Proposed Collection; Comment Request, 24726-24727 [2014-09997]
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24726
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 84 / Thursday, May 1, 2014 / Notices
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2014–09934 Filed 4–30–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714–01–P
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
Sunshine Act Meeting
Federal Election Commission
& TIME: Tuesday May 6, 2014 at 10
AGENCY:
DATE
a.m.
PLACE:
999 E Street NW., Washington,
DC.
This meeting will be closed to
the public.
ITEMS TO BE DISCUSSED:
Compliance matters pursuant to 2
U.S.C. 437g.
Matters concerning participation in civil
actions or proceedings or arbitration.
Internal personnel rules and internal
rules and practices.
Information the premature disclosure of
which would be likely to have a
considerable adverse effect on the
implementation of a proposed
Commission action.
*
*
*
*
*
PERSON TO CONTACT FOR INFORMATION:
Judith Ingram, Press Officer, Telephone:
(202) 694–1220.
STATUS:
Shelley E. Garr,
Deputy Secretary of the Commission.
[FR Doc. 2014–10123 Filed 4–29–14; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 6715–01–P
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE
AGENCY
[No. 2014–N–06]
Proposed Collection; Comment
Request
Federal Housing Finance
Agency.
ACTION: 30-day Notice of Submission of
Information Collection for Approval
From the Office of Management and
Budget.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, the Federal
Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) is
seeking public comments concerning
the existing information collection
‘‘Monthly Survey of Rates and Terms on
Conventional 1-Family Nonfarm
Mortgage Loans,’’ which has been
assigned control number 2590–0004 by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). FHFA intends to submit the
information collection to OMB for
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:30 Apr 30, 2014
Jkt 232001
review and approval of a three-year
extension of the control number, which
expired on March 31, 2014.
DATES: Interested persons may submit
comments on or before June 30, 2014.
Comments: Submit written comments
to the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs of the Office of
Management and Budget, Attention:
Desk Officer for the Federal Housing
Finance Agency, Washington, DC
20503, Fax: (202) 395–6974, Email
address: OIRA_Submission@
omb.eop.gov. Please also submit them to
FHFA using any of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments. If
you submit your comment to the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, please also
send it by email to FHFA at
Regcomments@fhfa.gov to ensure timely
receipt by the agency.
• Email: Regcomments@fhfa.gov.
Please include Proposed Collection;
Comment Request: ‘‘Monthly Survey of
Rates and Terms on Conventional 1Family Nonfarm Mortgage Loans, (No.
2014–N–06)’’ in the subject line of the
message.
• Mail/Hand Delivery: Federal
Housing Finance Agency, Eighth Floor,
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington,
DC 20024, ATTENTION: Public
Comments/Proposed Collection;
Comment Request: ‘‘Monthly Survey of
Rates and Terms on Conventional 1Family Nonfarm Mortgage Loans, (No.
2014–N–06).’’
We will post all public comments we
receive without change, including any
personal information you provide, such
as your name, address, email address,
and telephone number, on the FHFA
Web site at https://www.fhfa.gov. In
addition, copies of all comments
received will be available for
examination by the public on business
days between the hours of 10 a.m. and
3 p.m., at the Federal Housing Finance
Agency, Eighth Floor, 400 Seventh
Street SW., Washington, DC 20024. To
make an appointment to inspect
comments, please call the Office of
General Counsel at 202–649–3804.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
David L. Roderer, Senior Financial
Analyst, 202–408–2540 (not a toll-free
number), david.l.roderer@fhfa.gov, or by
regular mail at the Federal Housing
Finance Agency, 400 Seventh Street
SW., Washington, DC 20024. The
telephone number for the
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf
is 800–877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
A. Need for and Use of the Information
Collection
FHFA’s Monthly Survey of Rates and
Terms on Conventional 1-Family NonFarm Mortgage Loans, commonly
referred to as the ‘‘Monthly Interest Rate
Survey’’ or ‘‘MIRS,’’ is a monthly survey
of mortgage lenders that solicits
information on the terms and conditions
on all conventional, single-family, fully
amortized, purchase-money mortgage
loans closed during the last five working
days of the preceding month. The MIRS
collects monthly information on interest
rates, loan terms, and house prices by
property type (i.e., new or previously
occupied), by loan type (i.e., fixed- or
adjustable-rate), and by lender type (i.e.,
mortgage companies, savings
associations, commercial banks, and
savings banks), as well as information
on 15-year and 30-year fixed-rate loans.
