Qualified Mortgage Definition Under the Truth in Lending Act (Regulation Z): Extension of Sunset Date, 67938-67960 [2020-23540]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 207 / Monday, October 26, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL
PROTECTION
12 CFR Part 1026
[Docket No. CFPB–2020–0021]
Qualified Mortgage Definition Under
the Truth in Lending Act (Regulation
Z): Extension of Sunset Date
Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.
ACTION: Final rule; official
interpretation.
AGENCY:
With certain exceptions,
Regulation Z requires creditors to make
a reasonable, good faith determination
of a consumer’s ability to repay any
residential mortgage loan, and loans that
meet Regulation Z’s requirements for
‘‘qualified mortgages’’ (QMs) obtain
certain protections from liability. One
category of QMs consists of loans that
are eligible for purchase or guarantee by
either the Federal National Mortgage
Association (Fannie Mae) or the Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
(Freddie Mac) (collectively,
government-sponsored enterprises, or
GSEs), while operating under the
conservatorship or receivership of the
Federal Housing Finance Agency
(FHFA). The GSEs are currently under
Federal conservatorship. In 2013, the
Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection (Bureau) established this
category of QMs (Temporary GSE QM
loans) as a temporary measure that
would expire with respect to each GSE
on the date that GSE exits
conservatorship, or on January 10, 2021,
whichever comes first. In this final rule,
the Bureau amends Regulation Z to
replace the January 10, 2021 sunset date
of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition with a provision stating that
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
will be available only for covered
transactions for which the creditor
receives the consumer’s application
before the mandatory compliance date
of final amendments to the General QM
loan definition in Regulation Z. This
final rule does not amend the provision
stating that the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition expires with respect to a GSE
when that GSE exits conservatorship.
DATES: This rule is effective December
28, 2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ben
Cady, Counsel; or David Friend or
Priscilla Walton-Fein, Senior Counsels,
Office of Regulations, at 202–435–7700.
If you require this document in an
alternative electronic format, please
contact CFPB_Accessibility@cfpb.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
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I. Summary of the Final Rule
The Ability-to-Repay/Qualified
Mortgage Rule (ATR/QM Rule) requires
a creditor to make a reasonable, good
faith determination of a consumer’s
ability to repay a residential mortgage
loan according to its terms. Loans that
meet the ATR/QM Rule’s requirements
for QMs obtain certain protections from
liability. The ATR/QM Rule defines
several categories of QMs.
One QM category defined in the ATR/
QM Rule is the General QM loan
category. General QM loans must
comply with the ATR/QM Rule’s
prohibitions on certain loan features, its
points-and-fees limits, and its
underwriting requirements. For General
QM loans, the ratio of the consumer’s
total monthly debt to total monthly
income (DTI ratio) must not exceed 43
percent. Creditors must calculate,
consider, and verify debt and income for
purposes of determining the consumer’s
DTI ratio using the standards contained
in appendix Q of Regulation Z.
A second, temporary category of QM
loans defined in the ATR/QM Rule
consists of mortgages that (1) comply
with the same loan-feature prohibitions
and points-and-fees limits as General
QM loans and (2) are eligible to be
purchased or guaranteed by Fannie Mae
or Freddie Mac while under the
conservatorship of the FHFA. This final
rule refers to these loans as Temporary
GSE QM loans, and the provision that
created this loan category is commonly
known as the GSE Patch. Unlike for
General QM loans, the ATR/QM Rule
does not prescribe a DTI limit for
Temporary GSE QM loans. Thus, a loan
can qualify as a Temporary GSE QM
loan even if the consumer’s DTI ratio
exceeds 43 percent, as long as the loan
is eligible to be purchased or guaranteed
by either of the GSEs. In addition, for
Temporary GSE QM loans, the ATR/QM
Rule does not require creditors to use
appendix Q to determine the
consumer’s income, debt, or DTI ratio.
In 2013, the Bureau provided in the
ATR/QM Rule that the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition would expire with
respect to each GSE when that GSE exits
conservatorship or on January 10, 2021,
whichever comes first. The GSEs are
currently in conservatorship. Despite
the Bureau’s expectations when the
ATR/QM Rule was published in 2013,
Temporary GSE QM loan originations
continue to represent a large and
persistent share of the residential
mortgage loan market. A significant
number of Temporary GSE QM loans
would be affected by the expiration of
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition,
including loans for which the
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consumer’s DTI ratio is above 43
percent or the creditor’s method of
documenting and verifying income or
debt is incompatible with appendix Q.
Based on 2018 data, the Bureau
estimates that, as a result of the General
QM loan definition’s 43 percent DTI
limit, approximately 957,000 loans—16
percent of all closed-end first-lien
residential mortgage originations in
2018—would be affected by the
expiration of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition. These loans are
currently originated as QM loans due to
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
but would not be originated under the
current General QM loan definition, and
might not be originated at all, if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
were to expire.
On June 22, 2020, the Bureau issued
two proposed rules concerning the
ATR/QM Rule. In one of the proposals—
referred to in this final rule as the
Extension Proposal—the Bureau
proposed to extend the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition until the effective
date of a final rule issued by the Bureau
amending the General QM loan
definition.1 In the other proposal—
referred to in this final rule as the
General QM Proposal—the Bureau
proposed amendments to the General
QM loan definition.2 In the General QM
Proposal, the Bureau proposed, among
other things, to remove the General QM
loan definition’s DTI limit and replace
it with a limit based on the loan’s
pricing. The Bureau stated that it
expected such amendments would
allow most loans that currently could
receive QM status under the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition to receive QM
status under the General QM loan
definition if they are made after the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
expires. Based on 2018 data, the Bureau
estimated in the General QM Proposal
that 943,000 High-DTI conventional
loans would fall outside the QM
definitions if there are no changes to the
General QM loan definition prior to the
expiration of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition but would fall within the
General QM loan definition if it were
amended as the Bureau proposed. The
Bureau stated that, as a result, the
General QM Proposal would help to
facilitate a smooth and orderly
transition away from the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition.
On August 18, 2020, the Bureau
issued a third proposal concerning the
ATR/QM Rule. In that proposal—
referred to in this final rule as the
Seasoned QM Proposal—the Bureau
1 85
2 85
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proposed to create a new category of
QMs (Seasoned QMs) for first-lien,
fixed-rate covered transactions that meet
certain performance requirements over a
36-month seasoning period, are held in
portfolio until the end of the seasoning
period, comply with general restrictions
on product features and points and fees,
and meet certain underwriting
requirements.3
In this final rule, the Bureau amends
Regulation Z to replace the January 10,
2021 sunset date of the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition with a provision
stating that the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition will be available only for
covered transactions for which the
creditor receives the consumer’s
application before the mandatory
compliance date of final amendments to
the General QM loan definition in
Regulation Z. This final rule does not
amend the provision stating that the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
expires with respect to a GSE when that
GSE exits conservatorship (the
conservatorship clause). This final rule
does not affect the QM definitions that
apply to Federal Housing
Administration (FHA), U.S. Department
of Veterans Affairs (VA), U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA), or
Rural Housing Service (RHS) loans. The
Bureau concludes that this extension of
the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition’s sunset date will ensure that
responsible, affordable mortgage credit
remains available to consumers who
may be affected if the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition expires before the
amendments to the General QM loan
definition take effect.
II. Background
A. Dodd-Frank Act Amendments to the
Truth in Lending Act
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act (DoddFrank Act) 4 amended the Truth in
Lending Act (TILA) 5 to establish,
among other things, ability-to-repay
(ATR) requirements in connection with
the origination of most residential
mortgage loans.6 The amendments were
intended ‘‘to assure that consumers are
offered and receive residential mortgage
loans on terms that reasonably reflect
their ability to repay the loans and that
are understandable and not unfair,
deceptive or abusive.’’ 7 As amended,
TILA prohibits a creditor from making
a residential mortgage loan unless the
3 85
FR 53568 (Aug. 28, 2020).
Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
5 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.
6 Dodd-Frank Act sections 1411–12, 1414, 124
Stat. 2142–48, 2149; 15 U.S.C. 1639c.
7 15 U.S.C. 1639b(a)(2).
4 Public
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creditor makes a reasonable and good
faith determination based on verified
and documented information that the
consumer has a reasonable ability to
repay the loan.8
TILA identifies the factors a creditor
must consider in making a reasonable
and good faith assessment of a
consumer’s ability to repay. These
factors are the consumer’s credit history,
current and expected income, current
obligations, debt-to-income ratio or
residual income after paying nonmortgage debt and mortgage-related
obligations, employment status, and
other financial resources other than
equity in the dwelling or real property
that secures the repayment of the loan.9
A creditor, however, may not be certain
whether its ability-to-repay
determination is reasonable in a
particular case, and it risks liability if a
court or an agency, including the
Bureau, later concludes that the abilityto-repay determination was not
reasonable.
TILA addresses this uncertainty by
defining a category of loans—called
QMs—for which a creditor ‘‘may
presume that the loan has met’’ the ATR
requirements.10 The statute generally
defines a QM to mean any residential
mortgage loan for which:
• The loan does not have negative
amortization, interest-only payments, or
balloon payments;
• The loan term does not exceed 30
years;
• The total points and fees generally
do not exceed 3 percent of the loan
amount;
• The income and assets relied upon
for repayment are verified and
documented;
• The underwriting uses a monthly
payment based on the maximum rate
during the first five years, uses a
payment schedule that fully amortizes
the loan over the loan term, and takes
into account all mortgage-related
obligations; and
• The loan complies with any
guidelines or regulations established by
the Bureau relating to the ratio of total
monthly debt to monthly income or
alternative measures of ability to pay
8 15 U.S.C. 1639b(a)(1). TILA section 103 defines
‘‘residential mortgage loan’’ to mean, with some
exceptions including open-end credit plans, ‘‘any
consumer credit transaction that is secured by a
mortgage deed of trust, or other equivalent
consensual security interest on a dwelling or on
residential real property that includes a dwelling.’’
15 U.S.C. 1639b(dd)(5). TILA section 129C also
exempts certain residential mortgage loans from the
ATR requirements. See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. 1639c(a)(8)
(exempting reverse mortages and temporary or
bridge loans with a term of 12 months or less).
9 15 U.S.C. 1639c(a)(3).
10 15 U.S.C. 1639c(b)(1).
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regular expenses after payment of total
monthly debt.11
B. The ATR/QM Rule
In January 2013, the Bureau issued
the ATR/QM Rule, which amended
Regulation Z to implement TILA’s ATR
requirements (January 2013 Final
Rule).12 The ATR/QM Rule became
effective on January 10, 2014, and the
Bureau amended it several times
through 2016.13 The ATR/QM Rule
implements the statutory ATR
provisions discussed above and defines
several categories of QM loans.14 Under
the ATR/QM Rule, a creditor that makes
a QM loan is protected from liability
presumptively or conclusively,
depending on whether the loan is
‘‘higher priced.’’ 15
1. General QM Loans
One category of QM loans defined by
the ATR/QM Rule consists of General
QM loans. A loan is a General QM loan
if:
• The loan does not have negativeamortization, interest-only, or balloonpayment features, a term that exceeds 30
years, or points and fees that exceed
specified limits; 16
• The creditor underwrites the loan
based on a fully amortizing schedule
using the maximum rate permitted
during the first five years; 17
• The creditor considers and verifies
the consumer’s income and debt
obligations in accordance with
appendix Q; 18 and
• The consumer’s DTI ratio is no
more than 43 percent, determined in
accordance with appendix Q.19
11 15
U.S.C. 1639c(b)(2)(A).
FR 6408 (Jan. 30, 2013).
13 See 78 FR 35429 (June 12, 2013); 78 FR 44686
(July 24, 2013); 78 FR 60382 (Oct. 1, 2013); 79 FR
65300 (Nov. 3, 2014); 80 FR 59944 (Oct. 2, 2015);
81 FR 16074 (Mar. 25, 2016).
14 12 CFR 1026.43(c), (e).
15 The ATR/QM Rule generally defines a ‘‘higherpriced’’ covered transaction for General QM loans
and for Temporary GSE QM loans to mean a firstlien mortgage with an annual percentage rate (APR)
that exceeds the average prime offer rate (APOR) for
a comparable transaction as of the date the interest
rate is set by 1.5 or more percentage points; or a
subordinate-lien transaction with an APR that
exceeds APOR for a comparable transaction as of
the date the interest rate is set by 3.5 or more
percentage points. 12 CFR 1026.43(b)(4). A creditor
that makes a QM loan that is not ‘‘higher priced’’
is entitled to a conclusive presumption that it has
complied with the ATR/QM Rule—i.e., the creditor
receives a safe harbor. 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(1)(i). A
creditor that makes a QM loan that is ‘‘higher
priced’’ is entitled to a rebuttable presumption that
it has complied with the ATR/QM Rule. 12 CFR
1026.43(e)(1)(ii).
16 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(2)(i) through (iii).
17 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(2)(iv).
18 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(2)(v).
19 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(2)(vi).
12 78
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Appendix Q contains standards for
calculating and verifying debt and
income for purposes of determining
whether a mortgage satisfies the 43
percent DTI limit for General QM loans.
The standards in appendix Q were
adapted from guidelines maintained by
FHA when the January 2013 Final Rule
was issued.20 Appendix Q addresses
how to determine a consumer’s
employment-related income (e.g.,
income from wages, commissions, and
retirement plans); non-employment
related income (e.g., income from
alimony and child support payments,
investments, and property rentals); and
liabilities, including recurring and
contingent liabilities and projected
obligations.21
2. Temporary GSE QM Loans
A second, temporary category of QM
loans defined by the ATR/QM Rule,
Temporary GSE QM loans, consists of
mortgages that (1) comply with the
ATR/QM Rule’s prohibitions on certain
loan features and its limitations on
points and fees 22 and (2) are eligible to
be purchased or guaranteed by either
GSE while under the conservatorship of
the FHFA.23 Unlike for General QM
loans, Regulation Z does not prescribe a
DTI limit for Temporary GSE QM loans.
Thus, a loan can qualify as a Temporary
GSE QM loan even if the DTI ratio
exceeds 43 percent, as long as the DTI
ratio meets the applicable GSE’s DTI
requirements and other underwriting
criteria. In addition, income, debt, and
DTI ratios for such loans generally are
verified and calculated using GSE
standards, rather than appendix Q. The
January 2013 Final Rule provided that
the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition—also known as the GSE
Patch—would expire with respect to
each GSE when that GSE exits
conservatorship or on January 10, 2021,
whichever comes first.24
20 78 FR 6408, 6527–28 (Jan. 30, 2013) (noting
that appendix Q incorporates, with certain
modifications, the definitions and standards in
HUD Handbook 4155.1, Mortgage Credit Analysis
for Mortgage Insurance on One- to Four-Unit
Mortgage Loans).
21 12 CFR 1026, appendix Q.
22 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(2)(i) through (iii).
23 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(4).
24 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B). The ATR/QM Rule
created several additional categories of QM loans.
