Federal Mortgage Disclosure Requirements Under the Truth in Lending Act (Regulation Z), 19159-19176 [2018-09243]
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19159
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 83, No. 85
Wednesday, May 2, 2018
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents.
BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL
PROTECTION
12 CFR Part 1026
[Docket No. CFPB–2017–0018]
RIN 3170–AA71
Federal Mortgage Disclosure
Requirements Under the Truth in
Lending Act (Regulation Z)
Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.
ACTION: Final rule; official
interpretation.
AGENCY:
The Bureau of Consumer
Financial Protection (Bureau) is
amending Federal mortgage disclosure
requirements under the Real Estate
Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) and
the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) that are
implemented in Regulation Z. The
amendments relate to when a creditor
may compare charges paid by or
imposed on the consumer to amounts
disclosed on a Closing Disclosure,
instead of a Loan Estimate, to determine
if an estimated closing cost was
disclosed in good faith.
DATES: The final rule is effective June 1,
2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Shaakira Gold-Ramirez, Paralegal
Specialist, Pedro De Oliveira, David
Friend, and Priscilla Walton-Fein,
Senior Counsels, Office of Regulations,
Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection, at 202–435–7700 or https://
reginquiries.consumerfinance.gov/. If
you require this document in an
alternative electronic format, please
contact CFPB_Accessibility@cfpb.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
I. Summary of the Final Rule
The TILA–RESPA Rule 1 requires
creditors to provide consumers with
1 In November 2013, pursuant to sections 1098
and 1100A of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act), the
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good faith estimates of the loan terms
and closing costs required to be
disclosed on a Loan Estimate. Under the
rule, an estimated closing cost is
disclosed in good faith if the charge
paid by or imposed on the consumer
does not exceed the amount originally
disclosed, subject to certain exceptions.2
In some circumstances, creditors may
use revised estimates, instead of the
estimate originally disclosed to the
consumer, to compare to the charges
actually paid by or imposed on the
consumer for purposes of determining
whether an estimated closing cost was
disclosed in good faith. If the conditions
for using such revised estimates are met,
the creditor generally may provide
revised estimates on a revised Loan
Estimate or, in certain circumstances, on
a Closing Disclosure. However, under
the current rule, circumstances may
arise in which a cost increases but the
creditor is unable to use an otherwise
permissible revised estimate on either a
Loan Estimate or a Closing Disclosure
for purposes of determining whether an
estimated closing cost was disclosed in
good faith. This situation, which may
arise when the creditor has already
provided a Closing Disclosure to the
consumer when it learns about the cost
increase, occurs because of the
intersection of timing rules regarding
the provision of revised estimates. This
has been referred to in industry as a
‘‘gap’’ or ‘‘black hole’’ in the TILA–
RESPA Rule.
The Bureau understands that these
circumstances have led to uncertainty in
the market and created implementation
challenges that may have consequences
for both consumers and creditors. If
creditors cannot pass increased costs to
consumers in the specific transactions
Bureau issued the Integrated Mortgage Disclosures
under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act
(Regulation X) and the Truth in Lending Act
(Regulation Z) (2013 TILA–RESPA Final Rule),
combining certain disclosures that consumers
receive in connection with applying for and closing
on a mortgage loan into two new forms: The Loan
Estimate and Closing Disclosure. 78 FR 79730 (Dec.
31, 2013). The Bureau has since finalized
amendments to the 2013 TILA–RESPA Final Rule,
including in January and July of 2015 and in July
of 2017. See 80 FR 8767 (Feb. 19, 2015) (January
2015 Amendments); 80 FR 43911 (July 24, 2015)
(July 2015 Amendments); 82 FR 37656 (Aug. 11,
2017) (July 2017 Amendments). The 2013 TILA–
RESPA Final Rule and subsequent amendments to
that rule are referred to collectively herein as the
TILA–RESPA Rule.
2 12 CFR 1026.19(e)(3)(i). Those exceptions are
listed in § 1026.19(e)(3)(ii) through (iv).
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where the costs arise, creditors may
spread the costs across all consumers by
pricing their loan products with added
margins. The Bureau also understands
that some creditors may be denying
applications, even after providing the
Closing Disclosure, in some
circumstances where the creditor cannot
pass otherwise permissible cost
increases directly to affected consumers,
which can have negative effects for
those consumers. For these reasons, in
July 2017, the Bureau proposed to
address the issue by specifically
providing that creditors may use Closing
Disclosures to reflect changes in costs
for purposes of determining if an
estimated closing cost was disclosed in
good faith, regardless of when the
Closing Disclosure is provided relative
to consummation (2017 Proposal or ‘‘the
proposal’’).3 The Bureau is finalizing
those amendments as proposed, with
minor clarifying changes.
II. Background
In Dodd-Frank Act sections 1032(f),
1098, and 1100A, Congress directed the
Bureau to integrate certain mortgage
loan disclosures under TILA and
RESPA.4 The Bureau issued proposed
integrated disclosure forms and rules for
comment on July 9, 2012 (2012 TILA–
RESPA Proposal) 5 and issued the 2013
TILA–RESPA Final Rule on November
20, 2013. The rule included model
forms, samples illustrating the use of
those forms for different types of loans,
and Official Interpretations, which
provided authoritative guidance
explaining the new disclosures. The
2013 TILA–RESPA Final Rule took
effect on October 3, 2015.6
The Bureau has provided resources to
support implementation of the TILA–
RESPA Rule.7 The Bureau has also
stated its commitment to be sensitive to
the good faith efforts made by
institutions to come into compliance. In
addition, since the promulgation of the
2013 TILA–RESPA Final Rule, the
3 82
FR 37794 (Aug. 11, 2017).
Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2007,
2103–04, 2107–09 (2010).
5 77 FR 51116 (Aug. 23, 2012).
6 The rule had an initial effective date of August
1, 2015. 78 FR 79730, 80071 (Dec. 31, 2013).
However, the Bureau ultimately extended that
effective date another two months, to October 3,
2015, in a subsequent rulemaking. 80 FR 43911
(July 24, 2015).
7 The Bureau’s implementation resources can be
found on the Bureau’s website at www.consumer
finance.gov/regulatory-implementation/tila-respa.
4 Public
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Bureau has made various amendments
to facilitate compliance. Most recently,
the Bureau finalized the July 2017
Amendments, which memorialized the
Bureau’s informal guidance on various
issues, made clarifying and technical
amendments, and also made a limited
number of substantive changes where
the Bureau identified discrete solutions
to specific implementation challenges.
Concurrently with the July 2017
Amendments, the Bureau issued the
2017 Proposal to address an additional
implementation issue regarding when a
creditor may compare charges paid by
or imposed on the consumer to amounts
disclosed on a Closing Disclosure to
determine if an estimated closing cost
was disclosed in good faith.
proposal issued by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (Board) and the Department of
Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
carried out the same purpose.9 In
addition, the Dodd-Frank Act amended
section 105(b) of TILA and section 4(a)
of RESPA to require the integration of
the TILA disclosures and the
disclosures required by sections 4 and 5
of RESPA.10 The purpose of the
integrated disclosure is to facilitate
compliance with the disclosure
requirements of TILA and RESPA and to
improve borrower understanding of the
transaction. The Bureau provided
additional discussion of this integrated
disclosure mandate in the 2013 TILA–
RESPA Final Rule.11
III. Comments
The Bureau issued the 2017 Proposal
on July 6, 2017, and it was published in
the Federal Register on August 11,
2017. In response to the 2017 Proposal,
the Bureau received 43 unique
comments from industry commenters
(including trade associations, creditors,
and industry representatives), a
consumer advocate group, and others.
As discussed below, the Bureau has
considered the comments in adopting
this final rule.
B. Truth in Lending Act
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IV. Legal Authority
The Bureau is issuing this final rule
pursuant to its authority under TILA,
RESPA, and the Dodd-Frank Act,
including the authorities discussed
below. In general, the provisions of
Regulation Z that this final rule amends
were previously adopted by the Bureau
in the TILA–RESPA Rule. In doing so,
the Bureau relied on one or more of the
authorities discussed below, as well as
other authority. The Bureau is issuing
this final rule in reliance on the same
authority and for the same reasons
relied on in adopting the relevant
provisions of the TILA–RESPA Rule,
which are described in detail in the
Legal Authority and Section-by-Section
Analysis parts of the 2013 TILA–RESPA
Final Rule and January 2015
Amendments, respectively.8
A. The Integrated Disclosure Mandate
Section 1032(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act
required the Bureau to propose, for
public comment, rules and model
disclosures combining the disclosures
required under TILA and sections 4 and
5 of RESPA into a single, integrated
disclosure for mortgage loan
transactions covered by those laws,
unless the Bureau determined that any
8 78 FR 79730, 79753–56, 79834–37 (Dec. 31,
2013); 80 FR 8767, 8768–70 (Feb. 19, 2015).
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TILA section 105(a). As amended by
the Dodd-Frank Act, TILA section
105(a) 12 directs the Bureau to prescribe
regulations to carry out the purposes of
TILA and provides that such regulations
may contain additional requirements,
classifications, differentiations, or other
provisions and may further provide for
such adjustments and exceptions for all
or any class of transactions that the
Bureau judges are necessary or proper to
effectuate the purposes of TILA, to
prevent circumvention or evasion
thereof, or to facilitate compliance
therewith. A purpose of TILA is to
assure a meaningful disclosure of credit
terms so that the consumer will be able
to compare more readily the various
available credit terms and avoid the
uninformed use of credit.13 In enacting
TILA, Congress found that economic
stabilization would be enhanced and the
competition among the various financial
institutions and other firms engaged in
the extension of consumer credit would
be strengthened by the informed use of
credit.14 Strengthened competition
among financial institutions is a goal of
TILA, achieved through the meaningful
disclosure of credit terms.15 For the
9 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2007 (2010)
(codified at 12 U.S.C. 5532(f)).
10 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2108
(2010) (codified at 15 U.S.C. 1604(b)); Public Law
111–203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2103 (2010) (codified at 12
U.S.C. 2603(a)).
11 78 FR 79730, 79753–54 (Dec. 31, 2013).
12 15 U.S.C. 1604(a).
13 15 U.S.C. 1601(a).
14 Id.
15 The Bureau provided additional discussion of
the history of TILA section 105(a) and its
interaction with the provisions of TILA section 129
that apply to high-cost mortgages in the 2013 TILA–
RESPA Final Rule. As the Bureau explained, the
Bureau’s authority under TILA section 105(a) to
make adjustments and exceptions applies to all
transactions subject to TILA, including high-cost
mortgages, except with respect to the provisions of
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reasons discussed below and in the
TILA–RESPA Rule, the Bureau finalizes
these amendments pursuant to its
authority under TILA section 105(a).
The Bureau believes the finalized
amendments effectuate the purpose of
TILA under TILA section 102(a) of
meaningful disclosure of credit terms to
consumers and facilitate compliance
with the statute by clarifying when
particular disclosures may be provided.
The Bureau also believes that the final
rule furthers TILA’s goals by ensuring
more reliable estimates, which foster
competition among financial
institutions. In addition, the Bureau
believes the final rule will prevent
circumvention or evasion of TILA.
TILA section 129B(e). Dodd-Frank Act
section 1405(a) amended TILA to add
new section 129B(e).16 That section
authorizes the Bureau to prohibit or
condition terms, acts, or practices
relating to residential mortgage loans
that the Bureau finds to be abusive,
unfair, deceptive, predatory, necessary,
or proper to ensure that responsible,
affordable mortgage credit remains
available to consumers in a manner
consistent with the purposes of sections
129B and 129C of TILA, to prevent
circumvention or evasion thereof, or to
facilitate compliance with such
sections, or are not in the interest of the
borrower. In developing rules under
TILA section 129B(e), the Bureau has
considered whether the rules are in the
interest of the borrower, as required by
the statute. For the reasons discussed
below and in the TILA–RESPA Rule, the
Bureau finalizes these amendments
pursuant to its authority under TILA
section 129B(e). The Bureau believes
this final rule is consistent with TILA
section 129B(e).
C. Real Estate Settlement Procedures
Act Section 19(a)
Section 19(a) of RESPA authorizes the
Bureau to prescribe such rules and
regulations and to make such
interpretations and grant such
reasonable exemptions for classes of
transactions as may be necessary to
achieve the purposes of RESPA.17 One
purpose of RESPA is to effect certain
changes in the settlement process for
residential real estate that will result in
more effective advance disclosure to
home buyers and sellers of settlement
costs.18 In addition, in enacting RESPA,
Congress found that consumers are
entitled to greater and more timely
TILA section 129 that apply uniquely to such highcost mortgages. 78 FR 79730, 79754 (Dec. 31, 2013).
16 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2141
(2010) (codified at 15 U.S.C. 1639B(e)).
17 12 U.S.C. 2617(a).
18 12 U.S.C. 2601(b).
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information on the nature and costs of
the settlement process and to be
protected from unnecessarily high
settlement charges caused by certain
abusive practices in some areas of the
country.19 In developing rules under
RESPA section 19(a), the Bureau has
considered the purposes of RESPA,
including to effect certain changes in
the settlement process that will result in
more effective advance disclosure of
settlement costs. The Bureau finalizes
these amendments pursuant to its
authority under RESPA section 19(a).
For the reasons discussed below and in
the TILA–RESPA Rule, the Bureau
believes the final rule is consistent with
the purposes of RESPA by fostering
more effective advance disclosure to
home buyers and sellers of settlement
costs.
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D. Dodd-Frank Act
Dodd-Frank Act section 1032. Section
1032(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act provides
that the Bureau may prescribe rules to
ensure that the features of any consumer
financial product or service, both
initially and over the term of the
product or service, are fully, accurately,
and effectively disclosed to consumers
in a manner that permits consumers to
understand the costs, benefits, and risks
associated with the product or service,
in light of the facts and circumstances.20
The authority granted to the Bureau in
section 1032(a) is broad and empowers
the Bureau to prescribe rules regarding
the disclosure of the features of
consumer financial products and
services generally. Accordingly, the
Bureau may prescribe rules containing
disclosure requirements even if other
Federal consumer financial laws do not
specifically require disclosure of such
features. Dodd-Frank Act section
1032(c) provides that, in prescribing
rules pursuant to section 1032, the
Bureau shall consider available
evidence about consumer awareness,
understanding of, and responses to
disclosures or communications about
the risks, costs, and benefits of
consumer financial products or
services.21 Accordingly, in developing
the TILA–RESPA Rule under DoddFrank Act section 1032(a), the Bureau
considered available studies, reports,
and other evidence about consumer
awareness, understanding of, and
responses to disclosures or
19 Id. at 2601(a). In the past, RESPA section 19(a)
has served as a broad source of authority to
prescribe disclosures and substantive requirements
to carry out the purposes of RESPA.
20 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2006–07
(2010) (codified at 12 U.S.C. 5532(a)).
21 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2007
(2010) (codified at 12 U.S.C. 5532(c)).
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communications about the risks, costs,
and benefits of consumer financial
products or services. Moreover, the
Bureau considered the evidence
developed through its consumer testing
of the integrated disclosures as well as
prior testing done by the Board and
HUD regarding TILA and RESPA
disclosures. See part III of the 2013
TILA–RESPA Final Rule for a
discussion of the Bureau’s consumer
testing.22
The Bureau finalizes these
amendments pursuant to its authority
under Dodd-Frank Act section 1032(a).
For the reasons discussed below and in
the TILA–RESPA Rule, the Bureau
believes that the final rule is consistent
with Dodd-Frank Act section 1032(a)
because it promotes full, accurate, and
effective disclosure of the features of
consumer credit transactions secured by
real property in a manner that permits
consumers to understand the costs,
benefits, and risks associated with the
product or service, in light of the facts
and circumstances.
Dodd-Frank Act section 1405(b).
Section 1405(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act
provides that, notwithstanding any
other provision of title XIV of the DoddFrank Act, in order to improve
consumer awareness and understanding
of transactions involving residential
mortgage loans through the use of
disclosures, the Bureau may exempt
from or modify disclosure requirements,
in whole or in part, for any class of
residential mortgage loans if the Bureau
determines that such exemption or
modification is in the interest of
consumers and in the public interest.23
Section 1401 of the Dodd-Frank Act,
which amends TILA section 103(cc)(5),
generally defines a residential mortgage
loan as any consumer credit transaction
that is secured by a mortgage on a
dwelling or on residential real property
that includes a dwelling, other than an
open-end credit plan or an extension of
credit secured by a consumer’s interest
in a timeshare plan.24 Notably, the
authority granted by section 1405(b)
applies to disclosure requirements
generally and is not limited to a specific
statute or statutes. Accordingly, DoddFrank Act section 1405(b) is a broad
source of authority to exempt from or
modify the disclosure requirements of
TILA and RESPA. In developing rules
for residential mortgage loans under
Dodd-Frank Act section 1405(b), the
Bureau has considered the purposes of
22 78
FR 79730, 79743–50 (Dec. 31, 2013).
Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2142
(2010) (codified at 15 U.S.C. 1601 note).
24 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2138
(2010) (codified at 15 U.S.C. 1602(cc)(5)).
23 Public
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19161
improving consumer awareness and
understanding of transactions involving
residential mortgage loans through the
use of disclosures and the interests of
consumers and the public. The Bureau
finalizes these amendments pursuant to
its authority under Dodd-Frank Act
section 1405(b). For the reasons
discussed below and in the TILA–
RESPA Rule, the Bureau believes the
final rule is in the interest of consumers
and in the public interest, consistent
with Dodd-Frank Act section 1405(b).
V. Section-by-Section Analysis
Section 1026.19 Certain Mortgage and
Variable-Rate Transactions
19(e) Mortgage Loans—Early
Disclosures
19(e)(4) Provision and Receipt of
Revised Disclosures
The 2013 TILA–RESPA Final Rule
combined certain disclosures that
consumers receive in connection with
applying for and closing on a mortgage
loan into two new, integrated forms.
The first new form, the Loan Estimate,
replaced the RESPA Good Faith
Estimate and the early Truth in Lending
disclosure. The rule requires creditors to
deliver or place in the mail the Loan
Estimate no later than three business
days after the consumer submits a loan
application.25 The second form, the
Closing Disclosure, replaced the HUD–
1 Settlement Statement and the final
Truth in Lending disclosure. The rule
requires creditors to ensure that
consumers receive the Closing
Disclosure at least three business days
before consummation.26
Section 1026.19(e)(1)(i) of the 2013
TILA–RESPA Final Rule requires
creditors to provide consumers with
good faith estimates of the disclosures
required in § 1026.37, which describes
the loan terms and closing costs
required to be disclosed on the Loan
Estimate. Under § 1026.19(e)(3)(i), an
estimated closing cost is disclosed in
good faith if the charge paid by or
imposed on the consumer does not
exceed the amount originally disclosed,
except as otherwise provided in
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(ii) through (iv). Section
1026.19(e)(3)(ii) provides that estimates
for certain third-party services and
recording fees are in good faith if the
sum of all such charges paid by or
imposed on the consumer does not
exceed the sum of all such charges
disclosed on the Loan Estimate by more
25 12
26 Id.
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CFR 1026.19(e)(1)(iii).
at § 1026.19(f)(1)(ii).
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than 10 percent.27 Section
1026.19(e)(3)(iii) further provides that
certain other estimates are disclosed in
good faith so long as they are consistent
with the best information reasonably
available to the creditor at the time they
are disclosed, regardless of whether and
by how much the amount paid by the
consumer exceeds the disclosed
estimate.28 The allowed variances
between estimated closing costs and the
actual amounts paid by or imposed on
the consumer are referred to as
tolerances.
Section 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) permits
creditors, in certain limited
circumstances, to use revised estimates
of charges, instead of the estimate of
charges originally disclosed to the
consumer, to compare to the charges
actually paid by or imposed on the
consumer for purposes of determining
whether an estimated closing cost was
disclosed in good faith pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii) (i.e.,
determining whether the actual charge
exceeds the allowed tolerance).29 The
provision of such revised estimates is
referred to herein as resetting tolerances.
The circumstances under which
creditors may reset tolerances are: (1) A
defined set of changed circumstances
that cause estimated charges to increase
or, in the case of certain estimated
charges, cause the aggregate amount of
such charges to increase by more than
10 percent; 30 (2) the consumer is
27 This section also requires that, for the 10
percent tolerance to apply, the charge for the thirdparty service must not be paid to the creditor or an
affiliate of the creditor and the creditor must permit
the consumer to shop for the third-party service,
consistent with § 1026.19(e)(1)(vi). See 12 CFR
1026.19(e)(3)(ii)(B)–(C).
28 Section 1026.19(e)(3)(iii) provides that an
estimate of the following charges is in good faith if
it is consistent with the best information reasonably
available to the creditor at the time it is disclosed,
regardless of whether the amount paid by the
consumer exceeds the amount originally disclosed:
(1) Prepaid interest; (2) property insurance
premiums; (3) amounts placed into an escrow,
impound, reserve, or similar account; (4) charges
paid to third-party service providers selected by the
consumer consistent with § 1026.19(e)(1)(vi)(A) that
are not on the list provided pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(1)(vi)(C); and (5) property taxes and
other charges paid for third-party services not
required by the creditor.
29 The creditor is required to retain evidence that
it performed the required actions as well as made
the required disclosures under Regulation Z, which
includes evidence that the creditor properly
documented the reasons for the use of revised
estimates of charges. See § 1026.25(c)(1) and
comment 25(c)(1)–1.
30 Changed circumstance means: (1) An
extraordinary event beyond the control of any
interested party or other unexpected event specific
to the consumer or transaction; (2) information
specific to the consumer or transaction that the
creditor relied upon when providing the Loan
Estimate and that was inaccurate or changed after
the disclosures were provided; or (3) new
information specific to the consumer or transaction
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ineligible for an estimated charge
previously disclosed because of a
changed circumstance that affects the
consumer’s creditworthiness or the
value of the property securing the
transaction; (3) the consumer requests
revisions to the credit terms or the
settlement that cause an estimated
charge to increase; (4) points or lender
credits change because the interest rate
was not locked when the Loan Estimate
was provided; (5) the consumer
indicates an intent to proceed with the
transaction more than 10 business days,
or more than any additional number of
days specified by the creditor before the
offer expires, after the Loan Estimate
was provided to the consumer; and (6)
the loan is a construction loan that is
not expected to close until more than 60
days after the Loan Estimate has been
provided to the consumer and the
creditor clearly and conspicuously
states that a revised disclosure may be
issued.
Section 1026.19(e)(4) contains rules
for the provision and receipt of revised
estimates used to reset tolerances.
Section 1026.19(e)(4)(i) provides the
general rule that, subject to the
requirements of § 1026.19(e)(4)(ii), if a
creditor uses a revised estimate to
determine good faith (i.e., to reset
tolerances), the creditor shall provide a
Loan Estimate reflecting the revised
estimate within three business days of
receiving information sufficient to
establish that a permissible reason for
revision applies. Section
1026.19(e)(4)(ii) imposes timing
restrictions on the provision of revised
Loan Estimates. Specifically,
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) states that the creditor
shall not provide a revised Loan
Estimate on or after the date on which
the creditor provides the Closing
Disclosure. Section 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) also
provides that the consumer must receive
any revised Loan Estimate not later than
four business days prior to
consummation.
Regulation Z therefore limits
creditors’ ability to provide revised
Loan Estimates relative to the provision
of the Closing Disclosure and to
consummation. In issuing the 2013
TILA–RESPA Final Rule, the Bureau
explained that it was aware of cases
where creditors provided revised
RESPA Good Faith Estimates at the real
estate closing, along with the HUD–1
settlement statement.31 The Bureau was
concerned that the practice of providing
both good faith estimates of closing
costs and an actual statement of closing
that the creditor did not rely on when providing the
original Loan Estimate. 12 CFR 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(A).
31 78 FR 79730, 79836 (Dec. 31, 2013).
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costs at the same time could be
confusing for consumers and could
diminish their awareness and
understanding of the transaction. The
Bureau was also concerned about
consumers receiving seemingly
duplicative disclosures that could
contribute to information overload. For
this reason, the Bureau adopted the
provision of § 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) that
prohibits creditors from providing
revised Loan Estimates on or after the
date the creditor provides the Closing
Disclosure. The Bureau adopted the
provision of § 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) that
requires that consumers receive the
revised Loan Estimate not later than
four business days prior to
consummation to ensure that consumers
do not receive a revised Loan Estimate
on the same date as the Closing
Disclosure in cases where the revised
Loan Estimate is not provided to the
consumer in person.
Comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–1 clarifies when
creditors may reset tolerances with a
Closing Disclosure instead of with a
revised Loan Estimate. Specifically, the
comment explains that if there are fewer
than four business days between the
time the revised version of the
disclosures is required to be provided
pursuant to § 1026.19(e)(4)(i) (i.e.,
within three business days of receiving
information sufficient to establish a
reason for revision) and consummation,
creditors can reflect revised disclosures
to reset tolerances on the Closing
Disclosure. This is referred to herein as
the ‘‘four-business day limit.’’
Although the Bureau originally
proposed commentary in 2012 that
would have stated that creditors may
reflect the revised disclosures on the
Closing Disclosure, without regard to
the timing of consummation, the 2013
TILA–RESPA Final Rule contained the
four-business day limit.32 As stated in
the 2017 Proposal, the Bureau now
understands that there is significant
confusion in the market and that the
four-business day limit has caused
situations where creditors cannot
provide either a revised Loan Estimate
or Closing Disclosure to reset tolerances
even if a reason for revision under
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) would otherwise
permit the creditor to reset tolerances.
In particular, the Bureau understands
that this situation may occur if the
creditor has already provided the
Closing Disclosure and an event occurs
or a consumer requests a change that
causes an increase in closing costs that
32 See proposed comment 19(e)(4)–2 at 77 FR
51116, 51426 (Aug. 23, 2012) (‘‘Creditors comply
with the requirements of § 1026.19(e)(4) if the
revised disclosures are reflected in the disclosures
required by § 1026.19(f)(1)(i).’’).
