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Financial Institutions and Banking

5 Tips for Fair Lending Compliance

Community banks need to develop and follow fair lending practices; providing customers with nondiscriminatory access to credit is, of course, the right thing to do. What’s more, violations of fair lending laws and regulations can result in costly litigation and enforcement actions, hefty monetary penalties and serious reputational damage.

What are the laws?

The two primary fair lending laws are the Fair Housing Act (FHA) and the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA). The FHA prohibits discrimination in residential real estate-related transactions based on race or color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status (for example, households with one or more children under 18, pregnant women, or people in the process of adopting or otherwise gaining custody of a child), or handicap.

Similarly, the ECOA prohibits discrimination in credit transactions based on race or color, national origin, religion, sex, marital status, age (assuming the applicant has the capacity to contract), an applicant’s receipt of income from a public assistance program, or an applicant’s good faith exercise of his or her rights under the Consumer Credit Protection Act.

The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) requires certain lenders to report information about mortgage loan activity, including the race, ethnicity and sex of applicants. Finally, the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) provides incentives for banks to help meet their communities’ credit needs.

How can you comply?

Here are five tips for developing an effective compliance program:

  1. Conduct a risk assessment. Conduct a thorough assessment to identify your bank’s fair lending risks based on its size, location, customer demographics, product and service mix, and other factors. This assessment can pinpoint the bank’s most significant risks. It also can reveal weaknesses in the bank’s credit policies and procedures and other aspects of its credit operations. It’s particularly important to examine the bank’s management of risks associated with third parties, such as appraisers, aggregators, brokers and loan originators.
  2. Develop a written policy. A comprehensive written fair lending policy is key to help minimize your bank’s risks. And by demonstrating your commitment to fair lending, this document can go a long way toward mitigating the bank’s liability in the event of a violation. The policy should cover all of the bank’s products, services and credit operations and provide details about which practices are permissible and which aren’t.
  3. Analyze your data. Analyzing data about your lending and other credit decisions is important for two reasons: First, it’s the only way to determine whether disparities in access to credit exist for members of the various protected classes. These disparities don’t necessarily signal that unlawful discrimination is taking place — but gathering this data is the only way to make this determination.

Second, lending discrimination isn’t limited to disparate treatment of protected classes. Banks are potentially liable under the FHA and ECOA if their lending practices have a disparate impact on protected classes. For example, a policy of not making single-family mortgage loans under a specified dollar amount may disproportionately exclude certain low-income groups, even though the policy applies equally to all loan applicants. Banks can defend themselves against allegations of discrimination based on disparate impact by showing that the policy was justified by business necessity and that there was no alternative practice for achieving the same business objective without a disparate impact.

  1. Provide compliance training. Even the most thorough, well-designed policy won’t be worth the paper it’s printed on unless you provide fair lending compliance training for bank directors, management and all other relevant employees (and evaluate its effectiveness). Indeed, lack of training is a red flag for bank examiners. (See “Discrimination risk factors” at X.)
  2. Monitor compliance. You’ll need to monitor your bank’s compliance with fair lending laws and promptly address any violations or red flags you discover. You can do this by, among other things, performing regular data analysis, monitoring and managing consumer complaints, keeping an eye on third-party vendors, and conducting periodic independent audits of your compliance program (by your internal audit team or an outside consultant).

Reduce your risk

Fair lending laws are complex, and guidance can sometimes be ambiguous. Although a full discussion of the subject is beyond the scope of this article, the five tips outlined here are a good start in helping you evaluate the effectiveness of your fair lending compliance program.

Sidebar: Discrimination risk factors

A useful source of guidance on fair lending compliance is the Interagency Fair Lending Examination Procedures used by federal financial agencies. Among other things, the guidelines list the following compliance program discrimination risk factors:

  • Overall compliance record is weak,
  • Legally required monitoring information is nonexistent or incomplete,
  • Data or recordkeeping problems compromise the reliability of previous examination reviews,
  • Fair lending problems were previously found in one or more products or subsidiaries, and
  • The bank hasn’t updated compliance policies and procedures to reflect changes in law or in agency guidance.

If any of these problems are present in your institution, it’s important to rectify them as soon as possible. That way, you’ll avoid penalties and at the same time contribute to fair lending practices.

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