amends
Regulation C, 12 CFR part 1003, as set
forth below:
PART 1003—HOME MORTGAGE
DISCLOSURE (REGULATION C)
1. The authority citation for part 1003
continues to read as follows:
â–
Authority: 12 U.S.C.
2803, 2804, 2805,
5512, 5581.
2. In Supplement I to Part 1003, under
Section 1003.2—Definitions, under the
definition ‘‘Financial institution’’,
paragraph 2 is revised to read as
follows:
â–
Supplement I to Part 1003—Staff
Commentary
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Section 1003.2—Definitions
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Financial Institution
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2. Adjustment of exemption threshold
for banks, savings associations, and
credit unions.
For data collection in
2016, the asset-size exemption threshold
is $44 million. Banks, savings
associations, and credit unions with
assets at or below $44 million as of
December 31, 2015, are exempt from
collecting data for 2016.
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Dated: December 16, 2015.
Richard Cordray,
Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.
[FR Doc. 2015–32285 Filed 12–22–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–AM–P
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BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL
PROTECTION
12 CFR Part 1026
Truth in Lending Act (Regulation Z)
Adjustment to Asset-Size Exemption
Threshold
Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.
ACTION: Final rule; official
interpretation.
AGENCY:
The Bureau is amending the
official commentary that interprets the
requirements of the Bureau’s Regulation
Z (Truth in Lending) to reflect a change
in the asset size threshold for certain
creditors to qualify for an exemption to
the requirement to establish an escrow
account for a higher-priced mortgage
loan based on the annual percentage
change in the average of the Consumer
Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and
Clerical Workers (CPI–W) for the 12month period ending in November.
The
exemption threshold is adjusted to
decrease to $2.052 billion from $2.060
billion. The adjustment is based on the
0.4 percent decrease in the average of
the CPI–W for the 12-month period
ending in November 2015. Therefore,
creditors with assets of less than $2.052
billion (including assets of certain
affiliates) as of December 31, 2015, are
exempt, if other requirements of
Regulation Z also are met, from
establishing escrow accounts for higherpriced mortgage loans in 2016.
This
asset limit will also apply during a grace
period, in certain circumstances, with
respect to transactions with applications
received before April 1 of 2017. The
adjustment to the escrows exemption
asset-size threshold will also decrease a
similar threshold for small-creditor
portfolio and balloon-payment qualified
mortgages. Balloon-payment qualified
mortgages that satisfy all applicable
criteria, including being made by
creditors that have (together with
certain affiliates) total assets below the
threshold, are also excepted from the
prohibition on balloon payments for
high-cost mortgages.
DATES: This final rule is effective
January 1, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
James Wylie or Jaclyn Maier, Counsels,
Office of Regulations, at (202) 435–7700.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
I.
Background
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act (DoddFrank Act) amended TILA section
129D(a) to contain a general
requirement that an escrow account be
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Frm 00020
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
established by a creditor to pay for
property taxes and insurance premiums
for certain first-lien higher-priced
mortgage loan transactions. TILA
section 129(D) also generally permits an
exemption from the higher-priced
mortgage loan escrow requirement for a
creditor that meets certain requirements,
including any asset-size threshold the
Bureau may establish.
In the 2013 Escrows Final Rule,1 the
Bureau established such an asset-size
threshold of $2,000,000,000, which
would adjust automatically each year,
based on the year-to year change in the
average of the CPI–W for each 12-month
period ending in November, with
rounding to the nearest million dollars.2
For 2015, the threshold was $2.060
billion. The Bureau recently revised the
criteria for small creditors, and rural
and underserved areas, for purposes of
certain special provisions and
exemptions from various requirements
provided to certain small creditors
under the Bureau’s mortgage rules.
As
part of this revision the Bureau made
certain changes that affect how the
asset-size threshold applies. The Bureau
revised the rule to include in the
calculation of the asset-size threshold
the assets of the creditor’s affiliates that
regularly extended covered transactions
secured by first liens during the
applicable period. The Bureau also
added a grace period from calendar year
to calendar year to allow an otherwise
eligible creditor that exceeded the asset
limit in the preceding calendar year (but
not in the calendar year before the
preceding year) to continue to operate as
a small creditor with respect to
transactions with applications received
before April 1 of the current calendar
year.3
During the 12-month period ending in
November 2015, the average of the
CPI–W decreased by 0.4 percent.
As a
result, the exemption threshold is
decreased to $2.052 billion for 2016.
Thus, if the creditor’s assets together
with the assets of its affiliates that
regularly extended first-lien covered
transactions during calendar year 2015
are less than $2.052 billion on December
31, 2015, and it meets the other
requirements of § 1026.35(b)(2)(iii) it
will be exempt in 2016 from the escrowaccounts requirement for higher-priced
mortgage loans and will also be exempt
from the escrow-accounts requirement
for higher-priced mortgage loans for
purposes of any loan consummated in
2017 for which the application was
received before April 1, 2017. The
1 78
FR 4726 (Jan. 22, 2013).
12 CFR 1026.35(b)(2)(iii)(C).
3 See 80 FR 59943, 59951 (Oct.
2, 2015).
2 See
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. Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 246 / Wednesday, December 23, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
adjustment to the escrows exemption
asset-size threshold will also decrease
the threshold for small-creditor portfolio
and balloon-payment qualified
mortgages under Regulation Z. The
requirements for small-creditor portfolio
qualified mortgages at
§ 1026.43(e)(5)(i)(D) reference the asset
threshold in § 1026.35(b)(2)(iii)(C).