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would be a reason for revision under
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv), but there are four or
more days between the time the revised
disclosures would be required to be
provided pursuant to § 1026.19(e)(4)(i)
and consummation. This situation may
occur if there was also a delay in the
scheduled consummation date after the
initial Closing Disclosure is provided to
the consumer.
This situation can arise because of the
intersection of various timing rules
regarding the provision of revised
estimates to reset tolerances. As noted,
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) prohibits creditors
from providing Loan Estimates on or
after the date on which the creditor
provides the Closing Disclosure. In
many cases, this limitation would not
create issues for creditors because
current comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–1 explains
that creditors may reflect revised
estimates on a Closing Disclosure to
reset tolerances if there are less than
four business days between the time the
revised version of the disclosures is
required to be provided pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and consummation.
But there is no similar provision that
explicitly provides that creditors may
use a Closing Disclosure to reflect the
revised estimates if there are four or
more business days between the time
the revised version of the disclosures is
required to be provided pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and consummation.
The 2016 Proposal
On July 28, 2016, the Bureau
proposed clarifications and technical
amendments to the TILA–RESPA Rule,
along with several proposed substantive
changes (2016 Proposal).33 In the 2016
Proposal, the Bureau proposed comment
19(e)(4)(ii)–2 to clarify that creditors
may use corrected Closing Disclosures
provided under § 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii)
(in addition to the initial Closing
Disclosure) to reflect changes in costs
that will be used to reset tolerances.34
As discussed above, existing comment
19(e)(4)(ii)–1 clarifies that creditors may
reflect revised estimates on the Closing
Disclosure to reset tolerances if there are
less than four business days between the
time the revised version of the
disclosures is required to be provided
pursuant to § 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and
consummation. Although comment
19(e)(4)(ii)–1 expressly references only
the Closing Disclosure required by
§ 1026.19(f)(1)(i), the Bureau had stated
in informal guidance that the provision
also applies to corrected Closing
Disclosures provided pursuant to
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii). The Bureau
33 81
34 Id.
FR 54317 (Aug. 15, 2016).
at 54334.
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proposed comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–2 in the
2016 Proposal to clarify this point.
However, some commenters to the
2016 Proposal interpreted proposed
comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–2 as allowing
creditors to use corrected Closing
Disclosures to reset tolerances
regardless of when consummation is
expected to occur, as long as the
creditor provides the corrected Closing
Disclosure within three business days of
receiving information sufficient to
establish a reason for revision applies
pursuant to § 1029.19(e)(4)(i). Under
this interpretation, the four-business
day limit would still apply to resetting
tolerances with the initial Closing
Disclosure, but would not apply to
resetting tolerances with a corrected
Closing Disclosure. Commenters were
not uniform in their interpretation of
proposed comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–2.
Commenters who interpreted proposed
comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–2 as removing the
four-business day limit as it applies to
corrected Closing Disclosures were
generally supportive, citing uncertainty
about the proper interpretation of
current rules and stating that the timing
rules regarding resetting tolerances with
a Closing Disclosure are unworkable.
Many commenters perceived that
proposed comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–2 would
resolve these issues because they
interpreted it as allowing creditors to
use corrected Closing Disclosures to
reset tolerances even if there are four or
more business days between the time
the revised version of the disclosures is
required to be provided pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and consummation.
Some commenters who interpreted the
proposed comment in this way
supported it, but also cautioned about
unintended consequences. For example,
some commenters stated that
eliminating the four-business day limit
for corrected Closing Disclosures might
remove a disincentive that currently
exists under the rule from providing the
initial Closing Disclosure extremely
early in the mortgage origination
process, which these commenters stated
would not be consistent with the
Bureau’s intent that the Closing
Disclosure be a statement of actual
costs.
The 2017 Proposal
The Bureau did not finalize proposed
comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–2 as part of the
July 2017 Amendments. Instead, the
Bureau issued the 2017 Proposal to
amend § 1026.19(e)(4) and associated
commentary to expressly remove the
four-business day limit for providing
Closing Disclosures for purposes of
resetting tolerances and determining if
an estimated closing cost was disclosed
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19163
in good faith. The Bureau issued the
2017 Proposal in light of comments
received in response to the 2016
Proposal and prior outreach indicating
that timing rules regarding resetting
tolerances with Closing Disclosures
have led to uncertainty in the market
and created implementation challenges
that could have unintended
consequences for both consumers and
creditors, as explained above.
Consistent with current comment
19(e)(4)(ii)–1, the proposal would have
allowed creditors to reset tolerances by
providing a Closing Disclosure
(including any corrected disclosures
provided under § 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii))
within three business days of receiving
information sufficient to establish that a
reason for revision applies. Unlike
current comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–1,
however, the proposal would not have
restricted the creditor’s ability to reset
tolerances with a Closing Disclosure to
the period of less than four business
days between the time the revised
version of the disclosures is required to
be provided pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and consummation.
In the proposal, the Bureau explained
that it believes that, in most cases in
which a creditor learns about cost
increases that are a permissible reason
to reset tolerances, the creditor will not
yet have provided a Closing Disclosure
to the consumer. The proposal
explained that, to the extent there is a
cost increase of a type that would allow
tolerances to be reset, the Bureau
expects that creditors will typically
provide a revised Loan Estimate (and
not a Closing Disclosure) for the
purpose of resetting tolerances and that
these revised Loan Estimates will be
used in determining good faith under
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii). However,
there are circumstances in which
creditors will instead reset tolerances
with a Closing Disclosure. For example,
the proposal noted that events that can
affect closing costs may occur close to
the time of consummation, even after
the initial Closing Disclosure has been
provided to the consumer. The proposal
also noted that events may result in
consummation being delayed past the
time that was expected when the
creditor provided the Closing Disclosure
to the consumer. Some events can both
affect closing costs and lead to a delay
in consummation. These events may be
outside the control of the creditor and,
in some cases, requested by the
consumer. The proposal cited as
examples weather-related events that
delay closing and lead to additional
appraisal or inspection costs or illness
by a buyer or seller that could delay
closing and lead to the imposition of
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additional costs, such as a rate lock
extension fee. In these circumstances,
creditors may wish to reset tolerances
with a Closing Disclosure even outside
the time permitted by the four-business
day limit. If creditors cannot pass these
increased costs to consumers in the
specific transactions where they arise,
creditors may spread the costs across all
consumers by pricing their loan
products with added margins. The
proposal also noted that some creditors
may be seeking other ways to avoid
absorbing these unexpected costs, such
as denying applications from
consumers, even after providing the
consumer a Closing Disclosure.
For these reasons, the Bureau
proposed to allow creditors to reset
tolerances using a Closing Disclosure
without regard to the four-business day
limit. Under the proposal, as under the
current rule, to reset tolerances with a
Closing Disclosure, creditors would
have been required to provide the
Closing Disclosure to the consumer
within three business days of receiving
information sufficient to establish that a
reason for revision applies. Further, as
under the current rule, creditors would
have been allowed to reset tolerances
only under the limited circumstances
described in § 1026.19(e)(3)(iv).
The proposal would have removed
the four-business day limit for resetting
tolerances with both initial and
corrected Closing Disclosures. The
proposal cited two reasons for this
approach. First, the proposal noted a
concern that applying the four-business
day limit to initial Closing Disclosures
but not corrected Closing Disclosures
could incentivize creditors to provide
consumers with initial Closing
Disclosures very early in the lending
process, which in some circumstances
might be inconsistent with the
description of the Closing Disclosure as
a ‘‘statement of the final loan terms and
closing costs,’’ 35 and the requirement
under § 1026.19(f)(1)(i) that the
disclosures on the Closing Disclosure
are to be a statement of ‘‘the actual
terms of the transaction.’’ Second, the
proposal noted that applying the fourbusiness day limit to initial Closing
Disclosures but not corrected Closing
Disclosures could create operational
challenges and burden for creditors.
Accordingly, the Bureau proposed to
amend § 1026.19(e)(4)(i) to provide that,
subject to the requirements of
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(ii), if a creditor uses a
revised estimate pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) for the purpose of
determining good faith under
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii), the creditor
35 12
CFR 1026.38(a)(2).
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shall provide a revised version of the
disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(e)(1)(i) or the disclosures
required under § 1026.19(f)(1)(i)
(including any corrected disclosures
provided under § 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii))
reflecting the revised estimate within
three business days of receiving
information sufficient to establish that
one of the reasons for revision applies.
The Bureau also proposed to amend
comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–1 to remove the
reference to the four-business day limit,
for consistency with the proposed
amendments to § 1026.19(e)(4)(i). In
addition, the proposal would have
amended the comment to provide two
additional examples that further clarify
how creditors may provide revised
estimates on Closing Disclosures in lieu
of Loan Estimates for purposes of
determining good faith. The Bureau also
proposed conforming amendments to
the heading of § 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) and to
comments 19(e)(1)(ii)–1 and 19(e)(4)(i)–
1 in light of these proposed
amendments.
Finally, the proposal would have
made several changes to § 1026.19(e)(4)
and its commentary to reflect
amendments to the rule made by the
January 2015 Amendments regarding
interest rate dependent charges. Section
1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D), as adopted by the
2013 TILA–RESPA Final Rule,
previously required creditors to provide
the consumer with a revised disclosure
with the revised interest rate, the points
disclosed pursuant to § 1026.37(f)(1),
lender credits, and any other interest
rate dependent charges and terms on the
date the interest rate is locked. The
January 2015 Amendments changed
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D) to provide
creditors with more time (three business
days) to provide the revised disclosures.
This amendment harmonized the timing
requirement in § 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D)
with other timing requirements for
providing a revised Loan Estimate
adopted in the 2013 TILA–RESPA Final
Rule and addressed operational
challenges associated with the prior
requirement that gave creditors less time
to provide revised disclosures regarding
interest rate dependent charges. To
implement this change, the Bureau
revised § 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D) to state
that, no later than three business days
after the date the interest rate is locked,
the creditor shall provide a revised
version of the disclosures required
under § 1026.19(e)(1)(i) to the consumer
with the revised interest rate, the points
disclosed pursuant to § 1026.37(f)(1),
lender credits, and any other interest
rate dependent charges and terms. In the
January 2015 Amendments, the Bureau
also adopted modified versions of
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proposed comments 19(e)(3)(iv)(D)–1
and 19(e)(4)(i)–2 to reflect that change.
To further reflect the changes made by
the January 2015 Amendments to
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D), the Bureau
proposed to amend § 1026.19(e)(4)(i)
and comment 19(e)(4)(i)–1. The Bureau
also proposed to remove existing
comment 19(e)(4)(i)–2, regarding the
relationship to § 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D),
which the proposal stated may no
longer be necessary.
The Bureau solicited comment on
several specific issues related to the
proposal, including on the extent to
which the four-business day limit has
caused situations where creditors
cannot provide either a revised Loan
Estimate or Closing Disclosure to reset
tolerances even if a reason for revision
under § 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) would
otherwise permit the creditor to reset
tolerances. The Bureau requested
information on the frequency and the
cause of such occurrences and on the
average costs and the nature of such
costs associated with such occurrences.
The Bureau also requested
information that would assist in
evaluating potential consequences of the
proposal. In particular, some
commenters in response to the 2016
Proposal expressed concern that
removal of the four-business day limit
could result in some creditors providing
Closing Disclosures very early in the
lending process and that doing so could
have negative effects on some
consumers. The proposal noted the
Bureau’s understanding that some
creditors currently provide the Closing
Disclosure to consumers so early in the
process that the terms and costs are
nearly certain to be revised.
Commenters stated in response to the
2016 Proposal that eliminating the fourbusiness day limit for resetting
tolerances with a Closing Disclosure
could remove a disincentive to
providing Closing Disclosures before
final terms and costs are reliably
available (i.e., under the current rule,
waiting to provide the Closing
Disclosure until close to the time of
consummation decreases, to some
extent, the likelihood of a timing issue
arising with respect to resetting
tolerances with corrected Closing
Disclosures). Accordingly, the Bureau
requested comment on the extent to
which creditors are providing Closing
Disclosures to consumers so that they
are received substantially before the
required three business days prior to
consummation with terms and costs that
are nearly certain to be revised. The
Bureau requested comment on the
number of business days before
consummation consumers are receiving
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the Closing Disclosure and whether
creditors are issuing corrected Closing
Disclosures pursuant to § 1026.19(f)(2).
In addition, the Bureau requested
comment on the extent to which
creditors might change their practices
regarding provision of the Closing
Disclosure if the proposal to remove the
four-business day limit is adopted. The
Bureau also requested comment on
potential harms to consumers where
creditors provide Closing Disclosures to
consumers so that they are received
more than the required three business
days prior to consummation with terms
and costs that are nearly certain to be
revised. The Bureau additionally
requested comment on whether it
should consider adopting measures to
prevent such harms in a future
rulemaking.
The Bureau also requested comment
on other potential consequences that
might result from removing the fourbusiness day limit that applies to
resetting tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure. For example, compared to
current rules, the proposed changes
could allow creditors to pass more costs
on to consumers. The Bureau solicited
comment on whether the circumstances
for resetting tolerances in
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) provide sufficient
protection against potential consumer
harm or whether additional limitations
are appropriate for resetting tolerances
after the issuance of a Closing
Disclosure. For example, the Bureau
requested comment on whether it would
be appropriate to allow creditors to reset
tolerances with a corrected Closing
Disclosure in circumstances that are
more limited than those described in
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) (for example, only
when the increased costs result from a
consumer request or unforeseeable
event, such as a natural disaster). The
Bureau also requested comment on
whether the rule should be more
restrictive with respect to resetting
tolerances with a corrected Closing
Disclosure for certain third-party costs
(such as appraisal fees) and creditor fees
(such as interest rate lock extension
fees) and the types of costs and fees that
might be subject to any more restrictive
rules. The Bureau also requested
comment on whether removing the fourbusiness day limit might result in
confusion or information overload to the
consumer as a result of receiving more
corrected Closing Disclosures. The
Bureau requested comment on
additional consumer protections that
might be appropriate to promote the
purposes of the disclosures or prevent
circumvention or evasion and
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additional potential consumer harms
the Bureau had not identified.
Comments
The Bureau received 43 unique
comments from industry commenters
(including trade associations, creditors,
and industry representatives), a
consumer advocate group, and others.
Most industry commenters supported
the proposal to remove the fourbusiness day limit. These commenters
generally stated that the four-business
day limit arbitrarily leads to situations
where creditors must absorb costs that
could otherwise be passed to consumers
through resetting tolerances, and that
those costs are passed to all consumers
in the form of an increased cost of
credit. Industry commenters also noted
legal and compliance risks associated
with the uncertainty around current
rules, and stated that this uncertainty
has had an adverse impact on the cost
of credit. These commenters supported
the proposal because it would address
these issues by expressly permitting
creditors to use either initial or
corrected Closing Disclosures to reflect
changes in costs for purposes of
determining if an estimated closing cost
was disclosed in good faith, regardless
of when the Closing Disclosure is
provided relative to consummation.
Other industry commenters, while
generally supportive of the proposal,
expressed concerns about unintended
consequences and some suggested
additional parameters or guidance
around the timing or accuracy rules that
apply to Closing Disclosures. These
comments are discussed more fully
below.
Only one consumer advocate group
commented on the proposal. That
commenter urged the Bureau not to
adopt the proposal, primarily citing
concerns about consumer confusion and
information overload. That commenter
suggested that the proposal would lead
to consumers receiving an increased
number of disclosures, which the
commenter believes would undermine
the purpose of the Closing Disclosure
and overwhelm consumers. The
consumer advocate group commenter
also stated that the proposal would
remove the disincentive from providing
Closing Disclosures to consumers very
early, which the commenter believes
would undermine the distinction
between the Loan Estimate and the
Closing Disclosure. Instead of finalizing
the proposal, that commenter urged the
Bureau to amend the rule to provide
that a Closing Disclosure can only be
given three business days before
consummation, with redisclosure
permitted thereafter only under the
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19165
circumstances in § 1026.19(f)(2)(i) and
(ii).
One individual commenter expressed
opposition to the proposal and urged
the Bureau to increase the four-business
day limit to a seven-business day limit,
rather than eliminating it altogether, so
as to retain a deterrent against early
Closing Disclosures. An industry
commenter opposed such an approach,
stating that simply extending the fourbusiness day limit to a larger number of
days would not fully address current
issues.
Numerous commenters responded to
the Bureau’s specific requests for
comment on issues related to the fourbusiness day limit and the potential
effects of the proposal. These comments
are discussed below.
The Effect of the Four-Business Day
Limit
As noted above, the proposal
requested information on the extent to
which the four-business day limit has
created situations where creditors
cannot provide either a revised Loan
Estimate or a corrected Closing
Disclosure to reset tolerances. The
proposal requested information on the
frequency and the cause of such
occurrences and on the average costs
and the nature of such costs associated
with such occurrences.
Industry commenters generally stated
that the four-business day limit has
created compliance problems and
imposed costs on creditors. One
industry trade association commenter
noted that a large creditor had reported
tolerance cures of $60,000 in one month
attributable to issues with the fourbusiness day limit. That same
commenter noted that a mid-sized
creditor had reported that between 13
and 37 percent of its tolerance cures
each month during a five-month period
were attributable to the four-business
day limit. The commenter also noted
that absorbing such costs is more
difficult for small creditors. Another
commenter estimated costs incurred by
creditors for some common events
associated with the four-business day
limit: $825 per affected loan for lock
extension fees and a minimum of $150
per affected loan for property
inspections due to weather events.
Other commenters provided specific
examples of problems created by the
four-business day limit. For example,
one industry commenter described a
delay in the final construction of a home
and a corresponding rate lock extension
fee being incurred after the initial
Closing Disclosure had been sent to the
consumer six days before the originally
scheduled consummation date. That
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commenter noted another example of
additional survey costs incurred due to
a newly filed property lien during the
six days before consummation. In both
instances, the creditor absorbed the
increased costs because of the fourbusiness day limit. Another industry
commenter provided other examples,
including another instance of fees that
were incurred due to issues discovered
during a title search close to the
consummation date.
An industry trade association
commenter noted that its member banks
did not report the frequent need to reset
tolerances in close proximity to
consummation, but said that its
members reported isolated situations of
absorbing costs from valid changed
circumstances, denying requests for
changes to loan terms, or starting the
loan process over rather than
accommodating the change. Another
industry commenter stated that it
typically works with the same title
companies and other service providers
and does not price its loans to absorb
costs associated with the four-business
day limit. That commenter has not
denied applications because of the
inability to reset tolerances, but stated
that it has heard reports of such
occurrences at other creditors from
potential customers, including that
some consumers have lost home
purchase contracts where applications
are denied late in the process. Another
industry commenter stated that it
believes most lenders absorb the
additional costs associated with the
four-business day limit, rather than
denying applications, due to concerns
about customer service and the risk of
delay.
While not citing specific instances of
problems with the four-business day
limit, numerous other industry
commenters stated that costs will
frequently change after a Closing
Disclosure has been provided to the
consumer for reasons outside of the
creditor’s control, or due to consumer
requests, even if the initial Closing
Disclosure is provided close to the
anticipated time of consummation. Rate
lock extension fees were the fee type
most frequently cited as being
associated with such cost changes.
Several industry commenters also noted
that consumers may request changes to
interest rates and lender credits or
points after the initial Closing
Disclosure has been provided to the
consumer. Another commenter noted
that the four-business day limit is
especially problematic in new
construction transactions when
consumers submit change order requests
to their builder that increase the loan
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amount. Commenters also noted that
delays in anticipated closing dates
frequently occur. These commenters
cited numerous reasons that closings
might be delayed, even close to the time
of the initially scheduled closing,
including home inspection issues that
require correction, storm damage, title
issues, late appraisals, and consumer
requests for closing delays. The
consumer advocate group that
commented on the proposal did not
comment on this aspect of it.
Closing Disclosure Timing Practices
The proposal also requested comment
on the extent to which creditors are
providing Closing Disclosures to
consumers so that they are received
substantially before the required three
business days prior to consummation
with terms and costs that are nearly
certain to be revised (and, if so, the
number of days before consummation).
In addition, the proposal requested
comment on the extent to which
creditors might change their practices
regarding provision of the Closing
Disclosure if the proposal is finalized.
Numerous industry commenters
responded to the Bureau’s requests for
comment related to Closing Disclosure
timing. Several commenters noted that
there are inconsistent approaches to
Closing Disclosure timing across the
industry, with some issuing the Closing
Disclosure at an early point in the
process and others waiting until closer
to the time of consummation when final
amounts are more likely to be known.
Some commenters who noted this
difference in approach also noted that
providing Closing Disclosures very early
does not seem consistent with the
Bureau’s intent that the Closing
Disclosure act as a statement of final
loan terms and closing costs. One
industry commenter stated that it would
be possible for a creditor to set up a
process that would allow it to issue a
Closing Disclosure earlier, while still
containing accurate loan terms. That
commenter suggested holding creditors
responsible for having adequate policies
and procedures to ensure that the
disclosure is representative of the loan
terms and actual costs known at the
time of delivery.
Some commenters, including both
industry commenters and the consumer
advocate group commenter, expressed
concern that the proposal could
incentivize creditors to provide Closing
Disclosures earlier in the process. One
industry commenter stated that
creditors who do provide Closing
Disclosures very early may be at a
competitive advantage to those that do
not. Another industry commenter stated
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a concern that some creditors might
issue Closing Disclosures very early to
appear more efficient than their
competitors. Another industry
commenter indicated that some
creditors issue Closing Disclosures very
early to provide more flexibility with
scheduling closing, and noted that the
four-business day limit provides a
disincentive against the practice. As
discussed below, some commenters who
stated that the proposal could
incentivize creditors to provide Closing
Disclosures earlier also expressed
concern that such a practice could have
a detrimental effect on consumer
understanding of the transaction.
One industry commenter stated that it
currently provides the Closing
Disclosure three business days before
consummation, but noted that it would
likely provide the first Closing
Disclosure a week earlier if the proposal
is finalized. This commenter asserted
that such a practice would give
consumers additional time to review the
Closing Disclosure and ask questions.
Some commenters noted that they
provide Closing Disclosures close to the
time of consummation and did not
express that their practices would
change. Other industry commenters
generally stated that concerns that
removing the four-business day limit
would incentivize creditors to provide
Closing Disclosures early are unfounded
because early provision of the Closing
Disclosure would be difficult to
accomplish while meeting the
requirements to act in good faith and
exercise due diligence, and would
create additional work for creditors and
cause confusion for consumers. One
industry trade association commenter
noted that some of its member banks
had expressed that providing Closing
Disclosures early does not provide any
advantage, because there is a high
likelihood that the disclosure will
undergo revisions.
Closing Disclosure Timing and
Consumer Understanding
The Bureau requested comment on
potential harms to consumers when
creditors provide Closing Disclosures so
that they are received more than the
required three business days prior to
consummation with terms and costs that
are nearly certain to be revised,
including potential confusion or
information overload to the consumer as
a result of receiving more corrected
Closing Disclosures. The Bureau also
requested comment on whether it
should consider adopting measures to
prevent such harms in a future
rulemaking.
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Some commenters stated that the
proposal could result in consumer
confusion because it would remove the
current disincentive to providing
Closing Disclosures well before the
required three business days prior to
consummation, which they assert would
result in earlier, and therefore more
frequent, Closing Disclosures. For
example, the consumer advocate group
commenter expressed concern that the
proposal would encourage creditors to
provide Closing Disclosures very early
in the lending process, which would
result in more Closing Disclosures and
be confusing for consumers. That
commenter explained that creditors are
permitted to issue multiple Loan
Estimates, including Loan Estimates that
do not reset tolerances. The commenter
expressed concern that the proposal
could increase consumer confusion by
encouraging multiple Closing
Disclosures, and that consumers will
not know which versions of the
disclosures to compare. The consumer
advocate group commenter also stated
that consumers may become
desensitized to the need to read
disclosures carefully if they receive
frequent Closing Disclosures. The
commenter stated that increases in costs
may eventually exceed what the
consumer is willing to pay, which
would cause them to shop with other
lenders. However, if consumers are
desensitized to changes, the commenter
argued that consumers will be less
likely to withdraw from the transaction.
The consumer advocate group
commenter further stated that the
proposal would encourage creditors to
provide Closing Disclosures that are not
intended to reset tolerances, which the
commenter asserted will be confusing
for consumers.
Several industry commenters also
stated that the proposal could
potentially increase consumer confusion
by incentivizing earlier, and therefore
more frequent, Closing Disclosures.
Several commenters, including an
industry trade association commenter,
similarly stated that too many
disclosure updates could work against
consumer understanding, because
consumers might ignore the disclosures
and would not know which ones to use
for comparison purposes.
An industry commenter stated that
consumers would be confused when
receiving a Closing Disclosure very early
and that consumers could be confused
by a Closing Disclosure that purports to
be a statement of final loan terms and
closing costs, but is only an estimate of
costs. That commenter noted that not all
changes to the loan will require
creditors to reset tolerances and that
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consumers who receive Closing
Disclosures very early may not receive
corrected Closing Disclosures until
consummation if there are no changes
that occur that would cause the creditor
to reset tolerances (or one of the
triggering events in § 1026.19(f)(2)(ii)
occurs, which would require a new
disclosure and three-day waiting
period). The commenter stated that this
would be contrary to the purpose of the
requirement to receive the Closing
Disclosure three business days before
consummation.
Other commenters stated that the
proposal would not create consumer
confusion. Some industry commenters
stated that the proposal would not
diminish consumer understanding
because creditors would remain able to
reset tolerances only as permitted under
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) and that there would
not be a large increase in the number of
Closing Disclosures. One industry
commenter stated that consumers
should not experience confusion or
information overload, as it would be no
different from consumers receiving
revised Loan Estimates. That commenter
also stated that it expects lenders to
communicate with consumers to
address any confusion. Another
industry commenter similarly suggested
that consumers might benefit from
earlier Closing Disclosures and the
creditor’s flexibility to issue corrected
Closing Disclosures because it would
facilitate a more transparent process.