The ATR/QM Rule provided that mortgages eligible
to be insured or guaranteed (as applicable) by HUD,
VA, USDA, and RHS were QMs. 12 CFR
1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(B) through (E). The ATR/QM Rule
stated that these provisions would expire on the
effective date of rules issued by each of these
agencies pursuant to their authority under TILA to
define a QM. 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(A). Because
each of these agencies has issued such a rule, these
provisions have expired. See, e.g., 24 CFR 203.19
(HUD rule). Other categories of QM loans provide
more flexible standards for certain loans originated
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C. The Bureau’s Assessment of the ATR/
QM Rule
Section 1022(d) of the Dodd-Frank
Act requires the Bureau to assess each
of its significant rules and orders and to
publish a report of each assessment
within five years of the effective date of
the rule or order.25 The Bureau noted in
the January 2013 Final Rule that its
section 1022(d) assessment of the ATR/
QM Rule would provide an opportunity
to analyze the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition and confirm, prior to its
expiration, whether it would be
appropriate to allow it to expire.26 The
Bureau published its report as a result
of its assessment on January 11, 2019
(Assessment Report).27
D. Effects of the COVID–19 Pandemic on
Mortgage Markets
The COVID–19 pandemic has had a
significant effect on the U.S. economy.
In the early months of the pandemic,
economic activity contracted, millions
of workers became unemployed, and
mortgage markets were affected. In
recent months, there has been a
significant rebound in mortgageorigination activity, buoyed by
historically low interest rates and by an
increasingly large share of government
and GSE-backed loans. However,
origination activity outside the
government and GSE-backed origination
channels has declined significantly, and
mortgage-credit availability for many
consumers—including those who would
be dependent on the non-QM market for
financing—remains tight. The
pandemic’s impact on both the
secondary market for new originations
and on the servicing of existing
mortgages is described below.
1. Secondary Market Impacts and
Implications for Mortgage Origination
Markets
The early economic disruptions
associated with the COVID–19
pandemic restricted the flow of credit in
the U.S. economy, particularly as
tensions and uncertainty rose in midMarch 2020, and investors moved
rapidly towards cash and government
securities.28 The lack of investor
by certain small creditors. 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(5), (f);
cf. 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(6) (applicable only to covered
transactions for which the application was received
before April 1, 2016).
25 12 U.S.C. 5512(d).
26 78 FR 6408, 6533–34 (Jan. 30, 2013).
27 Bureau of Consumer Fin. Prot., Ability-toRepay and Qualified Mortgage Rule Assessment
Report (Jan. 2019), 2019) (Assessment Report),
https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/
cfpb_ability-to-repay-qualified-mortgage_
assessment-report.pdf.
28 The Quarterly CARES Act Report to Congress:
Hearing Before the S. Comm. on Banking, Housing,
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demand to purchase mortgages,
combined with a large supply of agency
mortgage-backed securities (MBS)
entering the market,29 resulted in
widening spreads between the rates on
a 10-year Treasury note and mortgage
interest rates.30 This dynamic made it
difficult for creditors to originate loans,
as many creditors rely on the ability to
profitably sell loans in the secondary
market to generate the liquidity to
originate new loans. This resulted in
mortgages becoming more expensive for
both homebuyers and homeowners
looking to refinance. After the actions
taken by the Federal Reserve Board of
Governors (Board) in March 2020 to
purchase agency MBS ‘‘in the amounts
needed to support smooth market
functioning and effective transmission
of monetary policy to broader financial
conditions and the economy,’’ 31 market
conditions have improved
substantially.32 This has helped to
tighten interest rate spreads, which
stabilizes mortgage rates, resulting in a
decline in mortgage rates since the
Board’s intervention and in a significant
increase in refinance activity.
However, non-agency MBS 33 are
generally perceived by investors as
riskier than agency MBS. As a result,
private capital has remained tight and
non-agency mortgage credit, including
non-QM lending, has declined. Issuance
of non-agency MBS declined by 8.2
percent in the first quarter of 2020, with
nearly all the transactions completed in
January and February before the
COVID–19 pandemic began to affect the
economy significantly.34 Nearly all
major non-QM creditors ceased making
loans in March and April 2020.
Beginning in May 2020, issuers of nonand Urban Affairs, 116th Cong. 2–3 (2020)
(statement of Jerome H. Powell, Chairman, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System).
29 Agency MBS are backed by loans guaranteed by
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Government
National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae).
30 Laurie Goodman et al., Urban Inst., Housing
Finance at a Glance, Monthly Chartbook (Mar. 26,
2020), https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/
publication/101926/housing-finance-at-a-glance-amonthly-chartbook-march-2020.pdf.
31 Press Release, Bd. of Governors of the Fed.
Reserve Sys., Federal Reserve announces extensive
new measures to support the economy (Mar. 23,
2020), https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/
pressreleases/monetary20200323b.htm.
32 The Quarterly CARES Act Report to Congress:
Hearing Before the S. Comm. on Banking, Housing,
and Urban Affairs, 116th Cong. 3 (2020) (statement
of Jerome H. Powell, Chairman, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System).
33 Non-agency MBS are not backed by loans
guaranteed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac or Ginnie
Mae. This includes securities collateralized by nonQM loans.
34 Brandon Ivey, Non-Agency MBS Issuance
Slowed in First Quarter (Apr. 3, 2020), https://
www.insidemortgagefinance.com/articles/217623non-agency-mbs-issuance-slowed-in-first-quarter.
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agency MBS began to test the market
with deals collateralized by non-QM
loans largely originated prior to the
pandemic, and investor demand for
these securitizations has begun to
recover. However, no securitization has
been completed that is predominantly
collateralized by non-QM loans
originated since the pandemic began.35
As a result, many non-QM creditors—
which largely depend on the ability to
sell loans in the secondary market in
order to fund new loans—have begun to
resume originations, albeit with a tighter
credit box.36 Prime jumbo financing
dropped nearly 22 percent in the first
quarter of 2020. Banks increased interest
rates and narrowed the product
offerings such that only consumers with
pristine credit profiles were eligible, as
these loans must be held in portfolio
when the secondary market for nonagency MBS contracts.37
The GSEs and government agencies
continue to play a dominant role in the
market recovery, with the GSE share of
first-lien mortgage originations at 65.2
percent in the second quarter of 2020,
up from 42.1 percent in the second
quarter of 2019 and the FHA and VA
share growing to 21.1 percent from 17.7
percent a year prior, according to an
analysis by the Urban Institute. Portfolio
lending declined to 12.7 percent in the
second quarter of 2020, down from 38.6
percent in the second quarter of 2019,
and private label securitizations
declined to 1 percent from 1.6 percent
a year prior.38
2. Servicing Market Impacts and
Implications for Origination Markets
In addition to the direct impact on
origination volume and composition,
the pandemic’s impact on the mortgage
servicing market has downstream effects
on mortgage originations as many of the
same entities both originate and service
mortgages. Anticipating that a number
of homeowners would struggle to pay
their mortgages due to the pandemic
and related economic impacts, Congress
passed and the President signed into
law the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and
35 Brandon Ivey, Non-Agency MBS Issuance Slow
in Mid-August (Aug. 21, 2020), https://
www.insidemortgagefinance.com/articles/218973non-agency-mbs-issuance-slow-in-mid-august.
36 Brandon Ivey, Non-Agency Mortgage
Securitization Opening Up After Pause (May 14,
2020), https://www.insidemortgagefinance.com/
articles/218034-non-agency-mortgagesecuritization-opening-up-after-pause.
37 Brandon Ivey, Jumbo Originations Drop Nearly
22% in First Quarter (May 15, 2020) https://
www.insidemortgagefinance.com/articles/218028jumbo-originations-drop-nearly-22-in-first-quarter.
38 Laurie Goodman et al., Urban Inst., Housing
Finance at a Glance, Monthly Chartbook (Aug. 27,
2020), https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/
publication/102776/august-chartbook-2020.pdf.