Likewise, the requirements for balloonpayment qualified mortgages at
§ 1026.43(f)(1)(vi) reference the asset
threshold in § 1026.35(b)(2)(iii)(C).
Balloon-payment qualified mortgages
that satisfy all applicable criteria in
§§ 1026.43(f)(1)(i) through (vi) and
1026.43(f)(2), or the conditions set forth
in § 1026.43(e)(6) for covered
transactions for which the application is
received before April 1, 2016,4
including being made by creditors that
have (together with certain affiliates)
total assets below the threshold in
§ 1026.35(b)(2)(iii)(C), are also excepted
from the prohibition on balloon
payments for high-cost mortgages in
§ 1026.32(d)(1)(ii)(C).
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II.
Procedural Requirements
A. Administrative Procedure Act
Under the Administrative Procedure
Act (APA), notice and opportunity for
public comment are not required if the
Bureau finds that notice and public
comment are impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public
interest. 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(B). Pursuant to
this final rule, comment 35(b)(2)(iii)–1
in Regulation Z is amended to update
the exemption threshold. The
amendment in this final rule is
technical, and merely applies the
formula previously established in
Regulation Z for determining any
adjustments to the exemption threshold.
For these reasons, the Bureau has
determined that publishing a notice of
proposed rulemaking and providing
opportunity for public comment are
unnecessary.
Therefore, the amendment
is adopted in final form.
Section 553(d) of the APA generally
requires publication of a final rule not
less than 30 days before its effective
date, except for (1) a substantive rule
which grants or recognizes an
exemption or relieves a restriction; (2)
interpretive rules and statements of
policy; or (3) as otherwise provided by
the agency for good cause found and
published with the rule. 5 U.S.C. 553(d).
At a minimum, the Bureau believes the
4 The Bureau extended the temporary provision
in § 1026.43(e)(6) from covered transactions
consummated on or before January 10, 2016 to
covered transactions for which the application was
received on or before April 1, 2016.
See 80 FR
59943, 59959 (Oct. 2, 2015).
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16:43 Dec 22, 2015
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amendments fall under the third
exception to section 553(d). The Bureau
finds that there is good cause to make
the amendments effective on January 1,
2016.
The amendment in this rule is
technical, and applies the method
previously established in the agency’s
regulations for automatic adjustments to
the threshold.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Because no notice of proposed
rulemaking is required, the Regulatory
Flexibility Act does not require an
initial or final regulatory flexibility
analysis. 5 U.S.C.
603(a), 604(a).
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3506;
5 CFR 1320), the agency reviewed this
final rule.
No collections of information
pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction
Act are contained in the final rule.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 1026
Advertising, Consumer protection,
Credit, Credit unions, Mortgages,
National banks, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Savings
associations, Truth in lending.
79675
Paragraph 35(b)(2)(iii)
1. * * *
iii. * * *
E.
Under § 1026.35(b)(2)(iii)(C), the
$2,000,000,000 asset threshold adjusts
automatically each year based on the year-toyear change in the average of the Consumer
Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and
Clerical Workers, not seasonally adjusted, for
each 12-month period ending in November,
with rounding to the nearest million dollars.
The Bureau will publish notice of the asset
threshold each year by amending this
comment. For calendar year 2016, the asset
threshold is $2,052,000,000. A creditor that
together with the assets of its affiliates that
regularly extended first-lien covered
transactions during calendar year 2015 has
total assets of less than $2,052,000,000 on
December 31, 2015, satisfies this criterion for
purposes of any loan consummated in 2016
and for purposes of any loan consummated
in 2017 for which the application was
received before April 1, 2017.
For historical
purposes:
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Dated: December 16, 2015.
Richard Cordray,
Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.
[FR Doc. 2015–32293 Filed 12–22–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–AM–P
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Bureau amends
Regulation Z, 12 CFR part 1026, as set
forth below:
PART 1026—TRUTH IN LENDING
(REGULATION Z)
1. The authority citation for part 1026
continues to read as follows:
â–
Authority: 12 U.S.C.
2601, 2603–2605,
2607, 2609, 2617, 3353, 5511, 5512, 5532,
5581; 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.
2. In Supplement I to Part 1026—
Official Interpretations, under Section
1026.35—Requirements for HigherPriced Mortgage Loans, 35(b)(2)
Exemptions, Paragraph 35(b)(2)(iii),
paragraph 1.iii.E introductory text, as
amended at 80 FR 59968 (Oct.
2, 2015),
is revised to read as follows:
â–
SUPPLEMENT I TO PART 1026—
OFFICIAL INTERPRETATIONS
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Subpart E—Special Rules for Certain Home
Mortgage Transactions
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Section 1026.35—Requirements for HigherPriced Mortgage Loans
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35(b)(2) Exemptions
*
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FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE
AGENCY
12 CFR Part 1227
RIN 2590–AA60
Suspended Counterparty Program
Federal Housing Finance
Agency.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule establishes
requirements and procedures for the
Federal Housing Finance Agency’s
(FHFA) Suspended Counterparty
Program. Under the Suspended
Counterparty Program, FHFA may issue
suspension orders directing the
regulated entities (Fannie Mae, Freddie
Mac, and the eleven Federal Home Loan
Banks (Banks)) to cease doing business
with an individual or institution, and
any affiliate thereof, for a specified
period of time where such party has
committed fraud or other financial
misconduct involving a mortgage
transaction.
The final rule revises the interim final
rule published on October 23, 2013. The
final rule excludes from the types of
covered transactions that would be
subject to a final suspension order any
transaction involving a residential
mortgage loan if the loan is secured by
the respondent’s own personal or
SUMMARY:
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