Some industry commenters asserted that
consumers could benefit from receiving
Closing Disclosures earlier in the
process because they would have
additional time to review the
information that does not appear on the
Loan Estimate.
With respect to additional protections
to avoid potential consumer harms
associated with removing the fourbusiness day limit, several commenters
who supported the proposal also
suggested that the Bureau address
Closing Disclosure timing or accuracy
rules, because of concerns about
potential effects of the proposed rule or
to address uncertainty about current
rules. With respect to timing, an
industry commenter requested
clarification as to whether creditors can
reset tolerances using a Closing
Disclosure after issuing an initial Loan
Estimate but without ever issuing any
revised Loan Estimate. To maintain the
disincentive against providing Closing
Disclosures very early, an individual
commenter suggested that the Bureau
expand the window of time prior to
consummation during which a creditor
can reset tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure from four business days to
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19167
seven business days. Another
commenter noted that merely expanding
that time window by a limited number
of days would only partially address the
problems discussed in the proposal, and
did not favor that approach. The
consumer advocate group commenter
suggested that the rule should provide
that the Closing Disclosure can only be
given no more than three business days
before consummation. An anonymous
commenter advised that, in addition to
removing the four-business day limit for
resetting tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure, the Bureau should also
adopt a new prohibition on providing
Closing Disclosures unless the creditor
reasonably anticipates that the
transaction will close within ten
business days. An industry commenter
stated that the Bureau’s supervision
process could emphasize scrutiny of
potentially unnecessary iterations of
corrected Closing Disclosures. The
commenter suggested that, as an
alternative, the Bureau create a new
timing requirement for resetting
tolerances with a corrected Closing
Disclosure, whereby any and all changes
to the Closing Disclosure for resetting
tolerances would be made at only one
specific point in time during a
transaction. Meanwhile, several
commenters supported removing the
timing restriction on resetting tolerances
with a Closing Disclosure and stated
that the Bureau should not place new
timing limitations on providing Closing
Disclosures. One commenter noted that
the rule’s current accuracy standard is
already a deterrent against providing
very early Closing Disclosures because it
requires that the creditor, acting in good
faith, exercise due diligence in
obtaining the information.
With respect to Closing Disclosure
accuracy, one industry commenter
stated that, in addition to removing the
time limit for resetting tolerances with
a Closing Disclosure, the Bureau should
either apply a stricter accuracy standard
to the Closing Disclosure or clarify the
current accuracy standard to avoid very
early Closing Disclosures. That
commenter expressed concern that some
creditors are providing initial Closing
Disclosures to consumers using price
quotes automatically generated by
software vendors rather than requesting
more accurate information from the
settlement agent involved in the
transaction. Another industry
commenter similarly expressed concern
about the adequacy of current accuracy
standards and advised that the Bureau
provide some specific expectation
regarding Closing Disclosure timing in
order to discern whether a creditor has
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provided disclosures on the Closing
Disclosure in good faith. Another
industry commenter recommended that
the Bureau provide a complete summary
of good faith under all of the operative
provisions of the rule. Another industry
commenter suggested that concerns
about early Closing Disclosure issuance
can be addressed through a warning that
the practice violates the spirit of the
disclosure rule.
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Permissible Reasons To Reset
Tolerances
The Bureau requested comment on
whether the rule should allow creditors
to reset tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure in circumstances that are
more limited than those that apply
under the current rule
(§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)) or whether the rule
should be more restrictive with respect
to resetting tolerances with a corrected
Closing Disclosure for certain thirdparty costs and creditor fees. Most
commenters who addressed this aspect
of the proposal did not support applying
a more restrictive set of circumstances
or fees resetting tolerances with a
Closing Disclosure. Specifically, one
individual commenter and several
industry commenters requested that the
rule not restrict resetting tolerances with
a Closing Disclosure in circumstances
more limited than for a revised Loan
Estimate. However, one individual
commenter stated that interest rate lock
fees should not be allowed for resetting
tolerances with either revised Loan
Estimates or Closing Disclosures unless
the fee is clearly attributable to a
consumer delay or exceptional event,
such as a weather event. One industry
commenter stated that two provisions
under the current rule are inapplicable
to resetting tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure. Specifically, that commenter
stated that the provisions that allow
creditors to reset tolerances where a
Loan Estimate expires
(§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(E)) and in a
transaction involving a construction
loan where closings are delayed
(§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(F)) are inapplicable
to resetting tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure.
The Final Rule
For the reasons discussed below, the
Bureau is finalizing the amendments to
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and (ii) as proposed.
The Bureau is also finalizing the
proposed changes to comment
19(e)(1)(ii)–1, including a minor
technical revision for clarity, and to
comments 19(e)(4)(i)–1 and –2. The
Bureau is republishing comment
19(e)(1)(ii)–2 with no changes. In
addition, the Bureau is finalizing the
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changes to comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–1
substantially as proposed, including
minor technical and conforming
revisions, and providing an additional
example in response to commenter
requests for further clarification.
The final rule removes the fourbusiness day limit and permits creditors
to reset tolerances with either an initial
or corrected Closing Disclosure
regardless of when the Closing
Disclosure is provided relative to
consummation. The Bureau finds that
this change will benefit both consumers
and creditors and facilitate compliance
with the TILA–RESPA Rule and that it
is appropriate under the legal
authorities described in part IV above.
As noted above, once the creditor
provides the initial Closing Disclosure
to the consumer, the TILA–RESPA Rule
distinguishes between cost increases
that can be passed on to consumers and
those that cannot be passed on based on
when the creditor learns about the cost
increase relative to consummation. As
noted by numerous commenters, this
aspect of the TILA–RESPA Rule
imposes on the creditor the cost of
unanticipated changes to the loan that
could otherwise be passed to the
specific consumer incurring the
increased fee through resetting
tolerances. However, the four-business
day limit can also have negative effects
on consumers. Costs that cannot be
passed to the specific consumers who
incur them are generally passed on to all
consumers over time through an overall
increase in the cost of credit. Further,
some creditors may choose to deny
applications to avoid absorbing the
increased costs, which can have
negative effects for the consumer even if
the consumer immediately reapplies for
credit (e.g., could result in additional
fees to extend a rate lock, further delay
closing, or result in the loss of a home
sales contract). The Bureau also agrees
with some commenters who stated that
confusion over the current rules has the
potential to create legal and compliance
risks for creditors, which could have a
negative impact on the cost and
availability of credit.
As finalized, § 1026.19(e)(4)(i)
provides that, subject to the
requirements of § 1026.19(e)(4)(ii), if a
creditor uses a revised estimate
pursuant to § 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) for the
purpose of determining good faith under
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii), the creditor
shall provide a revised version of the
disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(e)(1)(i) or the disclosures
required under § 1026.19(f)(1)(i)
(including any corrected disclosures
provided under § 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii))
reflecting the revised estimate within
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three business days of receiving
information sufficient to establish that
one of the reasons for revision applies.36
The Bureau considered concerns
discussed in the proposal and expressed
by some commenters about the potential
effects of the proposal on the Closing
Disclosure timing. As noted above, the
timing restriction on resetting tolerances
creates a disincentive to providing
consumers with Closing Disclosures
very early in the lending process. Once
a creditor has provided a Closing
Disclosure, it can reset tolerances only
if there are less than four business days
between the time the revised version of
the disclosures is required to be
provided pursuant to § 1026.19(e)(4)(i)
(i.e., within three business days of the
time the creditor received information
sufficient to establish the reason for
revision) and consummation. The
Bureau agrees with commenters who
stated that the practice of providing very
early Closing Disclosures with terms
that are nearly certain to be revised
would be contrary to the underlying
purpose of the Closing Disclosure.
While the Bureau acknowledges that
eliminating the timing restriction on
resetting tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure could potentially affect the
Closing Disclosure timing for some
creditors, the Bureau does not believe
that retaining the four-business day
limit is an effective way to address
potential issues associated with early
Closing Disclosures.
In particular, the four-business day
limit is problematic where a scheduled
closing date is delayed and additional
costs are incurred after an initial Closing
Disclosure has been provided to the
consumer. As noted by numerous
commenters, this situation can arise
even when the initial Closing Disclosure
is provided to the consumer very close
to the time of the initially-scheduled
consummation date, as closing dates can
move at the last minute for a variety of
reasons. The Bureau believes that the
TILA–RESPA Rule should accommodate
changes that occur as a result of delayed
closings. Retaining the restriction on
resetting tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure would not accomplish that
goal. In addition, while the Bureau
agrees that the very early provision of
36 The final rule does not change the current
Regulation Z requirement that, if the Closing
Disclosure becomes inaccurate before
consummation, the creditor must provide a
corrected Closing Disclosure reflecting any changed
terms to the consumer so that the consumer
receives the corrected Closing Disclosure at or
before consummation, § 1026.19(f)(2)(i), or, in some
circumstances, must ensure that the consumer
receives the corrected Closing Disclosure no later
than three business days before consummation,
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(ii).
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Closing Disclosures is contrary to the
underlying purpose of those disclosures,
the Bureau does not believe that
finalizing the proposal will have an
overall negative effect on consumer
understanding. The Bureau does not
expect that removal of the four-business
day limit will result in a significant
increase in the number of disclosures
provided to consumers because the final
rule does not expand the circumstances
in which creditors are allowed to reset
tolerances. And, as further discussed
below, the Bureau believes that current
rules should prevent creditors from
sending Closing Disclosures very early
in the process before engaging in due
diligence to ensure that any costs that
are not finalized are estimated in good
faith.
The Bureau also considered
comments that suggested additional
protections might be necessary to avoid
consumer harm from removing the
restriction on resetting tolerances with a
Closing Disclosure. However, the
Bureau is not adopting any additional
substantive changes to the TILA–RESPA
Rule’s existing Closing Disclosure
timing or accuracy provisions at this
time. The Bureau concludes that the
rule’s existing provisions should
prevent creditors from sending Closing
Disclosures very early in the process
before engaging in due diligence.
With respect to the accuracy standard
that applies to the Closing Disclosure,
the Bureau concludes that substantive
changes to the TILA–RESPA Rule’s
existing provisions are not necessary to
prevent creditors from sending Closing
Disclosures very early in the process
before engaging in due diligence. The
Bureau believes the existing Closing
Disclosure accuracy standard already
accomplishes that objective. Existing
§ 1026.19(f)(1)(i) and comment
19(f)(1)(i)–1 require creditors to disclose
on the Closing Disclosure the actual
terms of the credit transaction. Existing
comment 19(f)(1)(i)–2 also permits
creditors to estimate disclosures on the
Closing Disclosure using the best
information reasonably available when
the actual term is not reasonably
available to the creditor at the time the
disclosures are made. Comment
19(f)(1)(i)–2 provides that the
‘‘reasonably available’’ standard
requires that the creditor, acting in good
faith, exercise due diligence in
obtaining the information. Further,
comment 19(f)(1)(i)–2.i.A provides an
example illustrating the ‘‘reasonably
available’’ standard for purposes of
§ 1026.19(f)(1)(i). Specifically, comment
19(f)(1)(i)–2.i.A assumes that a creditor
provides the Closing Disclosure for a
transaction in which the title insurance
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company that is providing the title
insurance policy is acting as the
settlement agent in connection with the
transaction, but the creditor does not
request the actual cost of the lender’s
title insurance policy that the consumer
is purchasing from the title insurance
company and instead discloses an
estimate based on information from a
different transaction. Comment
19(f)(1)(i)–2.i.A provides that the
creditor in the example has not
exercised due diligence in obtaining the
information about the cost of the
lender’s title insurance policy required
under the ‘‘reasonably available’’
standard in connection with the
estimate disclosed for the lender’s title
insurance policy. Regarding a
commenter’s request for clarification as
to whether creditors can reset tolerances
using a Closing Disclosure after issuing
an initial Loan Estimate but without
ever issuing any revised Loan Estimate,
the rule does not prohibit creditors from
doing so but creditors must otherwise
comply with the rule, including its
Closing Disclosure accuracy standard.
The Bureau will continue to monitor the
market for practices that do not comply
with the rule’s Closing Disclosure
accuracy standard.
With respect to the timing of the
Closing Disclosure, the Bureau is not
adopting any substantive changes to the
TILA–RESPA Rule’s existing Closing
Disclosure timing provisions, other than
removing the four-business day limit as
discussed above. For example, the
Bureau considered a commenter’s
suggestion that the Bureau expand the
window of time prior to consummation
during which a creditor can reset
tolerances with a Closing Disclosure
(from four business days to seven
business days). The commenter’s
suggested approach would mean that a
creditor could reset tolerances with a
Closing Disclosure when consummation
is reasonably expected to occur no more
than ten business days after the creditor
learns about the valid justification (i.e.,
three business days from the time the
creditor knows about the valid
justification plus seven business days
from the time the revised disclosure is
required to be provided until
consummation). The Bureau declines to
adopt such approach. The Bureau agrees
with another commenter who noted that
merely expanding that time window by
a limited number of days would only
partially address the issue created by
the four-business day limit under the
current rule. In the example above, a
creditor could not reset tolerances with
a Closing Disclosure when
consummation is reasonably expected to
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19169
occur eleven business days or more after
the creditor learns about the valid
justification. As noted above, the Bureau
concludes that the issues created by the
four-business day limit have negative
effects on both creditors and consumers
and that the four-business day limit
should be eliminated, not merely
expanded by a limited number of days.
Similarly, the Bureau declines to set
a new, specific timing requirement for
Closing Disclosures. For example, the
Bureau declines to place new
limitations on providing Closing
Disclosures such that an initial Closing
Disclosure could only be given no more
than three business days before
consummation, as a consumer advocate
group commenter advised. Such a new
limitation would exacerbate rather than
alleviate problems associated with the
current rule. The Bureau also declines
to follow the suggestion to adopt a new
prohibition on providing Closing
Disclosures unless the creditor
reasonably anticipates that the
transaction will close within 10
business days. The Bureau does not
believe that there is an appropriate basis
at this time for creating such a
prohibition, including setting any such
cutoff at 10 business days or any other
particular number of days.
The Bureau also considered the
commenter suggestion that the Bureau
create a new timing requirement for
resetting tolerances with a corrected
Closing Disclosure, whereby any and all
changes to the Closing Disclosure for
resetting tolerances would be made at
only one specific point in time during
a transaction. The Bureau declines to
adopt such a timing requirement
because doing so would be inconsistent
with the purpose articulated by the
Bureau when it adopted the
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(i) timing requirements
for resetting tolerances. Specifically,
current § 1026.19(e)(4)(i) generally
provides that, to reset tolerances, the
creditor must provide revised
disclosures within three business days
of receiving information sufficient to
establish a valid justification. In the
2013 TILA–RESPA Final Rule, the
Bureau stated its view ‘‘that intermittent
redisclosure of the integrated Loan
Estimate is necessary under RESPA
because settlement service provider
costs typically fluctuate during the
mortgage loan origination process’’ and
‘‘intermittent redisclosure is consistent
with the purposes of TILA because it
promotes the informed use of credit by
keeping the consumer apprised of
changes in costs.’’ 37 The Bureau
37 78
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similarly holds that view regarding
intermittent redisclosure with the
Closing Disclosure. For all these
reasons, the Bureau is finalizing the
proposal to remove the four-business
day limit without adopting any further
substantive changes to the rule’s
existing Closing Disclosure timing or
accuracy provisions.
The Bureau also declines to adopt
changes to the rule that would restrict
creditors’ ability to reset tolerances with
a Closing Disclosure to circumstances
that are more limited than those that
apply under § 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) or that
would be more restrictive with respect
to resetting tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure for certain third-party costs
and creditor fees. As noted above, most
commenters who addressed this aspect
of the proposal did not support applying
a more restrictive set of circumstances
or fees when resetting tolerances with a
Closing Disclosure. The Bureau believes
that the circumstances identified under
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) are adequate to
balance flexibility for creditors to reset
tolerances due to unforeseen
circumstances while also providing
constraints to avoid arbitrary increases
in costs to consumers in relation to
revised Loan Estimates, and that those
circumstances are also adequate with
respect to resetting tolerances with a
Closing Disclosure.
One individual commenter stated that
interest rate lock extension fees should
not be allowed for resetting tolerances
with either revised Loan Estimates or
Closing Disclosures unless the fee is
clearly attributable to a consumer delay
or exceptional event, such as a weather
event. The Bureau does not believe that
different treatment of interest rate lock
extension fees with respect to resetting
tolerances is warranted. Currently,
when the consumer enters into a rate
lock agreement for a previously floating
interest rate, the creditor is required to
provide a revised Loan Estimate that
updates the interest-rate related charges,
credits, and terms pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D).38 This disclosure
sets the applicable baseline for the
38 Some commenters requested further
clarification on the use of Closing Disclosures to
reset tolerances when the interest rate is locked
pursuant to § 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D). Guidance
provided in the section-by-section analysis of the
July 2017 Amendments explains that
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D) is used in relation to
providing revised Loan Estimates, not Closing
Disclosures, and once a revised Loan Estimate is
provided when a rate has been locked,
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D) is not a basis to provide
another revised Loan Estimate. If the interest rate
has not been locked until after a Closing Disclosure
has been provided, a corrected Closing Disclosure
must be provided if the disclosures become
inaccurate under § 1026.19(f)(2). 82 FR 37656,
37682 (Aug. 11, 2017).
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tolerance of those interest-rate related
charges, credits, and terms subject to a
good-faith tolerance. Subsequent
changes to interest rate charges and
terms would reset tolerances if the
changes are the result of a changed
circumstance that causes the applicable
charge to exceed the applicable
tolerance, or if the consumer requests a
change that causes the interest-rate
related charges, credits, and terms to
increase.39 The same timing concerns
related to the four-business day limit
apply when either the initial rate lock
occurs or an extension of the rate lock
period is sought (i.e., once the Closing
Disclosure has been issued, the creditor
can reset tolerances only if there are less
than four business days between the
time the revised version of the
disclosures is required to be provided
pursuant to § 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and
consummation). As noted by
commenters, the most common charge
that is incurred due to a changed
circumstance or consumer request after
the Closing Disclosure has been
provided is a fee to extend the relevant
time period of a rate lock.
The Bureau does not believe it is
appropriate to treat rate lock extension
fees differently than other fees under the
rule with respect to resetting tolerances.
The Bureau does not believe that rate
lock extension fees are fundamentally
different from other creditor costs.
Extending rate locks for consumers can
create opportunity costs to creditors
based on secondary market conditions
for the delivery of the loans, or direct
costs by requiring the renegotiation or
acquisition of interest-rate swaps used
to offset interest-rate risk. Further, the
Bureau is concerned that treating rate
lock extension fees differently in this
regard would make it less likely that
creditors would offer rate lock
extensions, which could have
unintended effects that could distort
interest rate pricing and the mortgage
market generally. The Bureau will
monitor industry practices related to
interest rate lock extensions to
determine if additional rulemaking in
this area is warranted in the future.
The Bureau also considered the
comment that noted that the provisions
that allow creditors to reset tolerances
when a Loan Estimate expires and in
transactions involving construction
loans where closings are delayed are
inapplicable to resetting tolerances with
a Closing Disclosure. Although the
Bureau agrees that those provisions are
generally inapplicable to resetting
tolerances with a Closing Disclosure, the
Bureau does not believe it is necessary
39 See
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to amend the rule further to address the
issue expressly.
The Bureau is also finalizing changes
to the commentary to § 1026.19(e)(4).
Consistent with the revisions to
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(i), the Bureau is
finalizing the proposed changes to
comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–1, which removes
the reference to the four-business day
limit, including a minor technical
revision for clarity. As amended,
comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–1 expressly states
that, if a creditor uses a revised estimate
pursuant to § 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) for the
purpose of determining good faith under
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii),
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(i) permits the creditor to
provide the revised estimate in the
disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(f)(1)(i) (including any
corrected disclosures provided under
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii)). In addition, and
as explained below, the Bureau is:
Making conforming revisions to existing
comments 19(e)(4)(ii)–1.i and .ii;
adopting proposed comment
19(e)(4)(ii)–1.iii with conforming and
clarifying revisions; and adopting
proposed comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–1.iv with
conforming revisions and renumbering
it as comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–1.v. The
conforming revisions to final comments
19(e)(4)(ii)–1.i, .ii, .iii, and .v reflect the
illustrative June dates used elsewhere in
existing comments 19(e)(1)(iii)–2,
19(e)(1)(v)–2, 19(f)(1)(i)–1, and
19(f)(2)(ii)–1. Final comment
19(e)(4)(ii)–1.iii also includes a
clarifying reference to existing
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(i) and its requirement
that the creditor provide corrected
disclosures reflecting any changed terms
to the consumer so that the consumer
receives the corrected disclosures at or
before consummation. The Bureau is
also adding new comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–
1.iv to provide an additional illustrative
example in response to commenters’
requests for additional clarification.
Specifically, some industry
commenters requested that the Bureau
provide examples that illustrate the use
of mail and electronic delivery of
disclosures. One industry commenter
requested that the Bureau provide an
example of a situation where creditors
may use a Closing Disclosure to reset
tolerances when the consumer requests
a rate lock extension. Several industry
commenters recommended that the
Bureau provide an example in which a
Closing Disclosure is provided to the
consumer and then a reason for revision
under § 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) occurs more
than four business days before
consummation—and thus highlight the
requirement in § 1026.19(e)(4)(i) that the
creditor provide revised disclosures
within three business days of receiving
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information sufficient to establish that a
reason for revision under
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) has occurred.
The new example in final comment
19(e)(4)(ii)–1.iv addresses these requests
for clarification. Specifically, the new
example in final comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–
1.iv assumes consummation is
originally scheduled for Wednesday,
June 10. The example provides that the
creditor hand delivers the disclosures
required by § 1026.19(f)(1)(i) on Friday,
June 5. On Monday, June 8, the
consumer reschedules consummation
for Wednesday, June 17. Also on
Monday, June 8, the consumer requests
a rate lock extension that would result
in a revised disclosure pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(C) but would not
require a new waiting period pursuant
to § 1026.19(f)(2)(ii). The example
clarifies that the creditor complies with
the requirements of § 1026.19(e)(4) by
delivering or placing in the mail the
disclosures required by § 1026.19(f)(2)(i)
reflecting the consumer-requested
changes on Thursday, June 11. The
example references existing
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(i) and its requirement
that the creditor provide corrected
disclosures reflecting any changed terms
to the consumer so that the consumer
receives the corrected disclosures at or
before consummation. The example
clarifies that the creditor complies with
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(i) by hand delivering the
disclosures on Thursday, June 11. The
example further clarifies that,
alternatively, the creditor complies with
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(i) by providing the
disclosures to the consumer by mail,
including by electronic mail, on
Thursday, June 11, because the
consumer is considered to have received
the corrected disclosures on Monday,
June 15 (unless the creditor relies on
evidence that the consumer received the
corrected disclosures earlier). The
example refers to § 1026.19(f)(1)(iii) and
comments 19(f)(1)(iii)–1 and –2
regarding receipt of disclosures that are
not provided to the consumer in person.
The example also refers to
§ 1026.38(t)(3) and comment
19(f)(1)(iii)–2 regarding providing
disclosures in electronic form.
An industry commenter requested
clarification regarding the
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(i) timing requirement
where a reason for revision under
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) occurs within three
business days of consummation.
Another industry commenter requested
clarification that providing a Closing
Disclosure to reset tolerances under
§ 1026.19(e)(4) does not necessarily
require a new waiting period pursuant
to § 1026.19(f)(2)(ii). The example in
final comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–1.iii
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addresses these requests for
clarification. Specifically, the example
in final comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–1.iii
assumes consummation is scheduled for
Thursday, June 4. The example provides
that the creditor hand delivers the
disclosures required by § 1026.19(f)(1)(i)
on Monday, June 1, and, on Tuesday,
June 2, the consumer requests a change
to the loan that would result in a revised
disclosure pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(C) but would not
require a new waiting period pursuant
to § 1026.19(f)(2)(ii). The example
references existing § 1026.19(f)(2)(i) and
its requirement that the creditor provide
corrected disclosures reflecting any
changed terms to the consumer so that
the consumer receives the corrected
disclosures at or before consummation.
The example clarifies that the creditor
complies with the requirements of
§ 1026.19(e)(4) by hand delivering the
disclosures required by § 1026.19(f)(2)(i)
reflecting the consumer-requested
changes on Thursday, June 4.
The Bureau is finalizing proposed
comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–1.iv with
conforming revisions and renumbering
it as comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–1.v. As
finalized comment 19(e)(4)(ii)–1.v
assumes that consummation is
originally scheduled for Wednesday,
June 10. The comment provides that the
creditor hand delivers the disclosures
required by § 1026.19(f)(1)(i) on Friday,
June 5, and the APR becomes inaccurate
on Monday, June 8, such that the
creditor is required to delay
consummation and provide corrected
disclosures, including any other
changed terms, so that the consumer
receives them at least three business
days before consummation under
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(ii). Consummation is
rescheduled for Friday, June 12. The
comment clarifies that the creditor
complies with the requirements of
§ 1026.19(e)(4) by hand delivering the
disclosures required by
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(ii) reflecting the revised
APR and any other changed terms to the
consumer on Tuesday, June 9. The
comment references § 1026.19(f)(2)(ii)
and associated commentary regarding
changes before consummation requiring
a new waiting period. The comment
also references comment 19(e)(4)(i)–1
for further guidance on when sufficient
information has been received to
establish an event has occurred.
The Bureau notes that some
commenters requested that the final rule
incorporate other clarifications and
examples. For example, an industry
commenter requested clarification as to
whether § 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) requires
consumers to receive a Closing
Disclosure not later than four business
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days prior to consummation. The
commenter also requested that the
Bureau permit creditors to reset
tolerances after consummation when
settlement occurs after consummation.