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Economic Security Act (CARES Act) 39
in March 2020. The CARES Act
provides additional protections for
borrowers whose mortgages are
purchased or securitized by a GSE and
certain federally backed mortgages. The
CARES Act mandated a 60-day
foreclosure moratorium for such
mortgages, which has since been
extended by the agencies until the end
of the year.40 The CARES Act also
allows borrowers to request up to 180
days of forbearance due to a COVID–19related financial hardship, with an
option to extend the forbearance period
for an additional 180 days.
Following the passage of the CARES
Act, some mortgage servicers remain
obligated to make some principal and
interest payments to investors in GSE
and Ginnie Mae securities, even if
consumers are not making payments.41
Servicers also remain obligated to make
escrowed real estate tax and insurance
payments to local taxing authorities and
insurance companies. While servicers
are required to hold liquid reserves to
cover anticipated advances,
significantly higher-than-expected
forbearance rates over an extended
period of time may lead to liquidity
shortages, particularly among many
non-bank servicers. According to a
weekly survey from the Mortgage
Bankers Association, while forbearance
39 Public Law 116–136, 134 Stat. 281 (2020)
(includes loans backed by HUD, USDA, VA, Fannie
Mae, and Freddie Mac).
40 See, e.g., Fed. Hous. Fin. Agency, FHFA
Extends Foreclosure and REO Eviction Moratoriums
(Aug. 27, 2020), https://www.fhfa.gov/Media/
PublicAffairs/Pages/FHFA-Extends-Foreclosureand-REO-Eviction-Moratoriums.aspx; Press Release,
U.S. Dep’t of Hous. & Urban Dev., FHA Extends
Foreclosure And Eviction Moratorium For
Homeowners Through Year End (Aug. 27, 2020),
https://www.hud.gov/press/press_releases_media_
advisories/HUD_No_20_134; Veterans Benefits
Admin., Extended Foreclosure Moratorium for
Borrowers Affected by COVID–19 (Aug. 24, 2020),
https://www.benefits.va.gov/HOMELOANS/
documents/circulars/26-20-30.pdf; Rural Dev., U.S.
Dep’t of Agric., Extension of Foreclosure and
Eviction Moratorium for Single Family Housing
Direct Loans (Aug. 28, 2020), https://
content.govdelivery.com/accounts/USDARD/
bulletins/29c3a9e.
41 The GSEs typically repurchase loans out of the
trust after they fall 120 days delinquent, after which
the servicer is no longer required to advance
principal and interest, but Ginnie Mae requires
servicers to advance principal and interest until the
default is resolved. On April 21, 2020, the FHFA
confirmed that servicers of GSE loans will only be
required to advance four months of mortgage
payments, regardless of whether the GSEs
repurchase the loans from the trust after 120 days
of delinquency. Fed. Hous. Fin. Agency, FHFA
Addresses Servicer Liquidity Concerns, Announces
Four Month Advance Obligation Limit for Loans in
Forbearance (Apr. 21, 2020), https://www.fhfa.gov/
Media/PublicAffairs/Pages/FHFA-AddressesServicer-Liquidity-Concerns-Announces-FourMonth-Advance-Obligation-Limit-for-Loans-inForbearance.aspx.
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rates remain elevated at 6.32 percent for
the week ending October 4, 2020, they
have decreased since reaching their high
of 8.55 percent on June 7, 2020.42
Because many mortgage servicers also
originate the loans they service, many
creditors, as well as several warehouse
providers,43 initially responded to the
risk of elevated forbearances and higherthan-expected monthly advances by
imposing credit overlays—i.e.,
additional underwriting standards—for
new originations. These new
underwriting standards include more
stringent requirements for non-QM,
jumbo, and government loans.44 The
GSEs also imposed an ‘‘adverse market
fee’’ of 50 basis points on most
refinances, effective for new
originations delivered to the GSEs on or
after December 1, 2020, to cover
projected losses due to forbearances, the
foreclosure moratoriums, and other
default servicing expenses.45 However,
due to refinance origination profits
resulting from historically low interest
rates, the leveling off in forbearance
rates, and actions taken at the Federal
level to alleviate servicer liquidity
pressure,46 concerns over non-bank
liquidity and related credit overlays
have begun to ease.47 While the non-QM
market has begun to recover, it is
unclear how quickly non-banks who
originate non-QM loans will fully return
42 Press Release, Mortg. Bankers Ass’n, Share of
Mortgage Loans in Forbearance Declines to 6.32%
(Oct. 12, 2020), https://www.mba.org/2020-pressreleases/october/share-of-mortgage-loans-inforbearance-declines-to-632.
43 Warehouse providers are creditors that provide
financing to mortgage originators and servicers to
fund and service loans.
44 Maria Volkova, FHA/VA Lenders Raise Credit
Score Requirements (Apr. 3, 2020), https://
www.insidemortgagefinance.com/articles/217636fhava-lenders-raise-fico-credit-score-requirements.
45 Press Release, Fed. Hous. Fin. Agency, Adverse
Market Refinance Fee Implementation now
December 1 (Aug. 25, 2020), https://www.fhfa.gov/
Media/PublicAffairs/Pages/Adverse-MarketRefinance-Fee-Implementation-Now-December1.aspx.
46 On April 10, 2020, Ginnie Mae released
guidance on a Pass-Through Assistance Program
whereby Ginnie Mae will provide financial
assistance at a fixed interest rate to servicers facing
a principal and interest shortfall as a last resort. All
Participant Memorandum (APM) 20–03, https://
www.ginniemae.gov/issuers/program_guidelines/
Pages/mbsguideapmslibdisppage.aspx?ParamID=
105. On April 7, 2020, Ginnie Mae also announced
approval of a servicing advance financing facility,
whereby mortgage servicing rights are securitized
and sold to private investors. Press Release, Ginnie
Mae approves private market servicer liquidity
facility, https://www.ginniemae.gov/newsroom/
Pages/PressReleaseDispPage.aspx?ParamID=194.
47 Brandon Ivey, Non-QM Lenders Regaining
Footing (July 24, 2020), https://
www.insidemortgagefinance.com/articles/218696non-qm-lenders-regaining-footing-with-a-positiveoutlook (on file).
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to their pre-pandemic level of
operations and loan production.
III. Summary of the Rulemaking
Process
The Bureau has solicited and received
substantial public and stakeholder input
on issues related to the substance of this
final rule. In addition to the Bureau’s
discussions with and communications
from industry stakeholders, consumer
advocates, other Federal agencies,48 and
members of Congress, the Bureau issued
requests for information (RFIs) in 2017
and 2018 and in July 2019 issued an
advance notice of proposed rulemaking
regarding the ATR/QM Rule (ANPR).
The Bureau issued the Extension
Proposal and the General QM Proposal
on June 22, 2020 and the Seasoned QM
Proposal on August 18, 2020.
A. The Requests for Information
In June 2017, the Bureau published an
RFI in connection with the Assessment
Report (Assessment RFI).49 In response
to the Assessment RFI, the Bureau
received approximately 480 comments
from creditors, industry groups,
consumer advocacy groups, and
individuals.50 The comments addressed
a variety of topics, including the
General QM loan definition and the 43
percent DTI limit; perceived problems
with, and potential changes and
alternatives to, appendix Q; and how
the Bureau should address the
expiration of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition. The comments
expressed a range of ideas for
addressing the expiration of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition.
Some commenters recommended
making the definition permanent or
extending it for various periods of time.
Other comments stated that the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
should be eliminated or permitted to
expire.
Beginning in January 2018, the
Bureau issued a general call for
evidence seeking comment on its
enforcement, supervision, rulemaking,
market monitoring, and financial
education activities.51 As part of the call
48 The Bureau has consulted with agencies
including the FHFA, the Board, FHA, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Trade
Commission, the National Credit Union
Administration, and the Department of the
Treasury.