In addition, the survey collects quarterly
information on conventional loans by
major metropolitan area and by Federal
Home Loan Bank district. The MIRS
does not collect information on loans
insured by the Federal Housing
Administration (FHA) or guaranteed by
the Veterans Administration (VA), loans
secured by multifamily property or
manufactured housing, or loans created
by refinancing another mortgage. The
MIRS is the most comprehensive source
of information on conventional
mortgage rates and terms in the United
States.
The MIRS originated with one of
FHFA’s predecessor agencies, the
former Federal Home Loan Bank Board
(FHLBB) in the 1960s. Among other
things, the FHLBB used data collected
through the MIRS to derive its National
Average Contract Mortgage Rate for the
Purchase of Previously Occupied Homes
by Combined Lenders (ARM Index),
which was used by lenders to set
mortgage rates on adjustable rate
mortgages (ARMs). No statutory or
regulatory provision explicitly required
the FHLBB to conduct the MIRS.
However, for a period in the early
1980s, federally chartered savings
institutions were required to use the
MIRS-derived ARM Index in setting
interest rates on ARMs. Few, if any,
loans from that period remain. After
1981, an unknown but likely very small
proportion of lenders used the ARM
Index to set interest rates on their new
ARMs.
In 1989, Congress enacted the
Financial Institutions Reform Recovery
and Enforcement Act (FIRREA), which
abolished the FHLBB and created the
Federal Housing Finance Board to
assume many of the FHLBB’s powers
and responsibilities. FIRREA required
E:\FR\FM\01MYN1.SGM
01MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 84 / Thursday, May 1, 2014 / Notices
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
the Chairperson of the Finance Board to
‘‘take such actions as may be necessary’’
to ensure that the ARM Index prepared
by the FHLBB continued to be
available.1 Although there was no
explicit reference in FIRREA to the
continuation of the MIRS, the Finance
Board viewed that statutory requirement
to continue to produce the ARM Index
as a mandate to continue also to
conduct the MIRS, from which the data
used to derive the ARM Index was
obtained. The Finance Board conducted
the MIRS and produced the ARM Index
from 1989 through 2008, when Congress
abolished that agency and transferred its
responsibilities to the newly-created
FHFA.2
Since 2008, FHFA has continued to
conduct the MIRS and produce the
ARM Index.3 By statute, MIRS data is
one of the factors that FHFA is required
to consider in assessing the national
average one-family house price for
purposes of periodically adjusting the
conforming mortgage loan limits of
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.4 In
addition, statutes in several states and
U.S. territories, including California,
Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey,
Wisconsin, and the Virgin Islands, refer
to, or rely upon, the MIRS.5
Many lenders use FHFA’s ARM
Index, derived from MIRS data, to set
interest rates on fixed rate loans. In
addition, businesses, trade associations,
and government agencies at both the
federal and state level rely upon the
MIRS data for various business and
regulatory purposes. For example,
economic policy makers have used the
MIRS data to determine trends in the
mortgage markets, including interest
rates, down payments, terms to
maturity, terms on ARMs, and initial
fees and charges on mortgage loans.
1 See Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and
Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA), Public Law
101–73, Title IV, 402(e)(3), 103 Stat. 183, codified
at 12 U.S.C. 1437 note. The statute permitted the
Finance Board to substitute a different ARM index
after notice and comment, but only if the new index
was based upon data substantially similar to that of
the original ARM Index and substitution of the new
ARM index would result in an interest rate
substantially similar to the rate in effect at the time
the new ARM index replaced the existing ARM
Index. See FIRREA 402(e)(4).
2 See Housing and Economic Recovery Act of
2008 (HERA), Public Law 110–289, Div. A, Title III,
section 1312, 122 Stat. 2794, codified at 12 U.S.C.
4511 note.
3 The MIRS and the ARM Index are described at
12 CFR 906.5.
4 See 12 U.S.C. 4542.
5 See, e.g., Cal. Civ. Code sections 1916.7 and
1916.8 (mortgage rates); Mich. Comp. Laws section
445.1621(d) (mortgage index rates); Minn. Stat.
section 92.06 (payments for state land sales); N.J.
Rev. Stat. 31:1–1 (interest rates); Wis. Stat. sectioni
138.056 (variable loan rates); V.I. Code Ann. tit. 11,
section 951 (legal rate of interest).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:30 Apr 30, 2014
Jkt 232001
Other federal banking agencies, such as
the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System and the Council of
Economic Advisors, have used the MIRS
results for research purposes.