Another industry commenter broadly
requested clarification regarding how to
reset tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure under various scenarios,
including when different
communication channels are used for
providing Loan Estimates and Closing
Disclosures, there is a non-borrowing
spouse, or there are multiple changed
circumstances. The Bureau declines to
make specific changes to the rule in
response to these comments, because
the existing regulation and commentary
address these issues as outlined below.
Regarding a commenter’s request for
clarification as to whether
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) requires consumers to
receive a Closing Disclosure not later
than four business days prior to
consummation, the Bureau notes that
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) provides that the
consumer must receive any revised
version of the disclosures required
under § 1026.19(e)(1)(i) (i.e., the Loan
Estimate) not later than four business
days prior to consummation, but that
timing requirement does not reference
the Closing Disclosure.
Regarding a commenter’s request to
allow creditors to reset tolerances after
consummation when settlement occurs
after consummation, the Bureau
declines to adopt this change because
existing § 1026.2(a)(13) provides that,
once consummation occurs, the
consumer is already contractually
obligated on the credit transaction. The
Bureau also declines to further amend
the rule in response to a commenter’s
broad request for clarification regarding
how to reset tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure under various scenarios,
including when different
communication channels are used for
providing Loan Estimates and Closing
Disclosures, there is a non-borrowing
spouse, or there are multiple changed
circumstances. The Bureau believes that
the TILA–RESPA Rule already provides
sufficient guidance on the topics
identified by the commenter.
Specifically, guidance for resetting
tolerances with a Closing Disclosure can
be found in § 1026.19(e)(4) and its
associated commentary, as amended by
this final rule. Guidance as to providing
disclosures via different communication
channels can be found in
§ 1026.19(e)(1)(iv) and
§ 1026.19(f)(1)(iii) and the associated
commentary. Guidance as to providing
disclosures for a non-borrowing spouse
can be found in § 1026.17(d) and
associated commentary. Guidance as to
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providing revised disclosures where
there are multiple changed
circumstances can be found in
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) and § 1026.19(e)(4)
and the associated commentary.
Finally, the Bureau notes that it is
adopting as proposed the changes to
§ 1026.19(e)(4) and its commentary to
reflect amendments to the TILA–RESPA
Rule made by the January 2015
Amendments regarding interest rate
dependent charges, for the reasons
noted above in the discussion of the
2017 Proposal. Specifically, the Bureau
is finalizing the amendments to
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and comment
19(e)(4)(i)–1, and removing existing
comment 19(e)(4)(i)–2, regarding the
relationship to § 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D).
VI. Effective Date
The Bureau proposed an effective date
of 30 days after publication in the
Federal Register of any final rule based
on the proposal. The Bureau also
requested comment on when the
changes proposed should be effective. In
the proposal, the Bureau stated that it
believed that the proposed changes
should enable industry to implement
the provisions set forth in the TILA–
RESPA Rule more cost-effectively and
that industry should be able to
implement these changes relatively
quickly. At the same time, the Bureau
stated that it recognized that some of the
proposed changes might require changes
to systems or procedures.
The Bureau received several
comments addressing the proposed
effective date. One industry commenter
agreed with the Bureau’s proposed
effective date of 30 days after
publication. That commenter, as well as
another industry commenter, noted that
the proposed provisions would not
impose new burdens on creditors. One
commenter noted that a creditor would
not be out of compliance if it continued
to follow the current rule after the
proposed changes take effect. Another
industry commenter requested that the
final rule become effective no sooner
than 90 days after publication in the
Federal Register to allow adequate time
to implement the timing changes. The
commenter also requested that the final
rule apply to applications received on or
after the effective date, or some specific
date. Another industry commenter
suggested that the Bureau adopt an
optional early compliance approach,
with an effective date 60 days after
publication and a mandatory
compliance date one year thereafter. An
industry commenter requested that this
final rule be effective for any transaction
covered by the 2013 TILA–RESPA Final
Rule. Another industry commenter
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encouraged the Bureau to heed
recommendations from loan origination
system vendors; however, the Bureau
did not receive any such
recommendations.
The amendments in the final rule will
become effective 30 days after
publication in the Federal Register.The
Bureau believes the changes should
enable industry to implement the
provisions set forth in the TILA–RESPA
Rule more cost-effectively and that
industry should be able to implement
these changes relatively quickly.
Regarding some commenters’ requests
for a later effective date, an optional
early compliance period, or an effective
date that distinguishes among
transactions based on when a loan
application was received, the Bureau
declines to adopt such approaches
because the final rule does not impose
any new burdens on creditors. Once the
final rule becomes effective, the ability
to reset tolerances prior to
consummation for a given transaction
will not be limited by when the
application was received. The Bureau
declines to make this final rule
retroactive, as retroactive rulemaking is
disfavored by the courts and the
commenter has not established why it
would be appropriate here.
VII. Dodd-Frank Act Section 1022(b)(2)
Analysis
A. Overview
In developing this final rule, the
Bureau has considered the potential
benefits, costs, and impacts.40 The
Bureau has consulted, or offered to
consult with, the prudential regulators,
the Securities and Exchange
Commission, the Department of Housing
and Urban Development, the Federal
Housing Finance Agency, the Federal
Trade Commission, the Department of
Veterans Affairs, the Department of
Agriculture, and the Department of the
Treasury, including regarding
consistency with any prudential,
market, or systemic objectives
administered by such agencies.
This final rule makes a substantive
change to the current TILA–RESPA
Rule, by allowing creditors to reset
tolerances with a Closing Disclosure
(both initial and corrected), irrespective
of the date of consummation. This new
40 Specifically, section 1022(b)(2)(A) of the DoddFrank Act calls for the Bureau to consider the
potential benefits and costs of a regulation to
consumers and covered persons, including the
potential reduction of access by consumers to
consumer financial products or services; the impact
on depository institutions and credit unions with
$10 billion or less in total assets as described in
section 1026 of the Dodd-Frank Act; and the impact
on consumers in rural areas.
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provision is restricted to circumstances
where the TILA–RESPA Rule currently
allows creditors to reset tolerances, such
as changes in costs resulting from
changed circumstances; new
information regarding eligibility of the
borrower; and borrower-requested
change (for instance, rate lock
extension). The potential benefits and
costs of the provisions contained in the
final rule are evaluated relative to the
baseline where the current provisions of
the TILA–RESPA Rule remain in place.
Under the TILA–RESPA Rule, there is
no specific provision that allows
creditors to use a Closing Disclosure to
reset tolerances if there are four or more
days between the time the revised
version of the disclosures is required to
be provided pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and consummation.
Consequently, a creditor may not be
allowed to reset tolerances if it has
already provided the Closing Disclosure
to the consumer when it learns about
the increase in cost. In such cases, some
creditors, faced with the prospect of
absorbing cost increases, may choose to
deny the application.
The proposal solicited data that could
inform the analysis of benefits, costs,
and impacts of the proposal, but the
Bureau did not receive any such data in
response. In particular, the Bureau
requested information on the extent to
which the current rule has caused
situations in which creditors cannot
reset tolerances despite a valid changed
circumstance. While some commenters
reported such occurrences, none
provided data to quantitatively assess
the frequency of such occurrences or the
associated costs and benefits. Since
operational data at a level of detail to
capture the date of the Closing
Disclosure and the consummation date,
or the application denial date, is not
available for purchase or gathered in
routine regulatory collections, the
Bureau does not have, and is not aware
of, data currently available that would
allow it to quantify the frequency of
instances of creditors being unable to
issue Closing Disclosures to reset
tolerances. As a result, this discussion
of the potential benefits, costs, and
impacts on consumers and covered
persons, which takes the existing
statutory and regulatory framework as
the baseline, is largely qualitative.
B. Potential Benefits and Costs to
Consumers and Covered Persons
The Bureau believes the final rule will
benefit creditors by providing them with
an option of resetting tolerances in
situations where they currently do not
have that option. The Bureau does not
believe there would be any increased
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costs to creditors from this final rule
compared to the baseline where the
current provisions of the TILA–RESPA
Rule remain in place, as the provisions
of this final rule are less restrictive for
creditors than the current provisions.
The Bureau believes consumers will
generally benefit from this final rule. It
is helpful to consider benefits and costs
to consumers separately in the following
scenarios.
First, there may be cases where an
initial Closing Disclosure has been
provided to the consumer well in
advance of consummation where the
creditor subsequently learns about a
change in cost that would be a cause to
reset tolerances. The creditor may be
unable to reset tolerances currently due
to the four-business day limit and may
choose to absorb extra costs rather than
deny the application. In these cases, this
final rule will create costs for consumers
because now any changes in costs due
to unexpected events would in these
cases likely be passed on to consumers.
However, in some situations, such as
cost increases due to a borrowerrequested change, these extra costs
might be avoidable. In addition, to the
extent that creditors are currently
pricing in the risk of having to absorb
unexpected cost increases, this final
rule will remove this extra layer of risk
adjustment and create a benefit to
consumers in the form of lower cost of
credit.
Second, there may be cases where an
initial Closing Disclosure already has
been provided to the consumer well in
advance of consummation and the
creditor subsequently learns about a
change in cost that would be a cause to
reset tolerances. The creditor may be
unable to reset tolerances currently due
to the four-business day limit and may
choose to deny the application for this
reason. In such cases, this final rule will
benefit borrowers by giving them an
option of paying extra costs instead of
having their applications denied; the
Bureau believes that some borrowers
may prefer to pay extra costs rather than
have their applications denied.
Third, there are hypothetically
situations where a creditor would prefer
to provide the initial Closing Disclosure
earlier, but is deterred from doing so by
the risk of not being able to reset
tolerances in case an unexpected change
occurs. In such cases, the proposed
change may result in more situations
where the initial Closing Disclosure is
provided well in advance of
consummation; this may affect the
accuracy of the disclosure if unexpected
cost changes occur between the issuance
and the consummation. The Bureau
believes creditors themselves may
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generally prefer to provide the initial
Closing Disclosure closer to the
consummation date because it is a good
customer service.
C. Impact on Covered Persons With No
More Than $10 Billion in Assets
As discussed previously, the Bureau
believes this final rule will not create
costs for creditors, including those with
no more than $10 billion in assets.
D. Impact on Access to Credit
The Bureau does not believe this final
rule will have a negative effect on access
to credit. On the contrary, the Bureau
believes it may have a beneficial effect
on access to credit. This may occur to
the extent that the current restrictions
on resetting tolerances using a Closing
Disclosure are reflected in credit
pricing, and to the extent that removing
such restrictions would result in
creditors reducing prices accordingly.
Furthermore, this final rule will provide
an option to consumers in situations
where the creditor is unwilling to
absorb the cost increase, and would
have denied the application in the
absence of this final rule.
E. Impact on Rural Areas
The Bureau does not believe this final
rule will have an adverse impact on
consumers in rural areas.
VIII. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (the
RFA), as amended by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, requires each
agency to consider the potential impact
of its regulations on small entities,
including small businesses, small
governmental units, and small nonprofit
organizations. The RFA defines a ‘‘small
business’’ as a business that meets the
size standard developed by the Small
Business Administration pursuant to the
Small Business Act.
The RFA generally requires an agency
to conduct an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis (IRFA) and a final
regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA) of
any rule subject to notice-and-comment
rulemaking requirements, unless the
agency certifies that the rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
The Bureau also is subject to certain
additional procedures under the RFA
involving the convening of a panel to
consult with small business
representatives prior to proposing a rule
for which an IRFA is required.
The Bureau believes this final rule
will not create a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
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19173
entities. As described above, this final
rule would reduce burden in a specific
set of circumstances that an individual
small entity would not frequently
encounter. Therefore, a FRFA is not
required.
Accordingly, the undersigned certifies
that this final rule would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
IX. Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.),
Federal agencies are generally required
to seek the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) approval for information
collection requirements prior to
implementation. The collections of
information related to Regulations Z and
X have been previously reviewed and
approved by OMB in accordance with
the PRA and assigned OMB Control
Number 3170–0015 (Regulation Z) and
3170–0016 (Regulation X). Under the
PRA, the Bureau may not conduct or
sponsor, and, notwithstanding any other
provision of law, a person is not
required to respond to an information
collection unless the information
collection displays a valid control
number assigned by OMB.
The Bureau has determined that this
final rule does not contain any
information collection requirements as
defined by the PRA.
X. Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.), the Bureau
will submit a report containing this rule
and other required information to the
U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of
Representatives, and the Comptroller
General of the United States prior to the
rule’s published effective date. The
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs has designated this rule as not a
‘‘major rule’’ as defined by 5 U.S.C.
804(2).
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 1026
Advertising, Appraisal, Appraiser,
Banking, Banks, Consumer protection,
Credit, Credit unions, Mortgages,
National banks, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Savings
associations, Truth in lending.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth above, 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:
■
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Authority: 12 U.S.C. 2601, 2603–2605,
2607, 2609, 2617, 3353, 5511, 5512, 5532,
5581; 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.
Supplement I to Part 1026—Official
Interpretations
Subpart C—Closed-End Credit
Section 1026.19—Certain Mortgage and
Variable-Rate Transactions
*
2. Section 1026.19 is amended by
revising paragraphs (e)(4)(i) and (ii) to
read as follows:
■
*
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(4) * * *
(i) General rule. Subject to the
requirements of paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of
this section, if a creditor uses a revised
estimate pursuant to paragraph (e)(3)(iv)
of this section for the purpose of
determining good faith under
paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) of this
section, the creditor shall provide a
revised version of the disclosures
required under paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this
section or the disclosures required
under paragraph (f)(1)(i) of this section
(including any corrected disclosures
provided under paragraph (f)(2)(i) or (ii)
of this section) reflecting the revised
estimate within three business days of
receiving information sufficient to
establish that one of the reasons for
revision provided under paragraphs
(e)(3)(iv)(A) through (F) of this section
applies.
(ii) Relationship between revised Loan
Estimates and Closing Disclosures. The
creditor shall not provide a revised
version of the disclosures required
under paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this section
on or after the date on which the
creditor provides the disclosures
required under paragraph (f)(1)(i) of this
section. The consumer must receive any
revised version of the disclosures
required under paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this
section not later than four business days
prior to consummation. If the revised
version of the disclosures required
under paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this section
is not provided to the consumer in
person, the consumer is considered to
have received such version three
business days after the creditor delivers
or places such version in the mail.
*
*
*
*
*
3. In Supplement I to Part 1026, under
Section 1026.19—Certain Mortgage and
Variable-Rate Transactions:
■ A. 19(e)(1)(ii) Mortgage broker is
revised.
■ B. 19(e)(4)(i) General rule is revised.
■ C. 19(e)(4)(ii) Relationship to
disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(f)(1)(i) is revised.
The revisions read as follows:
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*
*
*
*
*
*
*
19(e)(1)(ii) Mortgage broker.
§ 1026.19 Certain mortgage and variablerate transactions.
■
*
1. Mortgage broker responsibilities.
Section 1026.19(e)(1)(ii)(A) provides
that if a mortgage broker receives a
consumer’s application, either the
creditor or the mortgage broker must
provide the consumer with the
disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(e)(1)(i) in accordance with
§ 1026.19(e)(1)(iii). Section
1026.19(e)(1)(ii)(A) also provides that if
the mortgage broker provides the
required disclosures, it must comply
with all relevant requirements of
§ 1026.19(e). This means that ‘‘mortgage
broker’’ should be read in the place of
‘‘creditor’’ for all provisions of
§ 1026.19(e), except to the extent that
such a reading would create
responsibility for mortgage brokers
under § 1026.19(f). To illustrate,
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(i) states that if a creditor
uses a revised estimate pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) for the purpose of
determining good faith under
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii), the creditor
shall provide a revised version of the
disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(e)(1)(i) or the disclosures
required under § 1026.19(f)(1)(i)
(including any corrected disclosures
provided under § 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii))
reflecting the revised estimate.
‘‘Mortgage broker’’ could not be read in
place of ‘‘creditor’’ in reference to the
disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(f)(1)(i), (f)(2)(i), or (f)(2)(ii)
because mortgage brokers are not
responsible for the disclosures required
under § 1026.19(f)(1)(i), (f)(2)(i), or
(f)(2)(ii). In addition,
§ 1026.19(e)(1)(ii)(A) provides that the
creditor must ensure that disclosures
provided by mortgage brokers comply
with all requirements of § 1026.19(e),
and that disclosures provided by
mortgage brokers that do comply with
all such requirements satisfy the
creditor’s obligation under § 1026.19(e).
The term ‘‘mortgage broker,’’ as used in
§ 1026.19(e)(1)(ii), has the same
meaning as in § 1026.36(a)(2). See also
comment 36(a)–2. Section
1026.19(e)(1)(ii)(B) provides that if a
mortgage broker provides any disclosure
required under § 1026.19(e), the
mortgage broker must also comply with
the requirements of § 1026.25(c). For
example, if a mortgage broker provides
the disclosures required under
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
§ 1026.19(e)(1)(i), it must maintain
records for three years, in compliance
with § 1026.25(c)(1)(i).
2. Creditor responsibilities. If a
mortgage broker issues any disclosure
required under § 1026.19(e) in the
creditor’s place, the creditor remains
responsible under § 1026.19(e) for
ensuring that the requirements of
§ 1026.19(e) have been satisfied. For
example, if a mortgage broker receives a
consumer’s application and provides
the consumer with the disclosures
required under § 1026.19(e)(1)(i), the
creditor does not satisfy the
requirements of § 1026.19(e)(1)(i) if it
provides duplicative disclosures to the
consumer. In the same example, even if
the broker provides an erroneous
disclosure, the creditor is responsible
and may not issue a revised disclosure
correcting the error. The creditor is
expected to maintain communication
with the broker to ensure that the broker
is acting in place of the creditor.
*
*
*
*
*
19(e)(4)(i) General Rule
1. Three-business-day requirement.
Section 1026.19(e)(4)(i) provides that,
subject to the requirements of
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(ii), if a creditor uses a
revised estimate pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) for the purpose of
determining good faith under
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii), the creditor
shall provide a revised version of the
disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(e)(1)(i) or the disclosures
required under § 1026.19(f)(1)(i)
(including any corrected disclosures
provided under § 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii))
reflecting the revised estimate within
three business days of receiving
information sufficient to establish that
one of the reasons for revision provided
under § 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(A) through (F)
has occurred. The following examples
illustrate these requirements:
i. Assume a creditor requires a pest
inspection. The unaffiliated pest
inspection company informs the
creditor on Monday that the subject
property contains evidence of termite
damage, requiring a further inspection,
the cost of which will cause an increase
in estimated settlement charges subject
to § 1026.19(e)(3)(ii) by more than 10
percent. The creditor must provide
revised disclosures by Thursday to
comply with § 1026.19(e)(4)(i).
ii. Assume a creditor receives
information on Monday that, because of
a changed circumstance under
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(A), the title fees will
increase by an amount totaling six
percent of the originally estimated
settlement charges subject to
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(ii). The creditor had
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received information three weeks before
that, because of a changed circumstance
under § 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(A), the pest
inspection fees increased by an amount
totaling five percent of the originally
estimated settlement charges subject to
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(ii). Thus, on Monday,
the creditor has received sufficient
information to establish a valid reason
for revision and must provide revised
disclosures reflecting the 11 percent
increase by Thursday to comply with
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(i).
iii. Assume a creditor requires an
appraisal. The creditor receives the
appraisal report, which indicates that
the value of the home is significantly
lower than expected. However, the
creditor has reason to doubt the validity
of the appraisal report. A reason for
revision has not been established
because the creditor reasonably believes
that the appraisal report is incorrect.
The creditor then chooses to send a
different appraiser for a second opinion,
but the second appraiser returns a
similar report. At this point, the creditor
has received information sufficient to
establish that a reason for revision has,
in fact, occurred, and must provide
corrected disclosures within three
business days of receiving the second
appraisal report. In this example, in
order to comply with
§§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) and 1026.25, the
creditor must maintain records
documenting the creditor’s doubts
regarding the validity of the appraisal to
demonstrate that the reason for revision
did not occur upon receipt of the first
appraisal report.
19(e)(4)(ii) Relationship Between
Revised Loan Estimates and Closing
Disclosures
1. Revised Loan Estimate may not be
delivered at the same time as the
Closing Disclosure. Section
1026.19(e)(4)(ii) prohibits a creditor
from providing a revised version of the
disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(e)(1)(i) on or after the date on
which the creditor provides the
disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(f)(1)(i). Section
1026.19(e)(4)(ii) also requires that the
consumer must receive any revised
version of the disclosures required
under § 1026.19(e)(1)(i) no later than
four business days prior to
consummation, and provides that if the
revised version of the disclosures are
not provided to the consumer in person,
the consumer is considered to have
received the revised version of the
disclosures three business days after the
creditor delivers or places in the mail
the revised version of the disclosures.
See also comments 19(e)(1)(iv)–1 and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:16 May 01, 2018
Jkt 244001
–2. However, if a creditor uses a revised
estimate pursuant to § 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)
for the purpose of determining good
faith under § 1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii),
§ 1026.19(e)(4)(i) permits the creditor to
provide the revised estimate in the
disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(f)(1)(i) (including any
corrected disclosures provided under
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii)). See below for
illustrative examples:
i. If the creditor is scheduled to meet
with the consumer and provide the
disclosures required by § 1026.19(f)(1)(i)
on Wednesday, June 3, and the APR
becomes inaccurate on Tuesday, June 2,
the creditor complies with the
requirements of § 1026.19(e)(4) by
providing the disclosures required
under § 1026.19(f)(1)(i) reflecting the
revised APR on Wednesday, June 3.
However, the creditor does not comply
with the requirements of § 1026.19(e)(4)
if it provides both a revised version of
the disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(e)(1)(i) reflecting the revised
APR on Wednesday, June 3, and also
provides the disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(f)(1)(i) on Wednesday, June 3.
ii. If the creditor is scheduled to email
the disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(f)(1)(i) to the consumer on
Wednesday, June 3, and the consumer
requests a change to the loan that would
result in revised disclosures pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(C) on Tuesday, June
2, the creditor complies with the
requirements of § 1026.19(e)(4) by
providing the disclosures required
under § 1026.19(f)(1)(i) reflecting the
consumer-requested changes on
Wednesday, June 3. However, the
creditor does not comply with the
requirements of § 1026.19(e)(4) if it
provides disclosures reflecting the
consumer-requested changes using both
the revised version of the disclosures
required under § 1026.19(e)(1)(i) on
Wednesday, June 3, and also the
disclosures required under
§ 1026.19(f)(1)(i) on Wednesday, June 3.
iii. Consummation is scheduled for
Thursday, June 4. The creditor hand
delivers the disclosures required by
§ 1026.19(f)(1)(i) on Monday, June 1,
and, on Tuesday, June 2, the consumer
requests a change to the loan that would
result in revised disclosures pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(C) but would not
require a new waiting period pursuant
to § 1026.19(f)(2)(ii). Under
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(i), the creditor is required
to provide corrected disclosures
reflecting any changed terms to the
consumer so that the consumer receives
the corrected disclosures at or before
consummation. The creditor complies
with the requirements of § 1026.19(e)(4)
by hand delivering the disclosures
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
19175
required by § 1026.19(f)(2)(i) reflecting
the consumer-requested changes on
Thursday, June 4.
iv. Consummation is originally
scheduled for Wednesday, June 10. The
creditor hand delivers the disclosures
required by § 1026.19(f)(1)(i) on Friday,
June 5. On Monday, June 8, the
consumer reschedules consummation
for Wednesday, June 17. Also on
Monday, June 8, the consumer requests
a rate lock extension that would result
in revised disclosures pursuant to
§ 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(C) but would not
require a new waiting period pursuant
to § 1026.19(f)(2)(ii). The creditor
complies with the requirements of
§ 1026.19(e)(4) by delivering or placing
in the mail the disclosures required by
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(i) reflecting the
consumer-requested changes on
Thursday, June 11. Under
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(i), the creditor is required
to provide corrected disclosures
reflecting any changed terms to the
consumer so that the consumer receives
the corrected disclosures at or before
consummation. The creditor complies
with § 1026.19(f)(2)(i) by hand
delivering the disclosures on Thursday,
June 11. Alternatively, the creditor
complies with § 1026.19(f)(2)(i) by
providing the disclosures to the
consumer by mail, including by
electronic mail, on Thursday, June 11,
because the consumer is considered to
have received the corrected disclosures
on Monday, June 15 (unless the creditor
relies on evidence that the consumer
received the corrected disclosures
earlier). See § 1026.19(f)(1)(iii) and
comments 19(f)(1)(iii)–1 and –2. See
also § 1026.38(t)(3) and comment
19(f)(1)(iii)–2 regarding providing the
disclosures required by § 1026.19(f)(1)(i)
(including any corrected disclosures
provided under § 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii))
in electronic form.
v. Consummation is originally
scheduled for Wednesday, June 10. The
creditor hand delivers the disclosures
required by § 1026.19(f)(1)(i) on Friday,
June 5, and the APR becomes inaccurate
on Monday, June 8, such that the
creditor is required to delay
consummation and provide corrected
disclosures, including any other
changed terms, so that the consumer
receives them at least three business
days before consummation under
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(ii). Consummation is
rescheduled for Friday, June 12. The
creditor complies with the requirements
of § 1026.19(e)(4) by hand delivering the
disclosures required by
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(ii) reflecting the revised
APR and any other changed terms to the
consumer on Tuesday, June 9. See
§ 1026.19(f)(2)(ii) and associated
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commentary regarding changes before
consummation requiring a new waiting
period. See comment 19(e)(4)(i)–1 for
further guidance on when sufficient
information has been received to
establish an event has occurred.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: April 26, 2018.
Mick Mulvaney,
Acting Director, Bureau of Consumer
Financial Protection.
Correction
In the final special conditions
document FR Doc. 2017–06930,
published on April 7, 2017 (82 FR
16893), make the following correction:
On Federal Register page no. 16893,
second column, in two locations where
it appears, change the document’s
docket no. from FAA–2017–0126 to
FAA–2017–0190.