49 82 FR 25246 (June 1, 2017).
50 See Assessment Report, supra note 27, at
appendix B (summarizing comments received in
response to the Assessment RFI).
51 See Bureau of Consumer Fin. Prot., Call for
Evidence, https://www.consumerfinance.gov/policycompliance/notice-opportunities-comment/archiveclosed/call-for-evidence (last updated Apr. 17,
2018).
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for evidence, the Bureau published
requests for information relating to,
among other things, the Bureau’s
rulemaking process,52 the Bureau’s
adopted regulations and new
rulemaking authorities,53 and the
Bureau’s inherited regulations and
inherited rulemaking authorities.54 In
response to the call for evidence, the
Bureau received comments on the ATR/
QM Rule from stakeholders, including
consumer advocacy groups and industry
groups. The comments addressed a
variety of topics, including the General
QM loan definition, appendix Q, and
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition.
The comments also raised concerns
about, among other things, the risks of
allowing the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition to expire without any changes
to the General QM loan definition or
appendix Q. The concerns raised in
these comments were similar to those
raised in response to the Assessment
RFI, discussed above.
B. The ANPR
On July 25, 2019, the Bureau issued
the ANPR.55 The ANPR stated the
Bureau’s tentative plans to allow the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition to
expire in January 2021 or after a short
extension, if necessary, to facilitate a
smooth and orderly transition away
from the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition. The Bureau also stated that
it was considering whether to propose
revisions to the General QM loan
definition in light of the potential
expiration of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition and requested comments
on several topics related to the General
QM loan definition, including whether
and how the Bureau should revise the
DTI limit in the General QM loan
definition; whether the Bureau should
supplement or replace the DTI limit
with another method for directly
measuring a consumer’s personal
finances; whether the Bureau should
revise appendix Q or replace it with
other standards for calculating and
verifying a consumer’s debt and income;
and whether, instead of a DTI limit, the
Bureau should adopt standards that do
not directly measure a consumer’s
personal finances.56 The Bureau
requested comment on how much time
industry would need to change its
practices in response to any revisions
the Bureau makes to the General QM
52 83
FR 10437 (Mar. 9, 2018).
FR 12286 (Mar. 21, 2018).
54 83 FR 12881 (Mar. 26, 2018).
55 84 FR 37155 (July 31, 2019).
56 Id. at 37155, 37160–62.
53 83
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loan definition.57 The Bureau received
85 comments on the ANPR from
businesses in the mortgage industry
(including creditors), consumer
advocacy groups, elected officials,
individuals, and research centers.
C. The Extension Proposal, General QM
Proposal, and Seasoned QM Proposal
The Bureau issued the Extension
Proposal and the General QM Proposal
on June 22, 2020. In the Extension
Proposal, the Bureau proposed to
replace the January 10, 2021 sunset date
of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition with a provision that extends
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
until the effective date of final
amendments to the General QM loan
definition in Regulation Z (i.e., a final
rule relating to the General QM
Proposal). The Bureau did not propose
to amend the conservatorship clause.
The comment period for the Extension
Proposal ended on August 10, 2020.
In the General QM Proposal, the
Bureau proposed, among other things, to
remove the General QM loan
definition’s DTI limit and replace it
with a limit based on the loan’s pricing.
Under the proposal, a loan would meet
the General QM loan definition in
§ 1026.43(e)(2) only if the APR exceeds
APOR for a comparable transaction by
less than two percentage points as of the
date the interest rate is set. The Bureau
proposed higher thresholds for loans
with smaller loan amounts and
subordinate-lien transactions. The
Bureau also proposed to retain the
existing product-feature and
underwriting requirements and limits
on points and fees. Although the Bureau
proposed to remove the 43 percent DTI
limit from the General QM loan
definition, the General QM Proposal
would require that the creditor consider
and verify the consumer’s income or
assets, debt obligations, alimony, child
support, and monthly DTI ratio or
residual income. The Bureau proposed
to remove appendix Q. To mitigate the
uncertainty that may result from
appendix Q’s removal, the General QM
Proposal would clarify the requirements
to consider and verify a consumer’s
income, assets, debt obligations,
alimony, and child support. The Bureau
proposed to preserve the current
threshold separating safe harbor from
rebuttable presumption QMs, under
which a loan is a safe harbor QM if its
APR exceeds APOR for a comparable
transaction by less than 1.5 percentage
57 Id. at 37162. The Bureau stated that if the
answer to this question depends on how the Bureau
revises the definition, the Bureau requested answers
based on alternative possible definitions.
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points as of the date the interest rate is
set (or by less than 3.5 percentage points
for subordinate-lien transactions).
Although the Bureau proposed to
remove the 43 percent DTI limit and
adopt a price-based approach for the
General QM loan definition, the Bureau
also requested comment on two
alternative approaches: (1) Retaining the
DTI limit and increasing it to a specific
threshold between 45 percent and 48
percent or (2) using a hybrid approach
involving both pricing and a DTI limit,
such as applying a DTI limit to loans
that are above specified rate spreads.
Under these alternative approaches,
creditors would not be required to verify
debt and income using appendix Q.
The Bureau stated in the General QM
Proposal that it expected such
amendments would allow most loans
that currently could receive QM status
under the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition to receive QM status under
the General QM loan definition if they
are made after the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition expires.58 The Bureau
stated that, as a result, the General QM
Proposal would help to facilitate a
smooth and orderly transition away
from the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition. The Bureau proposed that
the effective date of a final rule relating
to the General QM Proposal would be
six months after publication of the final
rule in the Federal Register. The revised
regulations would apply to covered
transactions for which creditors receive
an application on or after this effective
date. The comment period for the
General QM Proposal ended on
September 8, 2020.
On August 18, 2020, the Bureau
issued the Seasoned QM Proposal. The
Bureau proposed to create a new
category of QMs for first-lien, fixed-rate
covered transactions that have met
certain performance requirements over a
36-month seasoning period, are held in
portfolio until the end of the seasoning
period, comply with general restrictions
on product features and points and fees,
and meet certain underwriting
requirements.59 The Bureau stated that
the primary objective of the Seasoned
QM Proposal was to ensure access to
responsible, affordable mortgage credit
by adding a Seasoned QM definition to
the existing QM definitions. The Bureau
proposed that a final rule relating to the
Seasoned QM Proposal would take
effect on the same date as a final rule
relating to the General QM Proposal.
Under the Seasoned QM Proposal—as
under the General QM Proposal—the
revised regulations would apply to
covered transactions for which creditors
receive an application on or after this
effective date. Thus, due to the 36month seasoning period, no loan would
be eligible to become a Seasoned QM
until at least 36 months after the
effective date of a final rule relating to
the Seasoned QM Proposal. The
comment period for the Seasoned QM
Proposal was extended to October 1,
2020.60
IV. Legal Authority
The Bureau is issuing this final rule
pursuant to its authority under TILA
and the Dodd-Frank Act. Section 1061
of the Dodd-Frank Act transferred to the
Bureau the ‘‘consumer financial
protection functions’’ previously vested
in certain other Federal agencies,
including the Board. The Dodd-Frank
Act defines the term ‘‘consumer
financial protection function’’ to
include ‘‘all authority to prescribe rules
or issue orders or guidelines pursuant to
any Federal consumer financial law,
including performing appropriate
functions to promulgate and review
such rules, orders, and guidelines.’’ 61
Title X of the Dodd-Frank Act
(including section 1061), along with
TILA and certain subtitles and
provisions of title XIV of the DoddFrank Act, are Federal consumer
financial laws.62
Section 105(a) of TILA directs the
Bureau to prescribe regulations to carry
out the purposes of TILA and states that
such regulations may contain such
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.63 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
credit terms available to him and avoid
60 85
58 Based
on 2018 data, the Bureau estimated in
the General QM Proposal that 943,000 High-DTI
conventional loans would fall outside the QM
definitions if there are no changes to the General
QM loan definition prior to the expiration of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition but would fall
within the General QM loan definition if amended
as the Bureau proposed.