The OMB number for the information
collection is 2590–0004, which expired
on March 31, 2014. The likely
respondents are mortgage lenders in the
United States.
B. Burden Estimate
FHFA estimates the total annual
number of respondents at 70 with 6
responses per respondent (because not
every respondent will have new
mortgage loans to report every month).
The estimate for the average time per
response is 20 minutes. The estimate for
the total annual hour burden is 140
hours (70 respondents × 6 responses ×
0.33 hours).
C. Comment Request
FHFA published a request for public
comments regarding this information
collection in the Federal Register on
January 30, 2014. See 78 FR 24420 (Jan.
30, 2014). The 60-day comment period
closed on March 31, 2014. FHFA
received one comment letter, from the
Bureau of Economic Analysis of the U.S.
Department of Commerce (BEA). In its
letter, BEA states that it strongly
supports FHFA’s continued collection
of data for the MIRS, noting that the
data are ‘‘crucial to key components of
BEA’s economic statistics.’’ Specifically,
BEA uses MIRS data to track contract
rates of interest and to estimate financial
costs as part of its estimate of rental
income of persons in the national
income and product accounts (NIPAs).
Indirectly, the data are used in the
industry annual and quarterly InputOutput and GDP-by-Industry accounts
in the estimates of gross output and
value added for the real estate subsector.
This notice requests written
comments on: (1) Whether the
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of FHFA
functions, including whether the
information has practical utility; (2) The
accuracy of FHFA’s estimates of the
burdens of the collection of information;
(3) Ways to enhance the quality, utility,
and clarity of the information collected;
and (4) Ways to minimize the burden of
the collection of information on survey
respondents, including through the use
of automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology.
PO 00000
Frm 00061
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
24727
Dated: April 24, 2014.
Kevin Winkler,
Chief Information Officer, Federal Housing
Finance Agency.
[FR Doc. 2014–09997 Filed 4–30–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8070–01–P
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Change in Bank Control Notices;
Acquisitions of Shares of a Bank or
Bank Holding Company
The notificants listed below have
applied under the Change in Bank
Control Act (12 U.S.C. 1817(j)) and
§ 225.41 of the Board’s Regulation Y (12
CFR 225.41) to acquire shares of a bank
or bank holding company. The factors
that are considered in acting on the
notices are set forth in paragraph 7 of
the Act (12 U.S.C. 1817(j)(7)).
The notices are available for
immediate inspection at the Federal
Reserve Bank indicated. The notices
also will be available for inspection at
the offices of the Board of Governors.
Interested persons may express their
views in writing to the Reserve Bank
indicated for that notice or to the offices
of the Board of Governors. Comments
must be received not later than May 16,
2014.
A. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas (E.
Ann Worthy, Vice President) 2200
North Pearl Street, Dallas, Texas 75201–
2272:
1. Arthur Temple, III, Lufkin, Texas,
individually and as trustee of the Arthur
Temple, III Testamentary Trust, Arthur
Temple, III Generation Skipping Trust,
and Arthur & Mary Temple Trust Part
II; Charlotte Ann Temple, St. Helena,
California, individually and as trustee of
the Charlotte Temple Family Trust, and
Charlotte Ann Temple Generation
Skipping Trust; Hannah Temple,
Austin, Texas; John Hurst, Dripping
Springs, Texas; Whitney Temple Grace,
West Lake Hills, Texas; Susan Temple,
Wilson, Wyoming; Arthur Spencer, St.
Helena, California, individually and as
trustee of the Charlotte Ann Temple
Generation Skipping Trust; Christopher
Spencer, St. Helena, California; William
H. Spencer, Washington, DC; Katherine
Spencer Zelazny, St. Helena, California,
as trustee of the Zelazny Family Trust;
Wayne Corley, Lufkin, Texas, as trustee
of the Charlotte Ann Temple
Testamentary Trust and Arthur Temple,
III Testamentary Trust; CAT AT Family,
L.P, St. Helena, California; to
collectively as a group acting in concert
to retain voting shares of Diboll State
Bancshares, Inc., and thereby indirectly
retain voting shares of First Bank and
Trust East Texas, both in Diboll, Texas.
E:\FR\FM\01MYN1.SGM
01MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 84 (Thursday, May 1, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 24726-24727]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-09997]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY
[No. 2014-N-06]
Proposed Collection; Comment Request
AGENCY: Federal Housing Finance Agency.