Issued in Renton, Washington, on April 24,
2018.
Victor Wicklund,
Manager, Transport Standards Branch, Policy
and Innovation Division, Aircraft
Certification Service.
[FR Doc. 2018–09243 Filed 5–1–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–AM–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
[FR Doc. 2018–09269 Filed 5–1–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 25
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
[Docket No. FAA–2017–0190; Special
Conditions No. 25–654–SC]
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
Special Conditions: VT DRB Aviation
Consultants, Boeing Model 777–200
Airplanes; Installation of an Airbag
System in Shoulder Belts
[Docket No. FAA–2018–0380; Product
Identifier 2018–NE–14–AD; Amendment 39–
19267; AD 2018–09–10]
RIN 2120–AA64
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final special conditions;
correction.
AGENCY:
Airworthiness Directives; CFM
International S.A. Turbofan Engines
This document corrects an
error that appeared in docket no. FAA–
2017–0126, Special Conditions No. 25–
654–SC, which was published in the
Federal Register on April 7, 2017. The
error occurs in the docket number of the
final special conditions document.
DATES: Effective Date: The effective date
of this correction is May 2, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
Shelden, FAA, Airframe and Cabin
Safety Section, AIR–675, Transport
Standards Branch, Policy and
Innovation Division, Aircraft
Certification Service, 2200 South 216th
St., Des Moines, Washington 98198;
telephone 206–231–3214; facsimile
206–231–3398.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with RULES
Background
On April 7, 2017, the Federal Register
published a document designated as
docket no. FAA–2017–0126, Final
Special Conditions No. 25–654–SC (82
FR 16893). The document, issued
special conditions pertaining to the
installation of an airbag system in
shoulder belts. As published, the
document contained an error, located in
two places, in the Federal Docket
assigned docket number.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:16 May 01, 2018
Jkt 244001
Examining the AD Docket
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY:
We are adopting a new
airworthiness directive (AD) for all CFM
International S.A. (CFM) Model
CFM56–7B engines. This AD requires
initial and repetitive inspections of the
concave and convex sides of the fan
blade dovetail to detect cracking and
replacement of any blades found
cracked. This AD was prompted by a
recent engine failure due to a fractured
fan blade, that resulted in the engine
inlet cowl disintegrating and debris
penetrating the fuselage, causing a loss
of pressurization, and prompting an
emergency descent. We are issuing this
AD to address the unsafe condition on
these products.
DATES: This AD is effective May 14,
2018.
The Director of the Federal Register
approved the incorporation by reference
of a certain publication listed in this AD
as of May 14, 2018.
We must receive comments on this
AD by June 18, 2018.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments,
using the procedures found in 14 CFR
11.43 and 11.45, by any of the following
methods:
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4700
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• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Fax: 202–493–2251.
• Mail: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations,
M–30, West Building Ground Floor,
Room W12–140, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20590.
• Hand Delivery: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations,
M–30, West Building Ground Floor,
Room W12–140, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20590,
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
For service information identified in
this final rule, contact CFM
International Inc., Aviation Operations
Center, 1 Neumann Way, M/D Room
285, Cincinnati, OH 45125; phone: 877–
432–3272; fax: 877–432–3329; email:
aviation.fleetsupport@ge.com. You may
view this service information at the
FAA, Engine and Propeller Standards
Branch, 1200 District Avenue,
Burlington, MA. For information on the
availability of this material at the FAA,
call 781–238–7759. It is also available
on the internet at https://
www.regulations.gov by searching for
and locating Docket No. FAA–2018–
0380.
You may examine the AD docket on
the internet at https://
www.regulations.gov by searching for
and locating Docket No. FAA–2018–
0380; or in person at Docket Operations
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
The AD docket contains this final rule,
the regulatory evaluation, any
comments received, and other
information. The street address for the
Docket Operations (phone: 800–647–
5527) is listed above. Comments will be
available in the AD docket shortly after
receipt.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Christopher McGuire, Aerospace
Engineer, ECO Branch, FAA, 1200
District Avenue, Burlington, MA 01803;
phone: 781–238–7120; fax: 781–238–
7199; email: chris.mcguire@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Discussion
A recent event involving an engine
failure due to a fractured fan blade
resulted in the engine inlet cowl
disintegrating and debris penetrating the
fuselage, causing a loss of
pressurization, and prompting an
emergency descent. One passenger
fatality occurred as a result. In response
to this event, the FAA issued Emergency
E:\FR\FM\02MYR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 85 (Wednesday, May 2, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 19159-19176]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-09243]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 85 / Wednesday, May 2, 2018 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 19159]]
BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION
12 CFR Part 1026
[Docket No. CFPB-2017-0018]
RIN 3170-AA71
Federal Mortgage Disclosure Requirements Under the Truth in
Lending Act (Regulation Z)
AGENCY: Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.
ACTION: Final rule; official interpretation.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (Bureau) is
amending Federal mortgage disclosure requirements under the Real Estate
Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) and the Truth in Lending Act (TILA)
that are implemented in Regulation Z. The amendments relate to when a
creditor may compare charges paid by or imposed on the consumer to
amounts disclosed on a Closing Disclosure, instead of a Loan Estimate,
to determine if an estimated closing cost was disclosed in good faith.
DATES: The final rule is effective June 1, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Shaakira Gold-Ramirez, Paralegal
Specialist, Pedro De Oliveira, David Friend, and Priscilla Walton-Fein,
Senior Counsels, Office of Regulations, Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection, at 202-435-7700 or https://reginquiries.consumerfinance.gov/. If you require this document in an
alternative electronic format, please contact
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Summary of the Final Rule
The TILA-RESPA Rule \1\ requires creditors to provide consumers
with good faith estimates of the loan terms and closing costs required
to be disclosed on a Loan Estimate. Under the rule, an estimated
closing cost is disclosed in good faith if the charge paid by or
imposed on the consumer does not exceed the amount originally
disclosed, subject to certain exceptions.\2\ In some circumstances,
creditors may use revised estimates, instead of the estimate originally
disclosed to the consumer, to compare to the charges actually paid by
or imposed on the consumer for purposes of determining whether an
estimated closing cost was disclosed in good faith. If the conditions
for using such revised estimates are met, the creditor generally may
provide revised estimates on a revised Loan Estimate or, in certain
circumstances, on a Closing Disclosure. However, under the current
rule, circumstances may arise in which a cost increases but the
creditor is unable to use an otherwise permissible revised estimate on
either a Loan Estimate or a Closing Disclosure for purposes of
determining whether an estimated closing cost was disclosed in good
faith. This situation, which may arise when the creditor has already
provided a Closing Disclosure to the consumer when it learns about the
cost increase, occurs because of the intersection of timing rules
regarding the provision of revised estimates. This has been referred to
in industry as a ``gap'' or ``black hole'' in the TILA-RESPA Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ In November 2013, pursuant to sections 1098 and 1100A of the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-
Frank Act), the Bureau issued the Integrated Mortgage Disclosures
under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (Regulation X) and
the Truth in Lending Act (Regulation Z) (2013 TILA-RESPA Final
Rule), combining certain disclosures that consumers receive in
connection with applying for and closing on a mortgage loan into two
new forms: The Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure. 78 FR 79730
(Dec. 31, 2013). The Bureau has since finalized amendments to the
2013 TILA-RESPA Final Rule, including in January and July of 2015
and in July of 2017. See 80 FR 8767 (Feb. 19, 2015) (January 2015
Amendments); 80 FR 43911 (July 24, 2015) (July 2015 Amendments); 82
FR 37656 (Aug. 11, 2017) (July 2017 Amendments). The 2013 TILA-RESPA
Final Rule and subsequent amendments to that rule are referred to
collectively herein as the TILA-RESPA Rule.
\2\ 12 CFR 1026.19(e)(3)(i). Those exceptions are listed in
Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(ii) through (iv).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Bureau understands that these circumstances have led to
uncertainty in the market and created implementation challenges that
may have consequences for both consumers and creditors. If creditors
cannot pass increased costs to consumers in the specific transactions
where the costs arise, creditors may spread the costs across all
consumers by pricing their loan products with added margins. The Bureau
also understands that some creditors may be denying applications, even
after providing the Closing Disclosure, in some circumstances where the
creditor cannot pass otherwise permissible cost increases directly to
affected consumers, which can have negative effects for those
consumers. For these reasons, in July 2017, the Bureau proposed to
address the issue by specifically providing that creditors may use
Closing Disclosures to reflect changes in costs for purposes of
determining if an estimated closing cost was disclosed in good faith,
regardless of when the Closing Disclosure is provided relative to
consummation (2017 Proposal or ``the proposal'').\3\ The Bureau is
finalizing those amendments as proposed, with minor clarifying changes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ 82 FR 37794 (Aug. 11, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Background
In Dodd-Frank Act sections 1032(f), 1098, and 1100A, Congress
directed the Bureau to integrate certain mortgage loan disclosures
under TILA and RESPA.\4\ The Bureau issued proposed integrated
disclosure forms and rules for comment on July 9, 2012 (2012 TILA-RESPA
Proposal) \5\ and issued the 2013 TILA-RESPA Final Rule on November 20,
2013. The rule included model forms, samples illustrating the use of
those forms for different types of loans, and Official Interpretations,
which provided authoritative guidance explaining the new disclosures.
The 2013 TILA-RESPA Final Rule took effect on October 3, 2015.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2007, 2103-04, 2107-09
(2010).
\5\ 77 FR 51116 (Aug. 23, 2012).
\6\ The rule had an initial effective date of August 1, 2015. 78
FR 79730, 80071 (Dec. 31, 2013). However, the Bureau ultimately
extended that effective date another two months, to October 3, 2015,
in a subsequent rulemaking. 80 FR 43911 (July 24, 2015).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Bureau has provided resources to support implementation of the
TILA-RESPA Rule.\7\ The Bureau has also stated its commitment to be
sensitive to the good faith efforts made by institutions to come into
compliance. In addition, since the promulgation of the 2013 TILA-RESPA
Final Rule, the
[[Page 19160]]
Bureau has made various amendments to facilitate compliance. Most
recently, the Bureau finalized the July 2017 Amendments, which
memorialized the Bureau's informal guidance on various issues, made
clarifying and technical amendments, and also made a limited number of
substantive changes where the Bureau identified discrete solutions to
specific implementation challenges. Concurrently with the July 2017
Amendments, the Bureau issued the 2017 Proposal to address an
additional implementation issue regarding when a creditor may compare
charges paid by or imposed on the consumer to amounts disclosed on a
Closing Disclosure to determine if an estimated closing cost was
disclosed in good faith.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ The Bureau's implementation resources can be found on the
Bureau's website at www.consumerfinance.gov/regulatory-implementation/tila-respa.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Comments
The Bureau issued the 2017 Proposal on July 6, 2017, and it was
published in the Federal Register on August 11, 2017. In response to
the 2017 Proposal, the Bureau received 43 unique comments from industry
commenters (including trade associations, creditors, and industry
representatives), a consumer advocate group, and others. As discussed
below, the Bureau has considered the comments in adopting this final
rule.
IV. Legal Authority
The Bureau is issuing this final rule pursuant to its authority
under TILA, RESPA, and the Dodd-Frank Act, including the authorities
discussed below. In general, the provisions of Regulation Z that this
final rule amends were previously adopted by the Bureau in the TILA-
RESPA Rule. In doing so, the Bureau relied on one or more of the
authorities discussed below, as well as other authority. The Bureau is
issuing this final rule in reliance on the same authority and for the
same reasons relied on in adopting the relevant provisions of the TILA-
RESPA Rule, which are described in detail in the Legal Authority and
Section-by-Section Analysis parts of the 2013 TILA-RESPA Final Rule and
January 2015 Amendments, respectively.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ 78 FR 79730, 79753-56, 79834-37 (Dec. 31, 2013); 80 FR 8767,
8768-70 (Feb. 19, 2015).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. The Integrated Disclosure Mandate
Section 1032(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act required the Bureau to
propose, for public comment, rules and model disclosures combining the
disclosures required under TILA and sections 4 and 5 of RESPA into a
single, integrated disclosure for mortgage loan transactions covered by
those laws, unless the Bureau determined that any proposal issued by
the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board) and the
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) carried out the same
purpose.\9\ In addition, the Dodd-Frank Act amended section 105(b) of
TILA and section 4(a) of RESPA to require the integration of the TILA
disclosures and the disclosures required by sections 4 and 5 of
RESPA.\10\ The purpose of the integrated disclosure is to facilitate
compliance with the disclosure requirements of TILA and RESPA and to
improve borrower understanding of the transaction. The Bureau provided
additional discussion of this integrated disclosure mandate in the 2013
TILA-RESPA Final Rule.\11\
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\9\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2007 (2010) (codified at
12 U.S.C. 5532(f)).
\10\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2108 (2010) (codified
at 15 U.S.C. 1604(b)); Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2103
(2010) (codified at 12 U.S.C. 2603(a)).
\11\ 78 FR 79730, 79753-54 (Dec. 31, 2013).
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B. Truth in Lending Act
TILA section 105(a). As amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, TILA section
105(a) \12\ directs the Bureau to prescribe regulations to carry out
the purposes of TILA and provides that such regulations may contain
additional requirements, classifications, differentiations, or other
provisions and may further provide for such adjustments and exceptions
for all or any class of transactions that the Bureau judges are
necessary or proper to effectuate the purposes of TILA, to prevent
circumvention or evasion thereof, or to facilitate compliance
therewith. A purpose of TILA is to assure a meaningful disclosure of
credit terms so that the consumer will be able to compare more readily
the various available credit terms and avoid the uninformed use of
credit.\13\ In enacting TILA, Congress found that economic
stabilization would be enhanced and the competition among the various
financial institutions and other firms engaged in the extension of
consumer credit would be strengthened by the informed use of
credit.\14\ Strengthened competition among financial institutions is a
goal of TILA, achieved through the meaningful disclosure of credit
terms.\15\ For the reasons discussed below and in the TILA-RESPA Rule,
the Bureau finalizes these amendments pursuant to its authority under
TILA section 105(a). The Bureau believes the finalized amendments
effectuate the purpose of TILA under TILA section 102(a) of meaningful
disclosure of credit terms to consumers and facilitate compliance with
the statute by clarifying when particular disclosures may be provided.
The Bureau also believes that the final rule furthers TILA's goals by
ensuring more reliable estimates, which foster competition among
financial institutions. In addition, the Bureau believes the final rule
will prevent circumvention or evasion of TILA.
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\12\ 15 U.S.C. 1604(a).
\13\ 15 U.S.C. 1601(a).
\14\ Id.
\15\ The Bureau provided additional discussion of the history of
TILA section 105(a) and its interaction with the provisions of TILA
section 129 that apply to high-cost mortgages in the 2013 TILA-RESPA
Final Rule. As the Bureau explained, the Bureau's authority under
TILA section 105(a) to make adjustments and exceptions applies to
all transactions subject to TILA, including high-cost mortgages,
except with respect to the provisions of TILA section 129 that apply
uniquely to such high-cost mortgages. 78 FR 79730, 79754 (Dec. 31,
2013).
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TILA section 129B(e). Dodd-Frank Act section 1405(a) amended TILA
to add new section 129B(e).\16\ That section authorizes the Bureau to
prohibit or condition terms, acts, or practices relating to residential
mortgage loans that the Bureau finds to be abusive, unfair, deceptive,
predatory, necessary, or proper to ensure that responsible, affordable
mortgage credit remains available to consumers in a manner consistent
with the purposes of sections 129B and 129C of TILA, to prevent
circumvention or evasion thereof, or to facilitate compliance with such
sections, or are not in the interest of the borrower. In developing
rules under TILA section 129B(e), the Bureau has considered whether the
rules are in the interest of the borrower, as required by the statute.
For the reasons discussed below and in the TILA-RESPA Rule, the Bureau
finalizes these amendments pursuant to its authority under TILA section
129B(e). The Bureau believes this final rule is consistent with TILA
section 129B(e).
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\16\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2141 (2010) (codified
at 15 U.S.C. 1639B(e)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act Section 19(a)
Section 19(a) of RESPA authorizes the Bureau to prescribe such
rules and regulations and to make such interpretations and grant such
reasonable exemptions for classes of transactions as may be necessary
to achieve the purposes of RESPA.\17\ One purpose of RESPA is to effect
certain changes in the settlement process for residential real estate
that will result in more effective advance disclosure to home buyers
and sellers of settlement costs.\18\ In addition, in enacting RESPA,
Congress found that consumers are entitled to greater and more timely
[[Page 19161]]
information on the nature and costs of the settlement process and to be
protected from unnecessarily high settlement charges caused by certain
abusive practices in some areas of the country.\19\ In developing rules
under RESPA section 19(a), the Bureau has considered the purposes of
RESPA, including to effect certain changes in the settlement process
that will result in more effective advance disclosure of settlement
costs. The Bureau finalizes these amendments pursuant to its authority
under RESPA section 19(a). For the reasons discussed below and in the
TILA-RESPA Rule, the Bureau believes the final rule is consistent with
the purposes of RESPA by fostering more effective advance disclosure to
home buyers and sellers of settlement costs.
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\17\ 12 U.S.C. 2617(a).
\18\ 12 U.S.C. 2601(b).
\19\ Id. at 2601(a). In the past, RESPA section 19(a) has served
as a broad source of authority to prescribe disclosures and
substantive requirements to carry out the purposes of RESPA.
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D. Dodd-Frank Act
Dodd-Frank Act section 1032. Section 1032(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act
provides that the Bureau may prescribe rules to ensure that the
features of any consumer financial product or service, both initially
and over the term of the product or service, are fully, accurately, and
effectively disclosed to consumers in a manner that permits consumers
to understand the costs, benefits, and risks associated with the
product or service, in light of the facts and circumstances.\20\ The
authority granted to the Bureau in section 1032(a) is broad and
empowers the Bureau to prescribe rules regarding the disclosure of the
features of consumer financial products and services generally.
Accordingly, the Bureau may prescribe rules containing disclosure
requirements even if other Federal consumer financial laws do not
specifically require disclosure of such features. Dodd-Frank Act
section 1032(c) provides that, in prescribing rules pursuant to section
1032, the Bureau shall consider available evidence about consumer
awareness, understanding of, and responses to disclosures or
communications about the risks, costs, and benefits of consumer
financial products or services.\21\ Accordingly, in developing the
TILA-RESPA Rule under Dodd-Frank Act section 1032(a), the Bureau
considered available studies, reports, and other evidence about
consumer awareness, understanding of, and responses to disclosures or
communications about the risks, costs, and benefits of consumer
financial products or services. Moreover, the Bureau considered the
evidence developed through its consumer testing of the integrated
disclosures as well as prior testing done by the Board and HUD
regarding TILA and RESPA disclosures. See part III of the 2013 TILA-
RESPA Final Rule for a discussion of the Bureau's consumer testing.\22\
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\20\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2006-07 (2010)
(codified at 12 U.S.C. 5532(a)).
\21\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2007 (2010) (codified
at 12 U.S.C. 5532(c)).
\22\ 78 FR 79730, 79743-50 (Dec. 31, 2013).
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The Bureau finalizes these amendments pursuant to its authority
under Dodd-Frank Act section 1032(a). For the reasons discussed below
and in the TILA-RESPA Rule, the Bureau believes that the final rule is
consistent with Dodd-Frank Act section 1032(a) because it promotes
full, accurate, and effective disclosure of the features of consumer
credit transactions secured by real property in a manner that permits
consumers to understand the costs, benefits, and risks associated with
the product or service, in light of the facts and circumstances.
Dodd-Frank Act section 1405(b). Section 1405(b) of the Dodd-Frank
Act provides that, notwithstanding any other provision of title XIV of
the Dodd-Frank Act, in order to improve consumer awareness and
understanding of transactions involving residential mortgage loans
through the use of disclosures, the Bureau may exempt from or modify
disclosure requirements, in whole or in part, for any class of
residential mortgage loans if the Bureau determines that such exemption
or modification is in the interest of consumers and in the public
interest.\23\ Section 1401 of the Dodd-Frank Act, which amends TILA
section 103(cc)(5), generally defines a residential mortgage loan as
any consumer credit transaction that is secured by a mortgage on a
dwelling or on residential real property that includes a dwelling,
other than an open-end credit plan or an extension of credit secured by
a consumer's interest in a timeshare plan.\24\ Notably, the authority
granted by section 1405(b) applies to disclosure requirements generally
and is not limited to a specific statute or statutes. Accordingly,
Dodd-Frank Act section 1405(b) is a broad source of authority to exempt
from or modify the disclosure requirements of TILA and RESPA. In
developing rules for residential mortgage loans under Dodd-Frank Act
section 1405(b), the Bureau has considered the purposes of improving
consumer awareness and understanding of transactions involving
residential mortgage loans through the use of disclosures and the
interests of consumers and the public. The Bureau finalizes these
amendments pursuant to its authority under Dodd-Frank Act section
1405(b). For the reasons discussed below and in the TILA-RESPA Rule,
the Bureau believes the final rule is in the interest of consumers and
in the public interest, consistent with Dodd-Frank Act section 1405(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2142 (2010) (codified
at 15 U.S.C. 1601 note).
\24\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376, 2138 (2010) (codified
at 15 U.S.C. 1602(cc)(5)).
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V. Section-by-Section Analysis
Section 1026.19 Certain Mortgage and Variable-Rate Transactions
19(e) Mortgage Loans--Early Disclosures
19(e)(4) Provision and Receipt of Revised Disclosures
The 2013 TILA-RESPA Final Rule combined certain disclosures that
consumers receive in connection with applying for and closing on a
mortgage loan into two new, integrated forms. The first new form, the
Loan Estimate, replaced the RESPA Good Faith Estimate and the early
Truth in Lending disclosure. The rule requires creditors to deliver or
place in the mail the Loan Estimate no later than three business days
after the consumer submits a loan application.\25\ The second form, the
Closing Disclosure, replaced the HUD-1 Settlement Statement and the
final Truth in Lending disclosure. The rule requires creditors to
ensure that consumers receive the Closing Disclosure at least three
business days before consummation.\26\
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\25\ 12 CFR 1026.19(e)(1)(iii).
\26\ Id. at Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 1026.19(e)(1)(i) of the 2013 TILA-RESPA Final Rule requires
creditors to provide consumers with good faith estimates of the
disclosures required in Sec. 1026.37, which describes the loan terms
and closing costs required to be disclosed on the Loan Estimate. Under
Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(i), an estimated closing cost is disclosed in good
faith if the charge paid by or imposed on the consumer does not exceed
the amount originally disclosed, except as otherwise provided in Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(ii) through (iv). Section 1026.19(e)(3)(ii) provides that
estimates for certain third-party services and recording fees are in
good faith if the sum of all such charges paid by or imposed on the
consumer does not exceed the sum of all such charges disclosed on the
Loan Estimate by more
[[Page 19162]]
than 10 percent.\27\ Section 1026.19(e)(3)(iii) further provides that
certain other estimates are disclosed in good faith so long as they are
consistent with the best information reasonably available to the
creditor at the time they are disclosed, regardless of whether and by
how much the amount paid by the consumer exceeds the disclosed
estimate.\28\ The allowed variances between estimated closing costs and
the actual amounts paid by or imposed on the consumer are referred to
as tolerances.
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\27\ This section also requires that, for the 10 percent
tolerance to apply, the charge for the third-party service must not
be paid to the creditor or an affiliate of the creditor and the
creditor must permit the consumer to shop for the third-party
service, consistent with Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(vi). See 12 CFR
1026.19(e)(3)(ii)(B)-(C).
\28\ Section 1026.19(e)(3)(iii) provides that an estimate of the
following charges is in good faith if it is consistent with the best
information reasonably available to the creditor at the time it is
disclosed, regardless of whether the amount paid by the consumer
exceeds the amount originally disclosed: (1) Prepaid interest; (2)
property insurance premiums; (3) amounts placed into an escrow,
impound, reserve, or similar account; (4) charges paid to third-
party service providers selected by the consumer consistent with
Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(vi)(A) that are not on the list provided
pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(vi)(C); and (5) property taxes and
other charges paid for third-party services not required by the
creditor.
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Section 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) permits creditors, in certain limited
circumstances, to use revised estimates of charges, instead of the
estimate of charges originally disclosed to the consumer, to compare to
the charges actually paid by or imposed on the consumer for purposes of
determining whether an estimated closing cost was disclosed in good
faith pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii) (i.e., determining
whether the actual charge exceeds the allowed tolerance).\29\ The
provision of such revised estimates is referred to herein as resetting
tolerances. The circumstances under which creditors may reset
tolerances are: (1) A defined set of changed circumstances that cause
estimated charges to increase or, in the case of certain estimated
charges, cause the aggregate amount of such charges to increase by more
than 10 percent; \30\ (2) the consumer is ineligible for an estimated
charge previously disclosed because of a changed circumstance that
affects the consumer's creditworthiness or the value of the property
securing the transaction; (3) the consumer requests revisions to the
credit terms or the settlement that cause an estimated charge to
increase; (4) points or lender credits change because the interest rate
was not locked when the Loan Estimate was provided; (5) the consumer
indicates an intent to proceed with the transaction more than 10
business days, or more than any additional number of days specified by
the creditor before the offer expires, after the Loan Estimate was
provided to the consumer; and (6) the loan is a construction loan that
is not expected to close until more than 60 days after the Loan
Estimate has been provided to the consumer and the creditor clearly and
conspicuously states that a revised disclosure may be issued.
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\29\ The creditor is required to retain evidence that it
performed the required actions as well as made the required
disclosures under Regulation Z, which includes evidence that the
creditor properly documented the reasons for the use of revised
estimates of charges. See Sec. 1026.25(c)(1) and comment 25(c)(1)-
1.