59 85 FR 53568 (Aug. 28, 2020).
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FR 60096 (Sept. 24, 2020).
U.S.C. 5581(a)(1)(A).
62 Dodd-Frank Act section 1002(14), 12 U.S.C.
5481(14) (defining ‘‘Federal consumer financial
law’’ to include the ‘‘enumerated consumer laws’’
and the provisions of title X of the Dodd-Frank Act),
Dodd-Frank Act section 1002(12)(O), 12 U.S.C.
5481(12)(O) (defining ‘‘enumerated consumer laws’’
to include TILA).
63 15 U.S.C. 1604(a).
61 12
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67943
the uninformed use of credit.’’ 64
Additionally, a purpose of TILA
sections 129B and 129C is to assure that
consumers are offered and receive
residential mortgage loans on terms that
reasonably reflect their ability to repay
the loans and that are understandable
and not unfair, deceptive, or abusive.65
As discussed in the section-by-section
analysis below, the Bureau is issuing
certain provisions of this final rule
pursuant to its rulemaking, adjustment,
and exception authority under TILA
section 105(a).
Section 129C(b)(3)(B)(i) of TILA
authorizes the Bureau to prescribe
regulations that revise, add to, or
subtract from the criteria that define a
QM upon a finding that such regulations
are necessary or proper to ensure that
responsible, affordable mortgage credit
remains available to consumers in a
manner consistent with the purposes of
TILA section 129C; or are necessary and
appropriate to effectuate the purposes of
TILA sections 129B and 129C, to
prevent circumvention or evasion
thereof, or to facilitate compliance with
such sections.66 In addition, TILA
section 129C(b)(3)(A) directs the Bureau
to prescribe regulations to carry out the
purposes of section 129C.67 As
discussed in the section-by-section
analysis below, the Bureau is issuing
certain provisions of this final rule
pursuant to its authority under TILA
section 129C(b)(3)(B)(i).
Section 1022(b)(1) of the Dodd-Frank
Act authorizes the Bureau to prescribe
rules to enable the Bureau to administer
and carry out the purposes and
objectives of the Federal consumer
financial laws, and to prevent evasions
thereof.68 TILA and title X of the DoddFrank Act are Federal consumer
financial laws. Accordingly, in this final
rule, the Bureau is exercising its
authority under Dodd-Frank Act section
1022(b) to prescribe rules that carry out
the purposes and objectives of TILA and
title X and prevent evasion of those
laws.
V. Why the Bureau Is Issuing This Final
Rule
This final rule replaces the January
10, 2021 sunset date of the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition with a
provision that extends the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition until the
mandatory compliance date of final
amendments to the General QM loan
64 15
U.S.C. 1601(a).
U.S.C. 1639b(a)(2).
66 15 U.S.C. 1639c(b)(3)(B)(i).
67 15 U.S.C. 1639c(b)(3)(A).
68 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(1).
65 15
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definition in Regulation Z.69 The
Bureau is issuing this final rule because
it is concerned about the likely effects
on the availability and cost of credit if
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
were to expire before final amendments
to the General QM loan definition take
effect.70 The Bureau proposed
amendments to the General QM loan
definition in the General QM Proposal,
which the Bureau issued on June 22,
2020.71
As explained above, the General QM
Proposal would remove the General QM
loan definition’s 43 percent DTI limit
and replace it with a price-based
approach. Specifically, the General QM
Proposal provides that a loan meets the
General QM loan definition in
§ 1026.43(e)(2) only if the APR exceeds
the APOR for a comparable transaction
by less than two percentage points as of
the date the interest rate is set.72 The
Bureau expects that the amendments the
Bureau proposed in the General QM
Proposal would, among other things,
allow most loans that currently could
receive QM status under the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition to receive QM
status under the General QM loan
definition if they are made after the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
expires.
However, the Bureau believes that
some consumers who would have
obtained loans under the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition—and who
would be able to obtain loans under the
revised General QM loan definition, as
separately proposed in the General QM
Proposal—would not be able to obtain
loans at all if the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition expired before final
amendments to the General QM loan
definition have gone into effect. Further,
for loans absorbed by FHA and the
private market in the absence of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition,
there is a significant risk that some
consumers would have paid more for
these loans. Any such pricing effects,
however, would depend on the
69 This final rule does not amend the
conservatorship clause in § 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A),
which provides that the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition will expire with respect to each GSE
when that GSE exits conservatorship.
70 As described in the section-by-section analysis
below, the mandatory compliance date for a final
rule amending the General QM loan definition
either would be the same as the effective date of
such a final rule or would occur after the effective
date of such a final rule. So, under this final rule,
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition would
cease to be available no earlier than the effective
date of a final rule amending the General QM loan
definition.
71 85 FR 41448 (July 10, 2020).
72 The General QM Proposal would also provide
higher thresholds for loans with smaller loan
amounts and for subordinate-lien transactions.
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characteristics of the particular loans
that would be originated as FHA loans
or in the private market.
To prevent these likely effects on the
availability and cost of credit if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
were to expire before final amendments
to the General QM loan definition take
effect, the Bureau is revising the ATR/
QM Rule to provide that the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition will expire on
the mandatory compliance date of a
final rule issued by the Bureau
amending the General QM loan
definition or when the GSEs exit
conservatorship, whichever comes first.
The Bureau concludes that this
extension of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition’s sunset date will ensure
that responsible, affordable credit
remains available to consumers who
may have been affected if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
were to expire before amendments to
the General QM loan definition take
effect.
Consistent with the Extension
Proposal, and for the reasons discussed
below in the section-by-section analysis
of § 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B), the Bureau is
not amending the conservatorship
clause in § 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A).
A. Why the Bureau Created the
Temporary GSE QM Loan Definition
In the January 2013 Final Rule, the
Bureau explained why it created the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition.
The Bureau observed that it did not
believe that a 43 percent DTI ratio
‘‘represents the outer boundary of
responsible lending’’ and acknowledged
that historically, and even after the
financial crisis, over 20 percent of
mortgages exceeded that threshold.73
However, the Bureau stated that, as DTI
ratios increase, ‘‘the general ability-torepay procedures, rather than the
qualified mortgage framework, is better
suited for consideration of all relevant
factors that go to a consumer’s ability to
repay a mortgage loan’’ and that ‘‘[o]ver
the long term . . . there will be a robust
and sizable market for prudent loans
beyond the 43 percent threshold even
without the benefit of the presumption
of compliance that applies to qualified
mortgages.’’ 74
At the same time, the Bureau noted
that the mortgage market was especially
fragile following the financial crisis and
that GSE-eligible loans and federally
insured or guaranteed loans made up a
significant majority of the market.75 The
Bureau believed that it was appropriate
73 78
FR 6408, 6527 (Jan. 30, 2013).
at 6527–28.