ACTION: 30-day Notice of Submission of Information Collection for
Approval From the Office of Management and Budget.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In accordance with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) is seeking
public comments concerning the existing information collection
``Monthly Survey of Rates and Terms on Conventional 1-Family Nonfarm
Mortgage Loans,'' which has been assigned control number 2590-0004 by
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). FHFA intends to submit the
information collection to OMB for review and approval of a three-year
extension of the control number, which expired on March 31, 2014.
DATES: Interested persons may submit comments on or before June 30,
2014.
Comments: Submit written comments to the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs of the Office of Management and Budget, Attention:
Desk Officer for the Federal Housing Finance Agency, Washington, DC
20503, Fax: (202) 395-6974, Email address: OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov. Please also submit them to FHFA using any of
the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments. If you submit your
comment to the Federal eRulemaking Portal, please also send it by email
to FHFA at Regcomments@fhfa.gov to ensure timely receipt by the agency.
Email: Regcomments@fhfa.gov. Please include Proposed
Collection; Comment Request: ``Monthly Survey of Rates and Terms on
Conventional 1-Family Nonfarm Mortgage Loans, (No. 2014-N-06)'' in the
subject line of the message.
Mail/Hand Delivery: Federal Housing Finance Agency, Eighth
Floor, 400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20024, ATTENTION: Public
Comments/Proposed Collection; Comment Request: ``Monthly Survey of
Rates and Terms on Conventional 1-Family Nonfarm Mortgage Loans, (No.
2014-N-06).''
We will post all public comments we receive without change,
including any personal information you provide, such as your name,
address, email address, and telephone number, on the FHFA Web site at
https://www.fhfa.gov. In addition, copies of all comments received will
be available for examination by the public on business days between the
hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m., at the Federal Housing Finance Agency,
Eighth Floor, 400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20024. To make an
appointment to inspect comments, please call the Office of General
Counsel at 202-649-3804.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: David L. Roderer, Senior Financial
Analyst, 202-408-2540 (not a toll-free number),
david.l.roderer@fhfa.gov, or by regular mail at the Federal Housing
Finance Agency, 400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20024. The
telephone number for the Telecommunications Device for the Deaf is 800-
877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Need for and Use of the Information Collection
FHFA's Monthly Survey of Rates and Terms on Conventional 1-Family
Non-Farm Mortgage Loans, commonly referred to as the ``Monthly Interest
Rate Survey'' or ``MIRS,'' is a monthly survey of mortgage lenders that
solicits information on the terms and conditions on all conventional,
single-family, fully amortized, purchase-money mortgage loans closed
during the last five working days of the preceding month. The MIRS
collects monthly information on interest rates, loan terms, and house
prices by property type (i.e., new or previously occupied), by loan
type (i.e., fixed- or adjustable-rate), and by lender type (i.e.,
mortgage companies, savings associations, commercial banks, and savings
banks), as well as information on 15-year and 30-year fixed-rate loans.
In addition, the survey collects quarterly information on conventional
loans by major metropolitan area and by Federal Home Loan Bank
district. The MIRS does not collect information on loans insured by the
Federal Housing Administration (FHA) or guaranteed by the Veterans
Administration (VA), loans secured by multifamily property or
manufactured housing, or loans created by refinancing another mortgage.
The MIRS is the most comprehensive source of information on
conventional mortgage rates and terms in the United States.
The MIRS originated with one of FHFA's predecessor agencies, the
former Federal Home Loan Bank Board (FHLBB) in the 1960s. Among other
things, the FHLBB used data collected through the MIRS to derive its
National Average Contract Mortgage Rate for the Purchase of Previously
Occupied Homes by Combined Lenders (ARM Index), which was used by
lenders to set mortgage rates on adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs). No
statutory or regulatory provision explicitly required the FHLBB to
conduct the MIRS. However, for a period in the early 1980s, federally
chartered savings institutions were required to use the MIRS-derived
ARM Index in setting interest rates on ARMs. Few, if any, loans from
that period remain. After 1981, an unknown but likely very small
proportion of lenders used the ARM Index to set interest rates on their
new ARMs.