\30\ Changed circumstance means: (1) An extraordinary event
beyond the control of any interested party or other unexpected event
specific to the consumer or transaction; (2) information specific to
the consumer or transaction that the creditor relied upon when
providing the Loan Estimate and that was inaccurate or changed after
the disclosures were provided; or (3) new information specific to
the consumer or transaction that the creditor did not rely on when
providing the original Loan Estimate. 12 CFR 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(A).
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Section 1026.19(e)(4) contains rules for the provision and receipt
of revised estimates used to reset tolerances. Section 1026.19(e)(4)(i)
provides the general rule that, subject to the requirements of Sec.
1026.19(e)(4)(ii), if a creditor uses a revised estimate to determine
good faith (i.e., to reset tolerances), the creditor shall provide a
Loan Estimate reflecting the revised estimate within three business
days of receiving information sufficient to establish that a
permissible reason for revision applies. Section 1026.19(e)(4)(ii)
imposes timing restrictions on the provision of revised Loan Estimates.
Specifically, Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) states that the creditor shall
not provide a revised Loan Estimate on or after the date on which the
creditor provides the Closing Disclosure. Section 1026.19(e)(4)(ii)
also provides that the consumer must receive any revised Loan Estimate
not later than four business days prior to consummation.
Regulation Z therefore limits creditors' ability to provide revised
Loan Estimates relative to the provision of the Closing Disclosure and
to consummation. In issuing the 2013 TILA-RESPA Final Rule, the Bureau
explained that it was aware of cases where creditors provided revised
RESPA Good Faith Estimates at the real estate closing, along with the
HUD-1 settlement statement.\31\ The Bureau was concerned that the
practice of providing both good faith estimates of closing costs and an
actual statement of closing costs at the same time could be confusing
for consumers and could diminish their awareness and understanding of
the transaction. The Bureau was also concerned about consumers
receiving seemingly duplicative disclosures that could contribute to
information overload. For this reason, the Bureau adopted the provision
of Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) that prohibits creditors from providing
revised Loan Estimates on or after the date the creditor provides the
Closing Disclosure. The Bureau adopted the provision of Sec.
1026.19(e)(4)(ii) that requires that consumers receive the revised Loan
Estimate not later than four business days prior to consummation to
ensure that consumers do not receive a revised Loan Estimate on the
same date as the Closing Disclosure in cases where the revised Loan
Estimate is not provided to the consumer in person.
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\31\ 78 FR 79730, 79836 (Dec. 31, 2013).
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Comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1 clarifies when creditors may reset
tolerances with a Closing Disclosure instead of with a revised Loan
Estimate. Specifically, the comment explains that if there are fewer
than four business days between the time the revised version of the
disclosures is required to be provided pursuant to Sec.
1026.19(e)(4)(i) (i.e., within three business days of receiving
information sufficient to establish a reason for revision) and
consummation, creditors can reflect revised disclosures to reset
tolerances on the Closing Disclosure. This is referred to herein as the
``four-business day limit.''
Although the Bureau originally proposed commentary in 2012 that
would have stated that creditors may reflect the revised disclosures on
the Closing Disclosure, without regard to the timing of consummation,
the 2013 TILA-RESPA Final Rule contained the four-business day
limit.\32\ As stated in the 2017 Proposal, the Bureau now understands
that there is significant confusion in the market and that the four-
business day limit has caused situations where creditors cannot provide
either a revised Loan Estimate or Closing Disclosure to reset
tolerances even if a reason for revision under Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)
would otherwise permit the creditor to reset tolerances. In particular,
the Bureau understands that this situation may occur if the creditor
has already provided the Closing Disclosure and an event occurs or a
consumer requests a change that causes an increase in closing costs
that
[[Page 19163]]
would be a reason for revision under Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv), but there
are four or more days between the time the revised disclosures would be
required to be provided pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and
consummation. This situation may occur if there was also a delay in the
scheduled consummation date after the initial Closing Disclosure is
provided to the consumer.
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\32\ See proposed comment 19(e)(4)-2 at 77 FR 51116, 51426 (Aug.
23, 2012) (``Creditors comply with the requirements of Sec.
1026.19(e)(4) if the revised disclosures are reflected in the
disclosures required by Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i).'').
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This situation can arise because of the intersection of various
timing rules regarding the provision of revised estimates to reset
tolerances. As noted, Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) prohibits creditors from
providing Loan Estimates on or after the date on which the creditor
provides the Closing Disclosure. In many cases, this limitation would
not create issues for creditors because current comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1
explains that creditors may reflect revised estimates on a Closing
Disclosure to reset tolerances if there are less than four business
days between the time the revised version of the disclosures is
required to be provided pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and
consummation. But there is no similar provision that explicitly
provides that creditors may use a Closing Disclosure to reflect the
revised estimates if there are four or more business days between the
time the revised version of the disclosures is required to be provided
pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and consummation.
The 2016 Proposal
On July 28, 2016, the Bureau proposed clarifications and technical
amendments to the TILA-RESPA Rule, along with several proposed
substantive changes (2016 Proposal).\33\ In the 2016 Proposal, the
Bureau proposed comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-2 to clarify that creditors may
use corrected Closing Disclosures provided under Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i)
or (ii) (in addition to the initial Closing Disclosure) to reflect
changes in costs that will be used to reset tolerances.\34\ As
discussed above, existing comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1 clarifies that
creditors may reflect revised estimates on the Closing Disclosure to
reset tolerances if there are less than four business days between the
time the revised version of the disclosures is required to be provided
pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and consummation. Although comment
19(e)(4)(ii)-1 expressly references only the Closing Disclosure
required by Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i), the Bureau had stated in informal
guidance that the provision also applies to corrected Closing
Disclosures provided pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii). The
Bureau proposed comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-2 in the 2016 Proposal to clarify
this point.
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\33\ 81 FR 54317 (Aug. 15, 2016).
\34\ Id. at 54334.
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However, some commenters to the 2016 Proposal interpreted proposed
comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-2 as allowing creditors to use corrected Closing
Disclosures to reset tolerances regardless of when consummation is
expected to occur, as long as the creditor provides the corrected
Closing Disclosure within three business days of receiving information
sufficient to establish a reason for revision applies pursuant to Sec.
1029.19(e)(4)(i). Under this interpretation, the four-business day
limit would still apply to resetting tolerances with the initial
Closing Disclosure, but would not apply to resetting tolerances with a
corrected Closing Disclosure. Commenters were not uniform in their
interpretation of proposed comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-2. Commenters who
interpreted proposed comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-2 as removing the four-
business day limit as it applies to corrected Closing Disclosures were
generally supportive, citing uncertainty about the proper
interpretation of current rules and stating that the timing rules
regarding resetting tolerances with a Closing Disclosure are
unworkable. Many commenters perceived that proposed comment
19(e)(4)(ii)-2 would resolve these issues because they interpreted it
as allowing creditors to use corrected Closing Disclosures to reset
tolerances even if there are four or more business days between the
time the revised version of the disclosures is required to be provided
pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and consummation. Some commenters
who interpreted the proposed comment in this way supported it, but also
cautioned about unintended consequences. For example, some commenters
stated that eliminating the four-business day limit for corrected
Closing Disclosures might remove a disincentive that currently exists
under the rule from providing the initial Closing Disclosure extremely
early in the mortgage origination process, which these commenters
stated would not be consistent with the Bureau's intent that the
Closing Disclosure be a statement of actual costs.
The 2017 Proposal
The Bureau did not finalize proposed comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-2 as part
of the July 2017 Amendments. Instead, the Bureau issued the 2017
Proposal to amend Sec. 1026.19(e)(4) and associated commentary to
expressly remove the four-business day limit for providing Closing
Disclosures for purposes of resetting tolerances and determining if an
estimated closing cost was disclosed in good faith. The Bureau issued
the 2017 Proposal in light of comments received in response to the 2016
Proposal and prior outreach indicating that timing rules regarding
resetting tolerances with Closing Disclosures have led to uncertainty
in the market and created implementation challenges that could have
unintended consequences for both consumers and creditors, as explained
above.
Consistent with current comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1, the proposal would
have allowed creditors to reset tolerances by providing a Closing
Disclosure (including any corrected disclosures provided under Sec.
1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii)) within three business days of receiving
information sufficient to establish that a reason for revision applies.
Unlike current comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1, however, the proposal would not
have restricted the creditor's ability to reset tolerances with a
Closing Disclosure to the period of less than four business days
between the time the revised version of the disclosures is required to
be provided pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and consummation.
In the proposal, the Bureau explained that it believes that, in
most cases in which a creditor learns about cost increases that are a
permissible reason to reset tolerances, the creditor will not yet have
provided a Closing Disclosure to the consumer. The proposal explained
that, to the extent there is a cost increase of a type that would allow
tolerances to be reset, the Bureau expects that creditors will
typically provide a revised Loan Estimate (and not a Closing
Disclosure) for the purpose of resetting tolerances and that these
revised Loan Estimates will be used in determining good faith under
Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii). However, there are circumstances in
which creditors will instead reset tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure. For example, the proposal noted that events that can affect
closing costs may occur close to the time of consummation, even after
the initial Closing Disclosure has been provided to the consumer. The
proposal also noted that events may result in consummation being
delayed past the time that was expected when the creditor provided the
Closing Disclosure to the consumer. Some events can both affect closing
costs and lead to a delay in consummation. These events may be outside
the control of the creditor and, in some cases, requested by the
consumer. The proposal cited as examples weather-related events that
delay closing and lead to additional appraisal or inspection costs or
illness by a buyer or seller that could delay closing and lead to the
imposition of
[[Page 19164]]
additional costs, such as a rate lock extension fee. In these
circumstances, creditors may wish to reset tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure even outside the time permitted by the four-business day
limit. If creditors cannot pass these increased costs to consumers in
the specific transactions where they arise, creditors may spread the
costs across all consumers by pricing their loan products with added
margins. The proposal also noted that some creditors may be seeking
other ways to avoid absorbing these unexpected costs, such as denying
applications from consumers, even after providing the consumer a
Closing Disclosure.
For these reasons, the Bureau proposed to allow creditors to reset
tolerances using a Closing Disclosure without regard to the four-
business day limit. Under the proposal, as under the current rule, to
reset tolerances with a Closing Disclosure, creditors would have been
required to provide the Closing Disclosure to the consumer within three
business days of receiving information sufficient to establish that a
reason for revision applies. Further, as under the current rule,
creditors would have been allowed to reset tolerances only under the
limited circumstances described in Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv).
The proposal would have removed the four-business day limit for
resetting tolerances with both initial and corrected Closing
Disclosures. The proposal cited two reasons for this approach. First,
the proposal noted a concern that applying the four-business day limit
to initial Closing Disclosures but not corrected Closing Disclosures
could incentivize creditors to provide consumers with initial Closing
Disclosures very early in the lending process, which in some
circumstances might be inconsistent with the description of the Closing
Disclosure as a ``statement of the final loan terms and closing
costs,'' \35\ and the requirement under Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i) that the
disclosures on the Closing Disclosure are to be a statement of ``the
actual terms of the transaction.'' Second, the proposal noted that
applying the four-business day limit to initial Closing Disclosures but
not corrected Closing Disclosures could create operational challenges
and burden for creditors.
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\35\ 12 CFR 1026.38(a)(2).
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Accordingly, the Bureau proposed to amend Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i) to
provide that, subject to the requirements of Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(ii),
if a creditor uses a revised estimate pursuant to Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(iv) for the purpose of determining good faith under Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii), the creditor shall provide a revised version
of the disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(i) or the
disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i) (including any
corrected disclosures provided under Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii))
reflecting the revised estimate within three business days of receiving
information sufficient to establish that one of the reasons for
revision applies.
The Bureau also proposed to amend comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1 to remove
the reference to the four-business day limit, for consistency with the
proposed amendments to Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i). In addition, the
proposal would have amended the comment to provide two additional
examples that further clarify how creditors may provide revised
estimates on Closing Disclosures in lieu of Loan Estimates for purposes
of determining good faith. The Bureau also proposed conforming
amendments to the heading of Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) and to comments
19(e)(1)(ii)-1 and 19(e)(4)(i)-1 in light of these proposed amendments.
Finally, the proposal would have made several changes to Sec.
1026.19(e)(4) and its commentary to reflect amendments to the rule made
by the January 2015 Amendments regarding interest rate dependent
charges. Section 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D), as adopted by the 2013 TILA-
RESPA Final Rule, previously required creditors to provide the consumer
with a revised disclosure with the revised interest rate, the points
disclosed pursuant to Sec. 1026.37(f)(1), lender credits, and any
other interest rate dependent charges and terms on the date the
interest rate is locked. The January 2015 Amendments changed Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D) to provide creditors with more time (three
business days) to provide the revised disclosures. This amendment
harmonized the timing requirement in Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D) with
other timing requirements for providing a revised Loan Estimate adopted
in the 2013 TILA-RESPA Final Rule and addressed operational challenges
associated with the prior requirement that gave creditors less time to
provide revised disclosures regarding interest rate dependent charges.
To implement this change, the Bureau revised Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D)
to state that, no later than three business days after the date the
interest rate is locked, the creditor shall provide a revised version
of the disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(i) to the
consumer with the revised interest rate, the points disclosed pursuant
to Sec. 1026.37(f)(1), lender credits, and any other interest rate
dependent charges and terms. In the January 2015 Amendments, the Bureau
also adopted modified versions of proposed comments 19(e)(3)(iv)(D)-1
and 19(e)(4)(i)-2 to reflect that change. To further reflect the
changes made by the January 2015 Amendments to Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D), the Bureau proposed to amend Sec.
1026.19(e)(4)(i) and comment 19(e)(4)(i)-1. The Bureau also proposed to
remove existing comment 19(e)(4)(i)-2, regarding the relationship to
Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D), which the proposal stated may no longer be
necessary.
The Bureau solicited comment on several specific issues related to
the proposal, including on the extent to which the four-business day
limit has caused situations where creditors cannot provide either a
revised Loan Estimate or Closing Disclosure to reset tolerances even if
a reason for revision under Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) would otherwise
permit the creditor to reset tolerances. The Bureau requested
information on the frequency and the cause of such occurrences and on
the average costs and the nature of such costs associated with such
occurrences.
The Bureau also requested information that would assist in
evaluating potential consequences of the proposal. In particular, some
commenters in response to the 2016 Proposal expressed concern that
removal of the four-business day limit could result in some creditors
providing Closing Disclosures very early in the lending process and
that doing so could have negative effects on some consumers. The
proposal noted the Bureau's understanding that some creditors currently
provide the Closing Disclosure to consumers so early in the process
that the terms and costs are nearly certain to be revised. Commenters
stated in response to the 2016 Proposal that eliminating the four-
business day limit for resetting tolerances with a Closing Disclosure
could remove a disincentive to providing Closing Disclosures before
final terms and costs are reliably available (i.e., under the current
rule, waiting to provide the Closing Disclosure until close to the time
of consummation decreases, to some extent, the likelihood of a timing
issue arising with respect to resetting tolerances with corrected
Closing Disclosures). Accordingly, the Bureau requested comment on the
extent to which creditors are providing Closing Disclosures to
consumers so that they are received substantially before the required
three business days prior to consummation with terms and costs that are
nearly certain to be revised. The Bureau requested comment on the
number of business days before consummation consumers are receiving
[[Page 19165]]
the Closing Disclosure and whether creditors are issuing corrected
Closing Disclosures pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(f)(2). In addition, the
Bureau requested comment on the extent to which creditors might change
their practices regarding provision of the Closing Disclosure if the
proposal to remove the four-business day limit is adopted. The Bureau
also requested comment on potential harms to consumers where creditors
provide Closing Disclosures to consumers so that they are received more
than the required three business days prior to consummation with terms
and costs that are nearly certain to be revised. The Bureau
additionally requested comment on whether it should consider adopting
measures to prevent such harms in a future rulemaking.
The Bureau also requested comment on other potential consequences
that might result from removing the four-business day limit that
applies to resetting tolerances with a Closing Disclosure. For example,
compared to current rules, the proposed changes could allow creditors
to pass more costs on to consumers. The Bureau solicited comment on
whether the circumstances for resetting tolerances in Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(iv) provide sufficient protection against potential
consumer harm or whether additional limitations are appropriate for
resetting tolerances after the issuance of a Closing Disclosure. For
example, the Bureau requested comment on whether it would be
appropriate to allow creditors to reset tolerances with a corrected
Closing Disclosure in circumstances that are more limited than those
described in Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) (for example, only when the
increased costs result from a consumer request or unforeseeable event,
such as a natural disaster). The Bureau also requested comment on
whether the rule should be more restrictive with respect to resetting
tolerances with a corrected Closing Disclosure for certain third-party
costs (such as appraisal fees) and creditor fees (such as interest rate
lock extension fees) and the types of costs and fees that might be
subject to any more restrictive rules. The Bureau also requested
comment on whether removing the four-business day limit might result in
confusion or information overload to the consumer as a result of
receiving more corrected Closing Disclosures. The Bureau requested
comment on additional consumer protections that might be appropriate to
promote the purposes of the disclosures or prevent circumvention or
evasion and additional potential consumer harms the Bureau had not
identified.
Comments
The Bureau received 43 unique comments from industry commenters
(including trade associations, creditors, and industry
representatives), a consumer advocate group, and others. Most industry
commenters supported the proposal to remove the four-business day
limit. These commenters generally stated that the four-business day
limit arbitrarily leads to situations where creditors must absorb costs
that could otherwise be passed to consumers through resetting
tolerances, and that those costs are passed to all consumers in the
form of an increased cost of credit. Industry commenters also noted
legal and compliance risks associated with the uncertainty around
current rules, and stated that this uncertainty has had an adverse
impact on the cost of credit. These commenters supported the proposal
because it would address these issues by expressly permitting creditors
to use either initial or corrected Closing Disclosures to reflect
changes in costs for purposes of determining if an estimated closing
cost was disclosed in good faith, regardless of when the Closing
Disclosure is provided relative to consummation. Other industry
commenters, while generally supportive of the proposal, expressed
concerns about unintended consequences and some suggested additional
parameters or guidance around the timing or accuracy rules that apply
to Closing Disclosures. These comments are discussed more fully below.
Only one consumer advocate group commented on the proposal. That
commenter urged the Bureau not to adopt the proposal, primarily citing
concerns about consumer confusion and information overload. That
commenter suggested that the proposal would lead to consumers receiving
an increased number of disclosures, which the commenter believes would
undermine the purpose of the Closing Disclosure and overwhelm
consumers. The consumer advocate group commenter also stated that the
proposal would remove the disincentive from providing Closing
Disclosures to consumers very early, which the commenter believes would
undermine the distinction between the Loan Estimate and the Closing
Disclosure. Instead of finalizing the proposal, that commenter urged
the Bureau to amend the rule to provide that a Closing Disclosure can
only be given three business days before consummation, with
redisclosure permitted thereafter only under the circumstances in Sec.
1026.19(f)(2)(i) and (ii).
One individual commenter expressed opposition to the proposal and
urged the Bureau to increase the four-business day limit to a seven-
business day limit, rather than eliminating it altogether, so as to
retain a deterrent against early Closing Disclosures. An industry
commenter opposed such an approach, stating that simply extending the
four-business day limit to a larger number of days would not fully
address current issues.
Numerous commenters responded to the Bureau's specific requests for
comment on issues related to the four-business day limit and the
potential effects of the proposal. These comments are discussed below.
The Effect of the Four-Business Day Limit
As noted above, the proposal requested information on the extent to
which the four-business day limit has created situations where
creditors cannot provide either a revised Loan Estimate or a corrected
Closing Disclosure to reset tolerances. The proposal requested
information on the frequency and the cause of such occurrences and on
the average costs and the nature of such costs associated with such
occurrences.
Industry commenters generally stated that the four-business day
limit has created compliance problems and imposed costs on creditors.
One industry trade association commenter noted that a large creditor
had reported tolerance cures of $60,000 in one month attributable to
issues with the four-business day limit. That same commenter noted that
a mid-sized creditor had reported that between 13 and 37 percent of its
tolerance cures each month during a five-month period were attributable
to the four-business day limit. The commenter also noted that absorbing
such costs is more difficult for small creditors. Another commenter
estimated costs incurred by creditors for some common events associated
with the four-business day limit: $825 per affected loan for lock
extension fees and a minimum of $150 per affected loan for property
inspections due to weather events.
Other commenters provided specific examples of problems created by
the four-business day limit. For example, one industry commenter
described a delay in the final construction of a home and a
corresponding rate lock extension fee being incurred after the initial
Closing Disclosure had been sent to the consumer six days before the
originally scheduled consummation date. That
[[Page 19166]]
commenter noted another example of additional survey costs incurred due
to a newly filed property lien during the six days before consummation.
In both instances, the creditor absorbed the increased costs because of
the four-business day limit. Another industry commenter provided other
examples, including another instance of fees that were incurred due to
issues discovered during a title search close to the consummation date.
An industry trade association commenter noted that its member banks
did not report the frequent need to reset tolerances in close proximity
to consummation, but said that its members reported isolated situations
of absorbing costs from valid changed circumstances, denying requests
for changes to loan terms, or starting the loan process over rather
than accommodating the change. Another industry commenter stated that
it typically works with the same title companies and other service
providers and does not price its loans to absorb costs associated with
the four-business day limit. That commenter has not denied applications
because of the inability to reset tolerances, but stated that it has
heard reports of such occurrences at other creditors from potential
customers, including that some consumers have lost home purchase
contracts where applications are denied late in the process. Another
industry commenter stated that it believes most lenders absorb the
additional costs associated with the four-business day limit, rather
than denying applications, due to concerns about customer service and
the risk of delay.
While not citing specific instances of problems with the four-
business day limit, numerous other industry commenters stated that
costs will frequently change after a Closing Disclosure has been
provided to the consumer for reasons outside of the creditor's control,
or due to consumer requests, even if the initial Closing Disclosure is
provided close to the anticipated time of consummation. Rate lock
extension fees were the fee type most frequently cited as being
associated with such cost changes. Several industry commenters also
noted that consumers may request changes to interest rates and lender
credits or points after the initial Closing Disclosure has been
provided to the consumer. Another commenter noted that the four-
business day limit is especially problematic in new construction
transactions when consumers submit change order requests to their
builder that increase the loan amount. Commenters also noted that
delays in anticipated closing dates frequently occur. These commenters
cited numerous reasons that closings might be delayed, even close to
the time of the initially scheduled closing, including home inspection
issues that require correction, storm damage, title issues, late
appraisals, and consumer requests for closing delays. The consumer
advocate group that commented on the proposal did not comment on this
aspect of it.
Closing Disclosure Timing Practices
The proposal also requested comment on the extent to which
creditors are providing Closing Disclosures to consumers so that they
are received substantially before the required three business days
prior to consummation with terms and costs that are nearly certain to
be revised (and, if so, the number of days before consummation). In
addition, the proposal requested comment on the extent to which
creditors might change their practices regarding provision of the
Closing Disclosure if the proposal is finalized.
Numerous industry commenters responded to the Bureau's requests for
comment related to Closing Disclosure timing. Several commenters noted
that there are inconsistent approaches to Closing Disclosure timing
across the industry, with some issuing the Closing Disclosure at an
early point in the process and others waiting until closer to the time
of consummation when final amounts are more likely to be known. Some
commenters who noted this difference in approach also noted that
providing Closing Disclosures very early does not seem consistent with
the Bureau's intent that the Closing Disclosure act as a statement of
final loan terms and closing costs. One industry commenter stated that
it would be possible for a creditor to set up a process that would
allow it to issue a Closing Disclosure earlier, while still containing
accurate loan terms. That commenter suggested holding creditors
responsible for having adequate policies and procedures to ensure that
the disclosure is representative of the loan terms and actual costs
known at the time of delivery.
Some commenters, including both industry commenters and the
consumer advocate group commenter, expressed concern that the proposal
could incentivize creditors to provide Closing Disclosures earlier in
the process. One industry commenter stated that creditors who do
provide Closing Disclosures very early may be at a competitive
advantage to those that do not. Another industry commenter stated a
concern that some creditors might issue Closing Disclosures very early
to appear more efficient than their competitors. Another industry
commenter indicated that some creditors issue Closing Disclosures very
early to provide more flexibility with scheduling closing, and noted
that the four-business day limit provides a disincentive against the
practice. As discussed below, some commenters who stated that the
proposal could incentivize creditors to provide Closing Disclosures
earlier also expressed concern that such a practice could have a
detrimental effect on consumer understanding of the transaction.
One industry commenter stated that it currently provides the
Closing Disclosure three business days before consummation, but noted
that it would likely provide the first Closing Disclosure a week
earlier if the proposal is finalized. This commenter asserted that such
a practice would give consumers additional time to review the Closing
Disclosure and ask questions. Some commenters noted that they provide
Closing Disclosures close to the time of consummation and did not
express that their practices would change. Other industry commenters
generally stated that concerns that removing the four-business day
limit would incentivize creditors to provide Closing Disclosures early
are unfounded because early provision of the Closing Disclosure would
be difficult to accomplish while meeting the requirements to act in
good faith and exercise due diligence, and would create additional work
for creditors and cause confusion for consumers. One industry trade
association commenter noted that some of its member banks had expressed
that providing Closing Disclosures early does not provide any
advantage, because there is a high likelihood that the disclosure will
undergo revisions.
Closing Disclosure Timing and Consumer Understanding
The Bureau requested comment on potential harms to consumers when
creditors provide Closing Disclosures so that they are received more
than the required three business days prior to consummation with terms
and costs that are nearly certain to be revised, including potential
confusion or information overload to the consumer as a result of
receiving more corrected Closing Disclosures. The Bureau also requested
comment on whether it should consider adopting measures to prevent such
harms in a future rulemaking.