75 Id. at 6533–34.
74 Id.
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to consider for a period of time that
GSE-eligible loans were originated with
an appropriate assessment of the
consumer’s ability to repay and
therefore warranted being treated as
QMs.76 The Bureau believed in 2013
that this temporary category of QM
loans would, in the near term, help to
ensure access to responsible, affordable
credit for consumers with DTI ratios
above 43 percent, as well as facilitate
compliance by creditors by promoting
the use of widely recognized, federally
related underwriting standards.77
The January 2013 Final Rule
established a sunset date for the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition of
January 10, 2021 (seven years after that
rule’s effective date). The January 2013
Final Rule also stated that the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
expires with respect to a GSE when that
GSE exits conservatorship, even if that
occurs before January 10, 2021.78 The
Bureau stated that it believed a sevenyear period between the January 2013
Final Rule’s effective date and the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition’s
sunset date would ‘‘provide an adequate
period for economic, market, and
regulatory conditions to stabilize’’ and
‘‘a reasonable transition period to the
general qualified mortgage
definition.’’ 79 The Bureau believed that
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
would benefit consumers by preserving
access to credit while the mortgage
industry adjusted to the ATR/QM
Rule.80 The Bureau also explained that
it structured the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition to cover loans eligible to
be purchased or guaranteed by either of
the GSEs—regardless of whether the
loans are actually purchased or
guaranteed—to leave room for non-GSE
private investors to return to the market
and secure the same legal protections as
the GSEs.81
The Bureau believed that, as the
market recovered, the GSEs and the
Federal agencies would be able to
reduce their market presence, the
percentage of Temporary GSE QM loans
would decrease, and the market would
shift toward General QM loans and nonQM loans above a 43 percent DTI
ratio.82 The Bureau’s view was that a
shift towards non-QM loans could be
supported by the non-GSE private
market—i.e., by institutions holding
such loans in portfolio, selling them in
76 Id.
at 6534.
at 6533.
78 See 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A)(1) and (iii)(B).
79 78 FR 6408, 6534 (Jan. 30, 2013).
80 Id. at 6536.
81 Id. at 6534.
82 Id.
77 Id.
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whole, or securitizing them in a
rejuvenated private-label securities
(PLS) market. The Bureau noted that
pursuant to its statutory obligations
under the Dodd-Frank Act, it would
assess the impact of the ATR/QM Rule
five years after the ATR/QM Rule’s
effective date, and the assessment
would provide an opportunity to
analyze the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition.83
B. The Continued Prevalence of
Temporary GSE QM Loan Originations
The mortgage market has evolved
differently than the Bureau predicted
when it issued the January 2013 Final
Rule. Contrary to the Bureau’s
expectations in 2013, the market has not
shifted away from Temporary GSE QM
originations and the private market 84
remains small. As noted in the
Assessment Report, Temporary GSE QM
originations continue to represent ‘‘a
large and persistent’’ share of
originations in the conforming segment
of the mortgage market, and a robust
and sizable market to support non-QM
lending has not emerged.85
The GSEs’ share of the conventional,
conforming purchase-mortgage market
was large before the ATR/QM Rule, and
the Assessment Report found a small
increase in that share since the ATR/QM
Rule’s effective date, reaching 71
percent in 2017.86 The Assessment
Report noted that, at least for loans
intended for sale in the secondary
market, creditors generally offer a
Temporary GSE QM loan even when a
General QM loan could be originated.87
As explained in the Extension
Proposal, the continued prevalence of
Temporary GSE QM loan originations is
contrary to the Bureau’s expectation at
the time it issued the January 2013 Final
Rule.88 The Assessment Report
discussed several possible reasons for
the continued prevalence of Temporary
GSE QM loan originations. The
Assessment Report first highlighted
concerns that Assessment RFI
commenters expressed about the
perceived lack of clarity in appendix Q.
The Assessment Report found that such
concerns ‘‘may have contributed to
83 Id.
84 Consistent with the Assessment Report,
references to the private market herein include
loans securitized by PLS and loans financed by
portfolio lending by commercial banks, credit
unions, savings banks, savings associations,
mortgage banks, life insurance companies, finance
companies, their affiliate institutions, and other
private purchasers. See Assessment Report, supra
note 27, at 74.
85 Id. at 198.
86 Id. at 191.
87 Id. at 192.
88 Id. at 13, 190, 238.
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investors’—and at least derivatively,
creditors’—preference’’ for Temporary
GSE QM loans instead of originating
loans under the General QM loan
definition.89 The Assessment Report
noted that a second possible reason for
the continued prevalence of Temporary
GSE QM loans is that the GSEs were
able to accommodate demand for
mortgages above the General QM loan
definition’s DTI limit of 43 percent as
the DTI ratio distribution in the market
shifted upward.90 The Assessment
Report found that a third possible
reason for the persistence of Temporary
GSE QM loans is the structure of the
secondary market.91 If creditors adhere
to the GSEs’ guidelines, they gain access
to a robust, highly liquid secondary
market.92 In contrast, while private
market securitizations have grown
somewhat in recent years, their volume
is still a fraction of their pre-crisis
levels.93
C. The Potential Market Impact of the
Temporary GSE QM Loan Definition’s
Expiration
As the Extension Proposal explained,
the Bureau anticipates that two main
types of conventional loans would be
affected by the expiration of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition:
High-DTI GSE loans (those with DTI
ratios above 43 percent) and GSEeligible loans without appendix Qrequired documentation. Leaving the
current fixed sunset date in place would
affect these loans because they are
currently originated as QM loans due to
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
but would not be originated as General
QM loans, and may not be originated at
all, if the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition were to expire before
amendments to the General QM loan
definition are in effect. This final rule
refers to these loans as potentially
displaced loans.
The Extension Proposal’s analysis of
the potential market impact of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition’s
expiration cited data and analysis from
the Bureau’s ANPR, as described below.
None of the comments on the Extension
Proposal challenged the data or analysis
from the ANPR or the Extension
Proposal related to the potential market
impacts of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition’s expiration.94 The Bureau
89 Id.
at 193.
at 194.
91 Id. at 196.
92 Id.
93 Id.
94 As noted below in the Bureau’s section 1022(b)
analysis, two consumer advocate commenters that
submitted a joint comment letter argued for a more
complete analysis of reasonable alternatives and
90 Id.
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concludes that the data and analysis in
the Extension Proposal and ANPR
provide an appropriate estimate of the
potential impact of the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition’s expiration for this
final rule.
High-DTI GSE Loans. The ANPR
provided an estimate of the number of
loans potentially affected by the
expiration of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition.95 In providing the
estimate, the ANPR focused on loans
that fall within the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition but not the General QM
loan definition because they have a DTI
ratio above 43 percent. This final rule
refers to these loans as High-DTI GSE
loans. Based on data from the National
Mortgage Database (NMDB), the Bureau
estimated that there were approximately
6.01 million closed-end first-lien
residential mortgage originations in the
United States in 2018.96 Based on
supplemental data provided by the
FHFA, the Bureau estimated that the
GSEs purchased or guaranteed 52
percent—roughly 3.12 million—of those
loans.97 Of those 3.12 million loans, the
Bureau estimated that 31 percent—
approximately 957,000 loans—had DTI
ratios greater than 43 percent.98 Thus,
the Bureau estimated that as a result of
the General QM loan definition’s 43
percent DTI limit, approximately
957,000 loans—16 percent of all closedend first-lien residential mortgage
originations in 2018—were High-DTI
GSE loans.99 This estimate does not
include Temporary GSE QM loans that
were eligible for purchase by either of
the GSEs but were not sold to the GSEs.
Loans Without Appendix Q-Required
Documentation That Are Otherwise
GSE-Eligible. In addition to High-DTI
GSE loans, an additional, smaller
number of Temporary GSE QM loans
with DTI ratios of 43 percent or less
when calculated using GSE
underwriting guides would not fall
within the General QM loan definition
because their method of documenting
and verifying income or debt is
that the Bureau should redo its analysis of benefits
and costs when more data is available. However,
these commenters did not challenge the Bureau’s
estimates of the potential market impacts of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition’s expiration.
95 84 FR 37155, 37158–59 (July 31, 2019).
96 Id.
97 Id. at 37159.
98 Id. The Bureau estimates that 616,000 of these
loans were for home purchases, and 341,000 were
refinance loans. In addition, the Bureau estimates
that the share of these loans with DTI ratios over
45 percent has varied over time due to changes in
market conditions and GSE underwriting standards,
rising from 47 percent in 2016 to 56 percent in
2017, and further to 69 percent in 2018.