In 1989, Congress enacted the Financial Institutions Reform
Recovery and Enforcement Act (FIRREA), which abolished the FHLBB and
created the Federal Housing Finance Board to assume many of the FHLBB's
powers and responsibilities. FIRREA required
[[Page 24727]]
the Chairperson of the Finance Board to ``take such actions as may be
necessary'' to ensure that the ARM Index prepared by the FHLBB
continued to be available.\1\ Although there was no explicit reference
in FIRREA to the continuation of the MIRS, the Finance Board viewed
that statutory requirement to continue to produce the ARM Index as a
mandate to continue also to conduct the MIRS, from which the data used
to derive the ARM Index was obtained. The Finance Board conducted the
MIRS and produced the ARM Index from 1989 through 2008, when Congress
abolished that agency and transferred its responsibilities to the
newly-created FHFA.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement
Act of 1989 (FIRREA), Public Law 101-73, Title IV, 402(e)(3), 103
Stat. 183, codified at 12 U.S.C. 1437 note. The statute permitted
the Finance Board to substitute a different ARM index after notice
and comment, but only if the new index was based upon data
substantially similar to that of the original ARM Index and
substitution of the new ARM index would result in an interest rate
substantially similar to the rate in effect at the time the new ARM
index replaced the existing ARM Index. See FIRREA 402(e)(4).
\2\ See Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (HERA), Public
Law 110-289, Div. A, Title III, section 1312, 122 Stat. 2794,
codified at 12 U.S.C. 4511 note.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since 2008, FHFA has continued to conduct the MIRS and produce the
ARM Index.\3\ By statute, MIRS data is one of the factors that FHFA is
required to consider in assessing the national average one-family house
price for purposes of periodically adjusting the conforming mortgage
loan limits of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.\4\ In addition, statutes in
several states and U.S. territories, including California, Michigan,
Minnesota, New Jersey, Wisconsin, and the Virgin Islands, refer to, or
rely upon, the MIRS.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The MIRS and the ARM Index are described at 12 CFR 906.5.
\4\ See 12 U.S.C. 4542.
\5\ See, e.g., Cal. Civ. Code sections 1916.7 and 1916.8
(mortgage rates); Mich. Comp. Laws section 445.1621(d) (mortgage
index rates); Minn. Stat. section 92.06 (payments for state land
sales); N.J. Rev. Stat. 31:1-1 (interest rates); Wis. Stat. sectioni
138.056 (variable loan rates); V.I. Code Ann. tit. 11, section 951
(legal rate of interest).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Many lenders use FHFA's ARM Index, derived from MIRS data, to set
interest rates on fixed rate loans. In addition, businesses, trade
associations, and government agencies at both the federal and state
level rely upon the MIRS data for various business and regulatory
purposes. For example, economic policy makers have used the MIRS data
to determine trends in the mortgage markets, including interest rates,
down payments, terms to maturity, terms on ARMs, and initial fees and
charges on mortgage loans. Other federal banking agencies, such as the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Council of
Economic Advisors, have used the MIRS results for research purposes.
The OMB number for the information collection is 2590-0004, which
expired on March 31, 2014. The likely respondents are mortgage lenders
in the United States.
B. Burden Estimate
FHFA estimates the total annual number of respondents at 70 with 6
responses per respondent (because not every respondent will have new
mortgage loans to report every month). The estimate for the average
time per response is 20 minutes. The estimate for the total annual hour
burden is 140 hours (70 respondents x 6 responses x 0.33 hours).
C. Comment Request
FHFA published a request for public comments regarding this
information collection in the Federal Register on January 30, 2014. See
78 FR 24420 (Jan. 30, 2014). The 60-day comment period closed on March
31, 2014. FHFA received one comment letter, from the Bureau of Economic
Analysis of the U.S. Department of Commerce (BEA). In its letter, BEA
states that it strongly supports FHFA's continued collection of data
for the MIRS, noting that the data are ``crucial to key components of
BEA's economic statistics.'' Specifically, BEA uses MIRS data to track
contract rates of interest and to estimate financial costs as part of
its estimate of rental income of persons in the national income and
product accounts (NIPAs). Indirectly, the data are used in the industry
annual and quarterly Input-Output and GDP-by-Industry accounts in the
estimates of gross output and value added for the real estate sub-
sector.
This notice requests written comments on: (1) Whether the
collection of information is necessary for the proper performance of
FHFA functions, including whether the information has practical
utility; (2) The accuracy of FHFA's estimates of the burdens of the
collection of information; (3) Ways to enhance the quality, utility,
and clarity of the information collected; and (4) Ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information on survey respondents,
including through the use of automated collection techniques or other
forms of information technology.
Dated: April 24, 2014.
Kevin Winkler,
Chief Information Officer, Federal Housing Finance Agency.
[FR Doc. 2014-09997 Filed 4-30-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8070-01-P