[[Page 19167]]
Some commenters stated that the proposal could result in consumer
confusion because it would remove the current disincentive to providing
Closing Disclosures well before the required three business days prior
to consummation, which they assert would result in earlier, and
therefore more frequent, Closing Disclosures. For example, the consumer
advocate group commenter expressed concern that the proposal would
encourage creditors to provide Closing Disclosures very early in the
lending process, which would result in more Closing Disclosures and be
confusing for consumers. That commenter explained that creditors are
permitted to issue multiple Loan Estimates, including Loan Estimates
that do not reset tolerances. The commenter expressed concern that the
proposal could increase consumer confusion by encouraging multiple
Closing Disclosures, and that consumers will not know which versions of
the disclosures to compare. The consumer advocate group commenter also
stated that consumers may become desensitized to the need to read
disclosures carefully if they receive frequent Closing Disclosures. The
commenter stated that increases in costs may eventually exceed what the
consumer is willing to pay, which would cause them to shop with other
lenders. However, if consumers are desensitized to changes, the
commenter argued that consumers will be less likely to withdraw from
the transaction. The consumer advocate group commenter further stated
that the proposal would encourage creditors to provide Closing
Disclosures that are not intended to reset tolerances, which the
commenter asserted will be confusing for consumers.
Several industry commenters also stated that the proposal could
potentially increase consumer confusion by incentivizing earlier, and
therefore more frequent, Closing Disclosures. Several commenters,
including an industry trade association commenter, similarly stated
that too many disclosure updates could work against consumer
understanding, because consumers might ignore the disclosures and would
not know which ones to use for comparison purposes.
An industry commenter stated that consumers would be confused when
receiving a Closing Disclosure very early and that consumers could be
confused by a Closing Disclosure that purports to be a statement of
final loan terms and closing costs, but is only an estimate of costs.
That commenter noted that not all changes to the loan will require
creditors to reset tolerances and that consumers who receive Closing
Disclosures very early may not receive corrected Closing Disclosures
until consummation if there are no changes that occur that would cause
the creditor to reset tolerances (or one of the triggering events in
Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(ii) occurs, which would require a new disclosure
and three-day waiting period). The commenter stated that this would be
contrary to the purpose of the requirement to receive the Closing
Disclosure three business days before consummation.
Other commenters stated that the proposal would not create consumer
confusion. Some industry commenters stated that the proposal would not
diminish consumer understanding because creditors would remain able to
reset tolerances only as permitted under Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) and
that there would not be a large increase in the number of Closing
Disclosures. One industry commenter stated that consumers should not
experience confusion or information overload, as it would be no
different from consumers receiving revised Loan Estimates. That
commenter also stated that it expects lenders to communicate with
consumers to address any confusion. Another industry commenter
similarly suggested that consumers might benefit from earlier Closing
Disclosures and the creditor's flexibility to issue corrected Closing
Disclosures because it would facilitate a more transparent process.
Some industry commenters asserted that consumers could benefit from
receiving Closing Disclosures earlier in the process because they would
have additional time to review the information that does not appear on
the Loan Estimate.
With respect to additional protections to avoid potential consumer
harms associated with removing the four-business day limit, several
commenters who supported the proposal also suggested that the Bureau
address Closing Disclosure timing or accuracy rules, because of
concerns about potential effects of the proposed rule or to address
uncertainty about current rules. With respect to timing, an industry
commenter requested clarification as to whether creditors can reset
tolerances using a Closing Disclosure after issuing an initial Loan
Estimate but without ever issuing any revised Loan Estimate. To
maintain the disincentive against providing Closing Disclosures very
early, an individual commenter suggested that the Bureau expand the
window of time prior to consummation during which a creditor can reset
tolerances with a Closing Disclosure from four business days to seven
business days. Another commenter noted that merely expanding that time
window by a limited number of days would only partially address the
problems discussed in the proposal, and did not favor that approach.
The consumer advocate group commenter suggested that the rule should
provide that the Closing Disclosure can only be given no more than
three business days before consummation. An anonymous commenter advised
that, in addition to removing the four-business day limit for resetting
tolerances with a Closing Disclosure, the Bureau should also adopt a
new prohibition on providing Closing Disclosures unless the creditor
reasonably anticipates that the transaction will close within ten
business days. An industry commenter stated that the Bureau's
supervision process could emphasize scrutiny of potentially unnecessary
iterations of corrected Closing Disclosures. The commenter suggested
that, as an alternative, the Bureau create a new timing requirement for
resetting tolerances with a corrected Closing Disclosure, whereby any
and all changes to the Closing Disclosure for resetting tolerances
would be made at only one specific point in time during a transaction.
Meanwhile, several commenters supported removing the timing restriction
on resetting tolerances with a Closing Disclosure and stated that the
Bureau should not place new timing limitations on providing Closing
Disclosures. One commenter noted that the rule's current accuracy
standard is already a deterrent against providing very early Closing
Disclosures because it requires that the creditor, acting in good
faith, exercise due diligence in obtaining the information.
With respect to Closing Disclosure accuracy, one industry commenter
stated that, in addition to removing the time limit for resetting
tolerances with a Closing Disclosure, the Bureau should either apply a
stricter accuracy standard to the Closing Disclosure or clarify the
current accuracy standard to avoid very early Closing Disclosures. That
commenter expressed concern that some creditors are providing initial
Closing Disclosures to consumers using price quotes automatically
generated by software vendors rather than requesting more accurate
information from the settlement agent involved in the transaction.
Another industry commenter similarly expressed concern about the
adequacy of current accuracy standards and advised that the Bureau
provide some specific expectation regarding Closing Disclosure timing
in order to discern whether a creditor has
[[Page 19168]]
provided disclosures on the Closing Disclosure in good faith. Another
industry commenter recommended that the Bureau provide a complete
summary of good faith under all of the operative provisions of the
rule. Another industry commenter suggested that concerns about early
Closing Disclosure issuance can be addressed through a warning that the
practice violates the spirit of the disclosure rule.
Permissible Reasons To Reset Tolerances
The Bureau requested comment on whether the rule should allow
creditors to reset tolerances with a Closing Disclosure in
circumstances that are more limited than those that apply under the
current rule (Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)) or whether the rule should be
more restrictive with respect to resetting tolerances with a corrected
Closing Disclosure for certain third-party costs and creditor fees.
Most commenters who addressed this aspect of the proposal did not
support applying a more restrictive set of circumstances or fees
resetting tolerances with a Closing Disclosure. Specifically, one
individual commenter and several industry commenters requested that the
rule not restrict resetting tolerances with a Closing Disclosure in
circumstances more limited than for a revised Loan Estimate. However,
one individual commenter stated that interest rate lock fees should not
be allowed for resetting tolerances with either revised Loan Estimates
or Closing Disclosures unless the fee is clearly attributable to a
consumer delay or exceptional event, such as a weather event. One
industry commenter stated that two provisions under the current rule
are inapplicable to resetting tolerances with a Closing Disclosure.
Specifically, that commenter stated that the provisions that allow
creditors to reset tolerances where a Loan Estimate expires (Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(E)) and in a transaction involving a construction
loan where closings are delayed (Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(F)) are
inapplicable to resetting tolerances with a Closing Disclosure.
The Final Rule
For the reasons discussed below, the Bureau is finalizing the
amendments to Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and (ii) as proposed. The Bureau
is also finalizing the proposed changes to comment 19(e)(1)(ii)-1,
including a minor technical revision for clarity, and to comments
19(e)(4)(i)-1 and -2. The Bureau is republishing comment 19(e)(1)(ii)-2
with no changes. In addition, the Bureau is finalizing the changes to
comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1 substantially as proposed, including minor
technical and conforming revisions, and providing an additional example
in response to commenter requests for further clarification.
The final rule removes the four-business day limit and permits
creditors to reset tolerances with either an initial or corrected
Closing Disclosure regardless of when the Closing Disclosure is
provided relative to consummation. The Bureau finds that this change
will benefit both consumers and creditors and facilitate compliance
with the TILA-RESPA Rule and that it is appropriate under the legal
authorities described in part IV above.
As noted above, once the creditor provides the initial Closing
Disclosure to the consumer, the TILA-RESPA Rule distinguishes between
cost increases that can be passed on to consumers and those that cannot
be passed on based on when the creditor learns about the cost increase
relative to consummation. As noted by numerous commenters, this aspect
of the TILA-RESPA Rule imposes on the creditor the cost of
unanticipated changes to the loan that could otherwise be passed to the
specific consumer incurring the increased fee through resetting
tolerances. However, the four-business day limit can also have negative
effects on consumers. Costs that cannot be passed to the specific
consumers who incur them are generally passed on to all consumers over
time through an overall increase in the cost of credit. Further, some
creditors may choose to deny applications to avoid absorbing the
increased costs, which can have negative effects for the consumer even
if the consumer immediately reapplies for credit (e.g., could result in
additional fees to extend a rate lock, further delay closing, or result
in the loss of a home sales contract). The Bureau also agrees with some
commenters who stated that confusion over the current rules has the
potential to create legal and compliance risks for creditors, which
could have a negative impact on the cost and availability of credit.
As finalized, Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i) provides that, subject to the
requirements of Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(ii), if a creditor uses a revised
estimate pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) for the purpose of
determining good faith under Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii), the
creditor shall provide a revised version of the disclosures required
under Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(i) or the disclosures required under Sec.
1026.19(f)(1)(i) (including any corrected disclosures provided under
Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii)) reflecting the revised estimate within
three business days of receiving information sufficient to establish
that one of the reasons for revision applies.\36\
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\36\ The final rule does not change the current Regulation Z
requirement that, if the Closing Disclosure becomes inaccurate
before consummation, the creditor must provide a corrected Closing
Disclosure reflecting any changed terms to the consumer so that the
consumer receives the corrected Closing Disclosure at or before
consummation, Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i), or, in some circumstances,
must ensure that the consumer receives the corrected Closing
Disclosure no later than three business days before consummation,
Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Bureau considered concerns discussed in the proposal and
expressed by some commenters about the potential effects of the
proposal on the Closing Disclosure timing. As noted above, the timing
restriction on resetting tolerances creates a disincentive to providing
consumers with Closing Disclosures very early in the lending process.
Once a creditor has provided a Closing Disclosure, it can reset
tolerances only if there are less than four business days between the
time the revised version of the disclosures is required to be provided
pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i) (i.e., within three business days of
the time the creditor received information sufficient to establish the
reason for revision) and consummation. The Bureau agrees with
commenters who stated that the practice of providing very early Closing
Disclosures with terms that are nearly certain to be revised would be
contrary to the underlying purpose of the Closing Disclosure. While the
Bureau acknowledges that eliminating the timing restriction on
resetting tolerances with a Closing Disclosure could potentially affect
the Closing Disclosure timing for some creditors, the Bureau does not
believe that retaining the four-business day limit is an effective way
to address potential issues associated with early Closing Disclosures.
In particular, the four-business day limit is problematic where a
scheduled closing date is delayed and additional costs are incurred
after an initial Closing Disclosure has been provided to the consumer.
As noted by numerous commenters, this situation can arise even when the
initial Closing Disclosure is provided to the consumer very close to
the time of the initially-scheduled consummation date, as closing dates
can move at the last minute for a variety of reasons. The Bureau
believes that the TILA-RESPA Rule should accommodate changes that occur
as a result of delayed closings. Retaining the restriction on resetting
tolerances with a Closing Disclosure would not accomplish that goal. In
addition, while the Bureau agrees that the very early provision of
[[Page 19169]]
Closing Disclosures is contrary to the underlying purpose of those
disclosures, the Bureau does not believe that finalizing the proposal
will have an overall negative effect on consumer understanding. The
Bureau does not expect that removal of the four-business day limit will
result in a significant increase in the number of disclosures provided
to consumers because the final rule does not expand the circumstances
in which creditors are allowed to reset tolerances. And, as further
discussed below, the Bureau believes that current rules should prevent
creditors from sending Closing Disclosures very early in the process
before engaging in due diligence to ensure that any costs that are not
finalized are estimated in good faith.
The Bureau also considered comments that suggested additional
protections might be necessary to avoid consumer harm from removing the
restriction on resetting tolerances with a Closing Disclosure. However,
the Bureau is not adopting any additional substantive changes to the
TILA-RESPA Rule's existing Closing Disclosure timing or accuracy
provisions at this time. The Bureau concludes that the rule's existing
provisions should prevent creditors from sending Closing Disclosures
very early in the process before engaging in due diligence.
With respect to the accuracy standard that applies to the Closing
Disclosure, the Bureau concludes that substantive changes to the TILA-
RESPA Rule's existing provisions are not necessary to prevent creditors
from sending Closing Disclosures very early in the process before
engaging in due diligence. The Bureau believes the existing Closing
Disclosure accuracy standard already accomplishes that objective.
Existing Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i) and comment 19(f)(1)(i)-1 require
creditors to disclose on the Closing Disclosure the actual terms of the
credit transaction. Existing comment 19(f)(1)(i)-2 also permits
creditors to estimate disclosures on the Closing Disclosure using the
best information reasonably available when the actual term is not
reasonably available to the creditor at the time the disclosures are
made. Comment 19(f)(1)(i)-2 provides that the ``reasonably available''
standard requires that the creditor, acting in good faith, exercise due
diligence in obtaining the information. Further, comment 19(f)(1)(i)-
2.i.A provides an example illustrating the ``reasonably available''
standard for purposes of Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i). Specifically, comment
19(f)(1)(i)-2.i.A assumes that a creditor provides the Closing
Disclosure for a transaction in which the title insurance company that
is providing the title insurance policy is acting as the settlement
agent in connection with the transaction, but the creditor does not
request the actual cost of the lender's title insurance policy that the
consumer is purchasing from the title insurance company and instead
discloses an estimate based on information from a different
transaction. Comment 19(f)(1)(i)-2.i.A provides that the creditor in
the example has not exercised due diligence in obtaining the
information about the cost of the lender's title insurance policy
required under the ``reasonably available'' standard in connection with
the estimate disclosed for the lender's title insurance policy.
Regarding a commenter's request for clarification as to whether
creditors can reset tolerances using a Closing Disclosure after issuing
an initial Loan Estimate but without ever issuing any revised Loan
Estimate, the rule does not prohibit creditors from doing so but
creditors must otherwise comply with the rule, including its Closing
Disclosure accuracy standard. The Bureau will continue to monitor the
market for practices that do not comply with the rule's Closing
Disclosure accuracy standard.
With respect to the timing of the Closing Disclosure, the Bureau is
not adopting any substantive changes to the TILA-RESPA Rule's existing
Closing Disclosure timing provisions, other than removing the four-
business day limit as discussed above. For example, the Bureau
considered a commenter's suggestion that the Bureau expand the window
of time prior to consummation during which a creditor can reset
tolerances with a Closing Disclosure (from four business days to seven
business days). The commenter's suggested approach would mean that a
creditor could reset tolerances with a Closing Disclosure when
consummation is reasonably expected to occur no more than ten business
days after the creditor learns about the valid justification (i.e.,
three business days from the time the creditor knows about the valid
justification plus seven business days from the time the revised
disclosure is required to be provided until consummation). The Bureau
declines to adopt such approach. The Bureau agrees with another
commenter who noted that merely expanding that time window by a limited
number of days would only partially address the issue created by the
four-business day limit under the current rule. In the example above, a
creditor could not reset tolerances with a Closing Disclosure when
consummation is reasonably expected to occur eleven business days or
more after the creditor learns about the valid justification. As noted
above, the Bureau concludes that the issues created by the four-
business day limit have negative effects on both creditors and
consumers and that the four-business day limit should be eliminated,
not merely expanded by a limited number of days.
Similarly, the Bureau declines to set a new, specific timing
requirement for Closing Disclosures. For example, the Bureau declines
to place new limitations on providing Closing Disclosures such that an
initial Closing Disclosure could only be given no more than three
business days before consummation, as a consumer advocate group
commenter advised. Such a new limitation would exacerbate rather than
alleviate problems associated with the current rule. The Bureau also
declines to follow the suggestion to adopt a new prohibition on
providing Closing Disclosures unless the creditor reasonably
anticipates that the transaction will close within 10 business days.
The Bureau does not believe that there is an appropriate basis at this
time for creating such a prohibition, including setting any such cutoff
at 10 business days or any other particular number of days.
The Bureau also considered the commenter suggestion that the Bureau
create a new timing requirement for resetting tolerances with a
corrected Closing Disclosure, whereby any and all changes to the
Closing Disclosure for resetting tolerances would be made at only one
specific point in time during a transaction. The Bureau declines to
adopt such a timing requirement because doing so would be inconsistent
with the purpose articulated by the Bureau when it adopted the Sec.
1026.19(e)(4)(i) timing requirements for resetting tolerances.
Specifically, current Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i) generally provides that,
to reset tolerances, the creditor must provide revised disclosures
within three business days of receiving information sufficient to
establish a valid justification. In the 2013 TILA-RESPA Final Rule, the
Bureau stated its view ``that intermittent redisclosure of the
integrated Loan Estimate is necessary under RESPA because settlement
service provider costs typically fluctuate during the mortgage loan
origination process'' and ``intermittent redisclosure is consistent
with the purposes of TILA because it promotes the informed use of
credit by keeping the consumer apprised of changes in costs.'' \37\ The
Bureau
[[Page 19170]]
similarly holds that view regarding intermittent redisclosure with the
Closing Disclosure. For all these reasons, the Bureau is finalizing the
proposal to remove the four-business day limit without adopting any
further substantive changes to the rule's existing Closing Disclosure
timing or accuracy provisions.
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\37\ 78 FR 79730, 79834 (Dec. 31, 2013).
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The Bureau also declines to adopt changes to the rule that would
restrict creditors' ability to reset tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure to circumstances that are more limited than those that apply
under Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) or that would be more restrictive with
respect to resetting tolerances with a Closing Disclosure for certain
third-party costs and creditor fees. As noted above, most commenters
who addressed this aspect of the proposal did not support applying a
more restrictive set of circumstances or fees when resetting tolerances
with a Closing Disclosure. The Bureau believes that the circumstances
identified under Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) are adequate to balance
flexibility for creditors to reset tolerances due to unforeseen
circumstances while also providing constraints to avoid arbitrary
increases in costs to consumers in relation to revised Loan Estimates,
and that those circumstances are also adequate with respect to
resetting tolerances with a Closing Disclosure.
One individual commenter stated that interest rate lock extension
fees should not be allowed for resetting tolerances with either revised
Loan Estimates or Closing Disclosures unless the fee is clearly
attributable to a consumer delay or exceptional event, such as a
weather event. The Bureau does not believe that different treatment of
interest rate lock extension fees with respect to resetting tolerances
is warranted. Currently, when the consumer enters into a rate lock
agreement for a previously floating interest rate, the creditor is
required to provide a revised Loan Estimate that updates the interest-
rate related charges, credits, and terms pursuant to Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D).\38\ This disclosure sets the applicable baseline
for the tolerance of those interest-rate related charges, credits, and
terms subject to a good-faith tolerance. Subsequent changes to interest
rate charges and terms would reset tolerances if the changes are the
result of a changed circumstance that causes the applicable charge to
exceed the applicable tolerance, or if the consumer requests a change
that causes the interest-rate related charges, credits, and terms to
increase.\39\ The same timing concerns related to the four-business day
limit apply when either the initial rate lock occurs or an extension of
the rate lock period is sought (i.e., once the Closing Disclosure has
been issued, the creditor can reset tolerances only if there are less
than four business days between the time the revised version of the
disclosures is required to be provided pursuant to Sec.
1026.19(e)(4)(i) and consummation). As noted by commenters, the most
common charge that is incurred due to a changed circumstance or
consumer request after the Closing Disclosure has been provided is a
fee to extend the relevant time period of a rate lock.
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\38\ Some commenters requested further clarification on the use
of Closing Disclosures to reset tolerances when the interest rate is
locked pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D). Guidance provided in
the section-by-section analysis of the July 2017 Amendments explains
that Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D) is used in relation to providing
revised Loan Estimates, not Closing Disclosures, and once a revised
Loan Estimate is provided when a rate has been locked, Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D) is not a basis to provide another revised Loan
Estimate. If the interest rate has not been locked until after a
Closing Disclosure has been provided, a corrected Closing Disclosure
must be provided if the disclosures become inaccurate under Sec.
1026.19(f)(2). 82 FR 37656, 37682 (Aug. 11, 2017).
\39\ See Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(A), (B), and (C).
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The Bureau does not believe it is appropriate to treat rate lock
extension fees differently than other fees under the rule with respect
to resetting tolerances. The Bureau does not believe that rate lock
extension fees are fundamentally different from other creditor costs.
Extending rate locks for consumers can create opportunity costs to
creditors based on secondary market conditions for the delivery of the
loans, or direct costs by requiring the renegotiation or acquisition of
interest-rate swaps used to offset interest-rate risk. Further, the
Bureau is concerned that treating rate lock extension fees differently
in this regard would make it less likely that creditors would offer
rate lock extensions, which could have unintended effects that could
distort interest rate pricing and the mortgage market generally. The
Bureau will monitor industry practices related to interest rate lock
extensions to determine if additional rulemaking in this area is
warranted in the future.
The Bureau also considered the comment that noted that the
provisions that allow creditors to reset tolerances when a Loan
Estimate expires and in transactions involving construction loans where
closings are delayed are inapplicable to resetting tolerances with a
Closing Disclosure. Although the Bureau agrees that those provisions
are generally inapplicable to resetting tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure, the Bureau does not believe it is necessary to amend the
rule further to address the issue expressly.
The Bureau is also finalizing changes to the commentary to Sec.
1026.19(e)(4). Consistent with the revisions to Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i),
the Bureau is finalizing the proposed changes to comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-
1, which removes the reference to the four-business day limit,
including a minor technical revision for clarity. As amended, comment
19(e)(4)(ii)-1 expressly states that, if a creditor uses a revised
estimate pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) for the purpose of
determining good faith under Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii), Sec.
1026.19(e)(4)(i) permits the creditor to provide the revised estimate
in the disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i) (including any
corrected disclosures provided under Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii)).
In addition, and as explained below, the Bureau is: Making conforming
revisions to existing comments 19(e)(4)(ii)-1.i and .ii; adopting
proposed comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1.iii with conforming and clarifying
revisions; and adopting proposed comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1.iv with
conforming revisions and renumbering it as comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1.v.
The conforming revisions to final comments 19(e)(4)(ii)-1.i, .ii, .iii,
and .v reflect the illustrative June dates used elsewhere in existing
comments 19(e)(1)(iii)-2, 19(e)(1)(v)-2, 19(f)(1)(i)-1, and
19(f)(2)(ii)-1. Final comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1.iii also includes a
clarifying reference to existing Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) and its
requirement that the creditor provide corrected disclosures reflecting
any changed terms to the consumer so that the consumer receives the
corrected disclosures at or before consummation. The Bureau is also
adding new comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1.iv to provide an additional
illustrative example in response to commenters' requests for additional
clarification.
Specifically, some industry commenters requested that the Bureau
provide examples that illustrate the use of mail and electronic
delivery of disclosures. One industry commenter requested that the
Bureau provide an example of a situation where creditors may use a
Closing Disclosure to reset tolerances when the consumer requests a
rate lock extension. Several industry commenters recommended that the
Bureau provide an example in which a Closing Disclosure is provided to
the consumer and then a reason for revision under Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(iv) occurs more than four business days before
consummation--and thus highlight the requirement in Sec.
1026.19(e)(4)(i) that the creditor provide revised disclosures within
three business days of receiving
[[Page 19171]]
information sufficient to establish that a reason for revision under
Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) has occurred.
The new example in final comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1.iv addresses these
requests for clarification. Specifically, the new example in final
comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1.iv assumes consummation is originally scheduled
for Wednesday, June 10. The example provides that the creditor hand
delivers the disclosures required by Sec. [thinsp]1026.19(f)(1)(i) on
Friday, June 5. On Monday, June 8, the consumer reschedules
consummation for Wednesday, June 17. Also on Monday, June 8, the
consumer requests a rate lock extension that would result in a revised
disclosure pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(C) but would not require
a new waiting period pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(ii). The example
clarifies that the creditor complies with the requirements of Sec.
1026.19(e)(4) by delivering or placing in the mail the disclosures
required by Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) reflecting the consumer-requested
changes on Thursday, June 11. The example references existing Sec.
1026.19(f)(2)(i) and its requirement that the creditor provide
corrected disclosures reflecting any changed terms to the consumer so
that the consumer receives the corrected disclosures at or before
consummation. The example clarifies that the creditor complies with
Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) by hand delivering the disclosures on Thursday,
June 11. The example further clarifies that, alternatively, the
creditor complies with Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) by providing the
disclosures to the consumer by mail, including by electronic mail, on
Thursday, June 11, because the consumer is considered to have received
the corrected disclosures on Monday, June 15 (unless the creditor
relies on evidence that the consumer received the corrected disclosures
earlier). The example refers to Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(iii) and comments
19(f)(1)(iii)-1 and -2 regarding receipt of disclosures that are not
provided to the consumer in person. The example also refers to Sec.
1026.38(t)(3) and comment 19(f)(1)(iii)-2 regarding providing
disclosures in electronic form.
An industry commenter requested clarification regarding the Sec.
1026.19(e)(4)(i) timing requirement where a reason for revision under
Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) occurs within three business days of
consummation. Another industry commenter requested clarification that
providing a Closing Disclosure to reset tolerances under Sec.
1026.19(e)(4) does not necessarily require a new waiting period
pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(ii). The example in final comment
19(e)(4)(ii)-1.iii addresses these requests for clarification.
Specifically, the example in final comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1.iii assumes
consummation is scheduled for Thursday, June 4. The example provides
that the creditor hand delivers the disclosures required by Sec.
1026.19(f)(1)(i) on Monday, June 1, and, on Tuesday, June 2, the
consumer requests a change to the loan that would result in a revised
disclosure pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(C) but would not require
a new waiting period pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(ii). The example
references existing Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) and its requirement that the
creditor provide corrected disclosures reflecting any changed terms to
the consumer so that the consumer receives the corrected disclosures at
or before consummation. The example clarifies that the creditor
complies with the requirements of Sec. 1026.19(e)(4) by hand
delivering the disclosures required by Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i)
reflecting the consumer-requested changes on Thursday, June 4.
The Bureau is finalizing proposed comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1.iv with
conforming revisions and renumbering it as comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1.v. As
finalized comment 19(e)(4)(ii)-1.v assumes that consummation is
originally scheduled for Wednesday, June 10. The comment provides that
the creditor hand delivers the disclosures required by Sec.
1026.19(f)(1)(i) on Friday, June 5, and the APR becomes inaccurate on
Monday, June 8, such that the creditor is required to delay
consummation and provide corrected disclosures, including any other
changed terms, so that the consumer receives them at least three
business days before consummation under Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(ii).
Consummation is rescheduled for Friday, June 12. The comment clarifies
that the creditor complies with the requirements of Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)
by hand delivering the disclosures required by Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(ii)
reflecting the revised APR and any other changed terms to the consumer
on Tuesday, June 9. The comment references Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(ii) and
associated commentary regarding changes before consummation requiring a
new waiting period. The comment also references comment 19(e)(4)(i)-1
for further guidance on when sufficient information has been received
to establish an event has occurred.
The Bureau notes that some commenters requested that the final rule
incorporate other clarifications and examples. For example, an industry
commenter requested clarification as to whether Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(ii)
requires consumers to receive a Closing Disclosure not later than four
business days prior to consummation. The commenter also requested that
the Bureau permit creditors to reset tolerances after consummation when
settlement occurs after consummation. Another industry commenter
broadly requested clarification regarding how to reset tolerances with
a Closing Disclosure under various scenarios, including when different
communication channels are used for providing Loan Estimates and
Closing Disclosures, there is a non-borrowing spouse, or there are
multiple changed circumstances. The Bureau declines to make specific
changes to the rule in response to these comments, because the existing
regulation and commentary address these issues as outlined below.
Regarding a commenter's request for clarification as to whether
Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) requires consumers to receive a Closing
Disclosure not later than four business days prior to consummation, the
Bureau notes that Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) provides that the consumer
must receive any revised version of the disclosures required under
Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(i) (i.e., the Loan Estimate) not later than four
business days prior to consummation, but that timing requirement does
not reference the Closing Disclosure.
Regarding a commenter's request to allow creditors to reset
tolerances after consummation when settlement occurs after
consummation, the Bureau declines to adopt this change because existing
Sec. 1026.2(a)(13) provides that, once consummation occurs, the
consumer is already contractually obligated on the credit transaction.
The Bureau also declines to further amend the rule in response to a
commenter's broad request for clarification regarding how to reset
tolerances with a Closing Disclosure under various scenarios, including
when different communication channels are used for providing Loan
Estimates and Closing Disclosures, there is a non-borrowing spouse, or
there are multiple changed circumstances. The Bureau believes that the
TILA-RESPA Rule already provides sufficient guidance on the topics
identified by the commenter. Specifically, guidance for resetting
tolerances with a Closing Disclosure can be found in Sec.
1026.19(e)(4) and its associated commentary, as amended by this final
rule. Guidance as to providing disclosures via different communication
channels can be found in Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(iv) and Sec.
1026.19(f)(1)(iii) and the associated commentary. Guidance as to
providing disclosures for a non-borrowing spouse can be found in Sec.
1026.17(d) and associated commentary. Guidance as to
[[Page 19172]]
providing revised disclosures where there are multiple changed
circumstances can be found in Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) and Sec.
1026.19(e)(4) and the associated commentary.
Finally, the Bureau notes that it is adopting as proposed the
changes to Sec. 1026.19(e)(4) and its commentary to reflect amendments
to the TILA-RESPA Rule made by the January 2015 Amendments regarding
interest rate dependent charges, for the reasons noted above in the
discussion of the 2017 Proposal. Specifically, the Bureau is finalizing
the amendments to Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and comment 19(e)(4)(i)-1, and
removing existing comment 19(e)(4)(i)-2, regarding the relationship to
Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(D).
VI. Effective Date
The Bureau proposed an effective date of 30 days after publication
in the Federal Register of any final rule based on the proposal. The
Bureau also requested comment on when the changes proposed should be
effective. In the proposal, the Bureau stated that it believed that the
proposed changes should enable industry to implement the provisions set
forth in the TILA-RESPA Rule more cost-effectively and that industry
should be able to implement these changes relatively quickly. At the
same time, the Bureau stated that it recognized that some of the
proposed changes might require changes to systems or procedures.
The Bureau received several comments addressing the proposed
effective date. One industry commenter agreed with the Bureau's
proposed effective date of 30 days after publication. That commenter,
as well as another industry commenter, noted that the proposed
provisions would not impose new burdens on creditors. One commenter
noted that a creditor would not be out of compliance if it continued to
follow the current rule after the proposed changes take effect. Another
industry commenter requested that the final rule become effective no
sooner than 90 days after publication in the Federal Register to allow
adequate time to implement the timing changes. The commenter also
requested that the final rule apply to applications received on or
after the effective date, or some specific date. Another industry
commenter suggested that the Bureau adopt an optional early compliance
approach, with an effective date 60 days after publication and a
mandatory compliance date one year thereafter. An industry commenter
requested that this final rule be effective for any transaction covered
by the 2013 TILA-RESPA Final Rule. Another industry commenter
encouraged the Bureau to heed recommendations from loan origination
system vendors; however, the Bureau did not receive any such
recommendations.
The amendments in the final rule will become effective 30 days
after publication in the Federal Register.The Bureau believes the
changes should enable industry to implement the provisions set forth in
the TILA-RESPA Rule more cost-effectively and that industry should be
able to implement these changes relatively quickly. Regarding some
commenters' requests for a later effective date, an optional early
compliance period, or an effective date that distinguishes among
transactions based on when a loan application was received, the Bureau
declines to adopt such approaches because the final rule does not
impose any new burdens on creditors. Once the final rule becomes
effective, the ability to reset tolerances prior to consummation for a
given transaction will not be limited by when the application was
received. The Bureau declines to make this final rule retroactive, as
retroactive rulemaking is disfavored by the courts and the commenter
has not established why it would be appropriate here.
VII. Dodd-Frank Act Section 1022(b)(2) Analysis
A. Overview
In developing this final rule, the Bureau has considered the
potential benefits, costs, and impacts.\40\ The Bureau has consulted,
or offered to consult with, the prudential regulators, the Securities
and Exchange Commission, the Department of Housing and Urban
Development, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the Federal Trade
Commission, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Department of
Agriculture, and the Department of the Treasury, including regarding
consistency with any prudential, market, or systemic objectives
administered by such agencies.
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\40\ Specifically, section 1022(b)(2)(A) of the Dodd-Frank Act
calls for the Bureau to consider the potential benefits and costs of
a regulation to consumers and covered persons, including the
potential reduction of access by consumers to consumer financial
products or services; the impact on depository institutions and
credit unions with $10 billion or less in total assets as described
in section 1026 of the Dodd-Frank Act; and the impact on consumers
in rural areas.
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This final rule makes a substantive change to the current TILA-
RESPA Rule, by allowing creditors to reset tolerances with a Closing
Disclosure (both initial and corrected), irrespective of the date of
consummation. This new provision is restricted to circumstances where
the TILA-RESPA Rule currently allows creditors to reset tolerances,
such as changes in costs resulting from changed circumstances; new
information regarding eligibility of the borrower; and borrower-
requested change (for instance, rate lock extension). The potential
benefits and costs of the provisions contained in the final rule are
evaluated relative to the baseline where the current provisions of the
TILA-RESPA Rule remain in place. Under the TILA-RESPA Rule, there is no
specific provision that allows creditors to use a Closing Disclosure to
reset tolerances if there are four or more days between the time the
revised version of the disclosures is required to be provided pursuant
to Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i) and consummation. Consequently, a creditor
may not be allowed to reset tolerances if it has already provided the
Closing Disclosure to the consumer when it learns about the increase in
cost. In such cases, some creditors, faced with the prospect of
absorbing cost increases, may choose to deny the application.
The proposal solicited data that could inform the analysis of
benefits, costs, and impacts of the proposal, but the Bureau did not
receive any such data in response. In particular, the Bureau requested
information on the extent to which the current rule has caused
situations in which creditors cannot reset tolerances despite a valid
changed circumstance. While some commenters reported such occurrences,
none provided data to quantitatively assess the frequency of such
occurrences or the associated costs and benefits. Since operational
data at a level of detail to capture the date of the Closing Disclosure
and the consummation date, or the application denial date, is not
available for purchase or gathered in routine regulatory collections,
the Bureau does not have, and is not aware of, data currently available
that would allow it to quantify the frequency of instances of creditors
being unable to issue Closing Disclosures to reset tolerances. As a
result, this discussion of the potential benefits, costs, and impacts
on consumers and covered persons, which takes the existing statutory
and regulatory framework as the baseline, is largely qualitative.
B. Potential Benefits and Costs to Consumers and Covered Persons
The Bureau believes the final rule will benefit creditors by
providing them with an option of resetting tolerances in situations
where they currently do not have that option. The Bureau does not
believe there would be any increased
[[Page 19173]]
costs to creditors from this final rule compared to the baseline where
the current provisions of the TILA-RESPA Rule remain in place, as the
provisions of this final rule are less restrictive for creditors than
the current provisions.
The Bureau believes consumers will generally benefit from this
final rule. It is helpful to consider benefits and costs to consumers
separately in the following scenarios.
First, there may be cases where an initial Closing Disclosure has
been provided to the consumer well in advance of consummation where the
creditor subsequently learns about a change in cost that would be a
cause to reset tolerances. The creditor may be unable to reset
tolerances currently due to the four-business day limit and may choose
to absorb extra costs rather than deny the application. In these cases,
this final rule will create costs for consumers because now any changes
in costs due to unexpected events would in these cases likely be passed
on to consumers. However, in some situations, such as cost increases
due to a borrower-requested change, these extra costs might be
avoidable. In addition, to the extent that creditors are currently
pricing in the risk of having to absorb unexpected cost increases, this
final rule will remove this extra layer of risk adjustment and create a
benefit to consumers in the form of lower cost of credit.
Second, there may be cases where an initial Closing Disclosure
already has been provided to the consumer well in advance of
consummation and the creditor subsequently learns about a change in
cost that would be a cause to reset tolerances. The creditor may be
unable to reset tolerances currently due to the four-business day limit
and may choose to deny the application for this reason. In such cases,
this final rule will benefit borrowers by giving them an option of
paying extra costs instead of having their applications denied; the
Bureau believes that some borrowers may prefer to pay extra costs
rather than have their applications denied.
Third, there are hypothetically situations where a creditor would
prefer to provide the initial Closing Disclosure earlier, but is
deterred from doing so by the risk of not being able to reset
tolerances in case an unexpected change occurs. In such cases, the
proposed change may result in more situations where the initial Closing
Disclosure is provided well in advance of consummation; this may affect
the accuracy of the disclosure if unexpected cost changes occur between
the issuance and the consummation. The Bureau believes creditors
themselves may generally prefer to provide the initial Closing
Disclosure closer to the consummation date because it is a good
customer service.
C. Impact on Covered Persons With No More Than $10 Billion in Assets
As discussed previously, the Bureau believes this final rule will
not create costs for creditors, including those with no more than $10
billion in assets.
D. Impact on Access to Credit
The Bureau does not believe this final rule will have a negative
effect on access to credit. On the contrary, the Bureau believes it may
have a beneficial effect on access to credit. This may occur to the
extent that the current restrictions on resetting tolerances using a
Closing Disclosure are reflected in credit pricing, and to the extent
that removing such restrictions would result in creditors reducing
prices accordingly. Furthermore, this final rule will provide an option
to consumers in situations where the creditor is unwilling to absorb
the cost increase, and would have denied the application in the absence
of this final rule.
E. Impact on Rural Areas
The Bureau does not believe this final rule will have an adverse
impact on consumers in rural areas.
VIII. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (the RFA), as amended by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, requires each
agency to consider the potential impact of its regulations on small
entities, including small businesses, small governmental units, and
small nonprofit organizations. The RFA defines a ``small business'' as
a business that meets the size standard developed by the Small Business
Administration pursuant to the Small Business Act.
The RFA generally requires an agency to conduct an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) and a final regulatory
flexibility analysis (FRFA) of any rule subject to notice-and-comment
rulemaking requirements, unless the agency certifies that the rule will
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The Bureau also is subject to certain additional procedures
under the RFA involving the convening of a panel to consult with small
business representatives prior to proposing a rule for which an IRFA is
required.
The Bureau believes this final rule will not create a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. As described
above, this final rule would reduce burden in a specific set of
circumstances that an individual small entity would not frequently
encounter. Therefore, a FRFA is not required.
Accordingly, the undersigned certifies that this final rule would
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
IX. Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et
seq.), Federal agencies are generally required to seek the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) approval for information collection
requirements prior to implementation. The collections of information
related to Regulations Z and X have been previously reviewed and
approved by OMB in accordance with the PRA and assigned OMB Control
Number 3170-0015 (Regulation Z) and 3170-0016 (Regulation X). Under the
PRA, the Bureau may not conduct or sponsor, and, notwithstanding any
other provision of law, a person is not required to respond to an
information collection unless the information collection displays a
valid control number assigned by OMB.
The Bureau has determined that this final rule does not contain any
information collection requirements as defined by the PRA.
X. Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.),
the Bureau will submit a report containing this rule and other required
information to the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of Representatives, and
the Comptroller General of the United States prior to the rule's
published effective date. The Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs has designated this rule as not a ``major rule'' as defined by
5 U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 1026
Advertising, Appraisal, Appraiser, Banking, Banks, Consumer
protection, Credit, Credit unions, Mortgages, National banks, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Savings associations, Truth in lending.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth above, the Bureau amends Regulation Z, 12
CFR part 1026, as set forth below:
PART 1026--TRUTH IN LENDING (REGULATION Z)
0
1. The authority citation for part 1026 continues to read as follows:
[[Page 19174]]
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 2601, 2603-2605, 2607, 2609, 2617, 3353,
5511, 5512, 5532, 5581; 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.
Subpart C--Closed-End Credit
0
2. Section 1026.19 is amended by revising paragraphs (e)(4)(i) and (ii)
to read as follows:
Sec. 1026.19 Certain mortgage and variable-rate transactions.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(4) * * *
(i) General rule. Subject to the requirements of paragraph
(e)(4)(ii) of this section, if a creditor uses a revised estimate
pursuant to paragraph (e)(3)(iv) of this section for the purpose of
determining good faith under paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) of this
section, the creditor shall provide a revised version of the
disclosures required under paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this section or the
disclosures required under paragraph (f)(1)(i) of this section
(including any corrected disclosures provided under paragraph (f)(2)(i)
or (ii) of this section) reflecting the revised estimate within three
business days of receiving information sufficient to establish that one
of the reasons for revision provided under paragraphs (e)(3)(iv)(A)
through (F) of this section applies.
(ii) Relationship between revised Loan Estimates and Closing
Disclosures. The creditor shall not provide a revised version of the
disclosures required under paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this section on or
after the date on which the creditor provides the disclosures required
under paragraph (f)(1)(i) of this section. The consumer must receive
any revised version of the disclosures required under paragraph
(e)(1)(i) of this section not later than four business days prior to
consummation. If the revised version of the disclosures required under
paragraph (e)(1)(i) of this section is not provided to the consumer in
person, the consumer is considered to have received such version three
business days after the creditor delivers or places such version in the
mail.
* * * * *
0
3. In Supplement I to Part 1026, under Section 1026.19--Certain
Mortgage and Variable-Rate Transactions:
0
A. 19(e)(1)(ii) Mortgage broker is revised.
0
B. 19(e)(4)(i) General rule is revised.
0
C. 19(e)(4)(ii) Relationship to disclosures required under Sec.
1026.19(f)(1)(i) is revised.
The revisions read as follows:
Supplement I to Part 1026--Official Interpretations
* * * * *
Section 1026.19--Certain Mortgage and Variable-Rate Transactions
* * * * *
19(e)(1)(ii) Mortgage broker.
1. Mortgage broker responsibilities. Section 1026.19(e)(1)(ii)(A)
provides that if a mortgage broker receives a consumer's application,
either the creditor or the mortgage broker must provide the consumer
with the disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(i) in
accordance with Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(iii). Section 1026.19(e)(1)(ii)(A)
also provides that if the mortgage broker provides the required
disclosures, it must comply with all relevant requirements of Sec.
1026.19(e). This means that ``mortgage broker'' should be read in the
place of ``creditor'' for all provisions of Sec. 1026.19(e), except to
the extent that such a reading would create responsibility for mortgage
brokers under Sec. 1026.19(f). To illustrate, Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i)
states that if a creditor uses a revised estimate pursuant to Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(iv) for the purpose of determining good faith under Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii), the creditor shall provide a revised version
of the disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(i) or the
disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i) (including any
corrected disclosures provided under Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii))
reflecting the revised estimate. ``Mortgage broker'' could not be read
in place of ``creditor'' in reference to the disclosures required under
Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i), (f)(2)(i), or (f)(2)(ii) because mortgage
brokers are not responsible for the disclosures required under Sec.
1026.19(f)(1)(i), (f)(2)(i), or (f)(2)(ii). In addition, Sec.
1026.19(e)(1)(ii)(A) provides that the creditor must ensure that
disclosures provided by mortgage brokers comply with all requirements
of Sec. 1026.19(e), and that disclosures provided by mortgage brokers
that do comply with all such requirements satisfy the creditor's
obligation under Sec. 1026.19(e). The term ``mortgage broker,'' as
used in Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(ii), has the same meaning as in Sec.
1026.36(a)(2). See also comment 36(a)-2. Section 1026.19(e)(1)(ii)(B)
provides that if a mortgage broker provides any disclosure required
under Sec. 1026.19(e), the mortgage broker must also comply with the
requirements of Sec. 1026.25(c). For example, if a mortgage broker
provides the disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(i), it must
maintain records for three years, in compliance with Sec.
1026.25(c)(1)(i).
2. Creditor responsibilities. If a mortgage broker issues any
disclosure required under Sec. 1026.19(e) in the creditor's place, the
creditor remains responsible under Sec. 1026.19(e) for ensuring that
the requirements of Sec. 1026.19(e) have been satisfied. For example,
if a mortgage broker receives a consumer's application and provides the
consumer with the disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(i),
the creditor does not satisfy the requirements of Sec.
1026.19(e)(1)(i) if it provides duplicative disclosures to the
consumer. In the same example, even if the broker provides an erroneous
disclosure, the creditor is responsible and may not issue a revised
disclosure correcting the error. The creditor is expected to maintain
communication with the broker to ensure that the broker is acting in
place of the creditor.
* * * * *
19(e)(4)(i) General Rule
1. Three-business-day requirement. Section 1026.19(e)(4)(i)
provides that, subject to the requirements of Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(ii),
if a creditor uses a revised estimate pursuant to Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(iv) for the purpose of determining good faith under Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii), the creditor shall provide a revised version
of the disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(i) or the
disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i) (including any
corrected disclosures provided under Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii))
reflecting the revised estimate within three business days of receiving
information sufficient to establish that one of the reasons for
revision provided under Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(A) through (F) has
occurred. The following examples illustrate these requirements:
i. Assume a creditor requires a pest inspection. The unaffiliated
pest inspection company informs the creditor on Monday that the subject
property contains evidence of termite damage, requiring a further
inspection, the cost of which will cause an increase in estimated
settlement charges subject to Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(ii) by more than 10
percent. The creditor must provide revised disclosures by Thursday to
comply with Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i).
ii. Assume a creditor receives information on Monday that, because
of a changed circumstance under Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(A), the title
fees will increase by an amount totaling six percent of the originally
estimated settlement charges subject to Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(ii). The
creditor had
[[Page 19175]]
received information three weeks before that, because of a changed
circumstance under Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(A), the pest inspection fees
increased by an amount totaling five percent of the originally
estimated settlement charges subject to Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(ii). Thus,
on Monday, the creditor has received sufficient information to
establish a valid reason for revision and must provide revised
disclosures reflecting the 11 percent increase by Thursday to comply
with Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i).
iii. Assume a creditor requires an appraisal. The creditor receives
the appraisal report, which indicates that the value of the home is
significantly lower than expected. However, the creditor has reason to
doubt the validity of the appraisal report. A reason for revision has
not been established because the creditor reasonably believes that the
appraisal report is incorrect. The creditor then chooses to send a
different appraiser for a second opinion, but the second appraiser
returns a similar report. At this point, the creditor has received
information sufficient to establish that a reason for revision has, in
fact, occurred, and must provide corrected disclosures within three
business days of receiving the second appraisal report. In this
example, in order to comply with Sec. Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) and
1026.25, the creditor must maintain records documenting the creditor's
doubts regarding the validity of the appraisal to demonstrate that the
reason for revision did not occur upon receipt of the first appraisal
report.
19(e)(4)(ii) Relationship Between Revised Loan Estimates and Closing
Disclosures
1. Revised Loan Estimate may not be delivered at the same time as
the Closing Disclosure. Section 1026.19(e)(4)(ii) prohibits a creditor
from providing a revised version of the disclosures required under
Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(i) on or after the date on which the creditor
provides the disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i). Section
1026.19(e)(4)(ii) also requires that the consumer must receive any
revised version of the disclosures required under Sec.
1026.19(e)(1)(i) no later than four business days prior to
consummation, and provides that if the revised version of the
disclosures are not provided to the consumer in person, the consumer is
considered to have received the revised version of the disclosures
three business days after the creditor delivers or places in the mail
the revised version of the disclosures. See also comments 19(e)(1)(iv)-
1 and -2. However, if a creditor uses a revised estimate pursuant to
Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv) for the purpose of determining good faith under
Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(i) and (ii), Sec. 1026.19(e)(4)(i) permits the
creditor to provide the revised estimate in the disclosures required
under Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i) (including any corrected disclosures
provided under Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or (ii)). See below for
illustrative examples:
i. If the creditor is scheduled to meet with the consumer and
provide the disclosures required by Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i) on
Wednesday, June 3, and the APR becomes inaccurate on Tuesday, June 2,
the creditor complies with the requirements of Sec. 1026.19(e)(4) by
providing the disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i)
reflecting the revised APR on Wednesday, June 3. However, the creditor
does not comply with the requirements of Sec. 1026.19(e)(4) if it
provides both a revised version of the disclosures required under Sec.
1026.19(e)(1)(i) reflecting the revised APR on Wednesday, June 3, and
also provides the disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i) on
Wednesday, June 3.
ii. If the creditor is scheduled to email the disclosures required
under Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i) to the consumer on Wednesday, June 3, and
the consumer requests a change to the loan that would result in revised
disclosures pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(C) on Tuesday, June 2,
the creditor complies with the requirements of Sec. 1026.19(e)(4) by
providing the disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i)
reflecting the consumer-requested changes on Wednesday, June 3.
However, the creditor does not comply with the requirements of Sec.
1026.19(e)(4) if it provides disclosures reflecting the consumer-
requested changes using both the revised version of the disclosures
required under Sec. 1026.19(e)(1)(i) on Wednesday, June 3, and also
the disclosures required under Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i) on Wednesday,
June 3.
iii. Consummation is scheduled for Thursday, June 4. The creditor
hand delivers the disclosures required by Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i) on
Monday, June 1, and, on Tuesday, June 2, the consumer requests a change
to the loan that would result in revised disclosures pursuant to Sec.
1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(C) but would not require a new waiting period
pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(ii). Under Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i), the
creditor is required to provide corrected disclosures reflecting any
changed terms to the consumer so that the consumer receives the
corrected disclosures at or before consummation. The creditor complies
with the requirements of Sec. 1026.19(e)(4) by hand delivering the
disclosures required by Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) reflecting the consumer-
requested changes on Thursday, June 4.
iv. Consummation is originally scheduled for Wednesday, June 10.
The creditor hand delivers the disclosures required by Sec.
1026.19(f)(1)(i) on Friday, June 5. On Monday, June 8, the consumer
reschedules consummation for Wednesday, June 17. Also on Monday, June
8, the consumer requests a rate lock extension that would result in
revised disclosures pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(e)(3)(iv)(C) but would
not require a new waiting period pursuant to Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(ii).
The creditor complies with the requirements of Sec. 1026.19(e)(4) by
delivering or placing in the mail the disclosures required by Sec.
1026.19(f)(2)(i) reflecting the consumer-requested changes on Thursday,
June 11. Under Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i), the creditor is required to
provide corrected disclosures reflecting any changed terms to the
consumer so that the consumer receives the corrected disclosures at or
before consummation. The creditor complies with Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i)
by hand delivering the disclosures on Thursday, June 11. Alternatively,
the creditor complies with Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) by providing the
disclosures to the consumer by mail, including by electronic mail, on
Thursday, June 11, because the consumer is considered to have received
the corrected disclosures on Monday, June 15 (unless the creditor
relies on evidence that the consumer received the corrected disclosures
earlier). See Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(iii) and comments 19(f)(1)(iii)-1 and
-2. See also Sec. 1026.38(t)(3) and comment 19(f)(1)(iii)-2 regarding
providing the disclosures required by Sec. 1026.19(f)(1)(i) (including
any corrected disclosures provided under Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(i) or
(ii)) in electronic form.
v. Consummation is originally scheduled for Wednesday, June 10. The
creditor hand delivers the disclosures required by Sec.
1026.19(f)(1)(i) on Friday, June 5, and the APR becomes inaccurate on
Monday, June 8, such that the creditor is required to delay
consummation and provide corrected disclosures, including any other
changed terms, so that the consumer receives them at least three
business days before consummation under Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(ii).
Consummation is rescheduled for Friday, June 12. The creditor complies
with the requirements of Sec. 1026.19(e)(4) by hand delivering the
disclosures required by Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(ii) reflecting the revised
APR and any other changed terms to the consumer on Tuesday, June 9. See
Sec. 1026.19(f)(2)(ii) and associated
[[Page 19176]]
commentary regarding changes before consummation requiring a new
waiting period. See comment 19(e)(4)(i)-1 for further guidance on when
sufficient information has been received to establish an event has
occurred.
* * * * *
Dated: April 26, 2018.
Mick Mulvaney,
Acting Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.
[FR Doc. 2018-09243 Filed 5-1-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-AM-P