99 Id.
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incompatible with appendix Q.100 These
loans would also likely be affected if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
were to expire before amendments to
the General QM loan definition are in
effect. As explained in the Extension
Proposal, the Bureau understands, from
extensive public feedback and its own
experience, that appendix Q does not
specifically address whether and how to
document and include certain forms of
income. The Bureau understands these
concerns are particularly acute for selfemployed consumers, consumers with
part-time employment, and consumers
with irregular or unusual income
streams.101 As a result, these consumers’
access to credit may be affected if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
were to expire before amendments to
the General QM loan definition are in
effect.
The Bureau’s analysis of the market
under the baseline focuses on High-DTI
GSE loans because the Bureau estimates
that most potentially displaced loans are
High-DTI GSE loans. The Bureau also
lacks the loan-level documentation and
underwriting data necessary to estimate
with precision the number of potentially
displaced loans that do not fall within
the other General QM loan requirements
and are not High-DTI GSE loans.
However, the Assessment Report did
not find evidence of substantial
numbers of loans in the non-GSEeligible jumbo market being displaced
when appendix Q verification
requirements became effective in
2014.102 Further, the Assessment Report
found evidence of only a limited
reduction in the approval rate of selfemployed applicants for non-GSE
eligible mortgages.103 Based on this
100 Id. at 37159 n.58. Where these types of loans
have DTI ratios above 43 percent, they would be
captured in the estimate above relating to High-DTI
GSE loans.
101 For example, in qualitative responses to the
Bureau’s Lender Survey conducted as part of the
Assessment Report, underwriting for self-employed
consumers was one of the most frequently reported
sources of difficulty in originating mortgages using
appendix Q. These concerns were also raised in
comments submitted in response to the Assessment
RFI, noting that appendix Q is ambiguous with
respect to how to treat income for consumers who
are self-employed, have irregular income, or want
to use asset depletion as income. See Assessment
Report, supra note 27, at 200.
102 Id. at 107 (‘‘For context, total jumbo purchase
originations increased from an estimated 108,700 to
130,200 between 2013 and 2014, based on
nationally representative NMDB data.’’).
103 Id. at 118 (‘‘The Application Data indicates
that, notwithstanding concerns that have been
expressed about the challenge of documenting and
verifying income for self-employed borrowers under
the General QM standard and the documentation
requirements contained in appendix Q to the Rule,
approval rates for non-High-DTI, non-GSE eligible
self-employed borrowers have decreased only
slightly, by two percentage points.’’).
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evidence, along with qualitative
comparisons of GSE and appendix Q
documentation requirements and
available data on the prevalence of
borrowers with non-traditional or
difficult-to-document income (e.g., selfemployed borrowers, retired borrowers,
those with irregular income streams),
the Bureau estimates this second
category of potentially displaced loans
is considerably less numerous than the
category of High-DTI GSE loans.
Nevertheless, the Bureau believes that,
for some borrowers, there would be a
meaningful impact on their access to
credit because their method of
documenting and verifying income or
debt is incompatible with appendix Q.
Additional Effects on Loans Not
Displaced. The Extension Proposal
explained that, in addition to
potentially displaced loans, loans that
continue to be originated as QM loans
after the expiration of the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition would also be
affected. After the sunset date, absent
changes to the General QM loan
definition, all loans with DTI ratios at or
below 43 percent that are or would have
been purchased and guaranteed as GSE
loans under the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition—approximately 2.16
million loans in 2018—and that
continue to be originated as General QM
loans after the provision expires would
be required to verify income and debts
according to appendix Q, rather than
only according to GSE guidelines. Given
the concerns raised about appendix Q’s
ambiguity and lack of flexibility, this
would likely entail both increased
documentation burden for some
consumers as well as increased costs or
time-to-origination for creditors on some
loans.104 Commenters on the Extension
Proposal did not offer additional
estimates regarding the number of
potentially displaced loans.
Focusing on High-DTI GSE loans, the
Bureau expects that these loans will
continue to comprise a significant
proportion of mortgage originations
through January 10, 2021, when the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition was
scheduled to expire.105 The ANPR
identified several ways that the market
for loans that would have been HighDTI GSE loans may respond to the
expiration of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition.106 In doing so, the
Bureau made assumptions about the
future behavior of certain mortgage
market participants: (1) That there is no
change to the GSEs’ current policy that
104 See part V.B for additional discussion of
concerns raised about appendix Q.
105 84 FR 37155, 37159 (July 31, 2019).
106 Id.
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does not allow purchase of non-QM
loans; and (2) that creditors’ preference
for making Temporary GSE QM loans,
and investors’ preference for purchasing
such loans, is driven in part by the safe
harbor provided to such loans and that
these preferences would continue at
least for some creditors and investors.107
The Bureau concludes that this
analysis from the ANPR continues to
provide an appropriate assessment of
how the market for loans that would
have been High-DTI GSE loans may
have responded to the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition’s expiration prior to
the effective date of amendments to the
General QM definition. Therefore, the
Bureau expects that many consumers
who would have obtained High-DTI
GSE loans would instead have obtained
FHA-insured loans because FHA
currently insures loans with DTI ratios
up to 57 percent (with compensating
factors).108 The number of loans that
would have moved to FHA would
depend on FHA’s willingness and
ability to insure such loans, on whether
the FHA mortgage payment would be
affordable to the consumer relative to
any options in the private mortgage
market, on whether FHA continues to
treat all loans that it insures as QMs
under its own QM rule, and on how
many High-DTI GSE loans exceed FHA’s
loan-amount limit.109 For example, the
Extension Proposal estimated that, in
2018, 11 percent of High-DTI GSE loans
exceeded FHA’s loan-amount limit.110
The Bureau considers this an outer limit
on the share of High-DTI GSE loans that
could have moved to FHA.111 As
explained in the Extension Proposal, the
Bureau expects that loans that would
have been originated as FHA loans
instead of under the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition would generally
have cost materially more for many
consumers.112 The Bureau also expects
107 Id.
108 Id. In fiscal year 2019, approximately 57
percent of FHA-insured purchase mortgages had a
DTI ratio above 43 percent. U.S. Dep’t of Hous. &
Urban Dev., Annual Report to Congress Regarding
the Financial Status of the FHA Mutual Mortgage
Insurance Fund, Fiscal Year 2019, at 33 (Nov. 14,
2019), https://www.hud.gov/sites/dfiles/Housing/
documents/2019FHAAnnualReportMMIFund.pdf.
109 84 FR 37155, 37159 (July 31, 2019).
110 Id. In 2018, FHA’s county-level maximum
loan limits ranged from $271,050 to $721,050. See
U.S. Dep’t of Hous. & Urban Dev., FHA Mortgage
Limits, https://entp.hud.gov/idapp/html/
hicostlook.cfm (last visited Oct. 17, 2020).
111 84 FR 37155, 37159 (July 31, 2019).
112 Interest rates and insurance premiums on FHA
loans generally feature less risk-based pricing than
conventional loans, charging more similar rates and
premiums to all consumers. As a result, they are
likely to cost more than conventional loans for
consumers with stronger credit scores and larger
down payments. Consistent with this pricing
differential, consumers with higher credit scores
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that some consumers offered FHA loans
might have chosen not to take out a
mortgage because of these higher costs.
It is also possible that some
consumers who would have sought
High-DTI GSE loans would have been
able to obtain loans in the private
market.113 The ANPR noted that the
number of loans absorbed by the private
market would likely depend, in part, on
whether actors in the private market are
willing to assume the legal and credit
risk associated with funding High-DTI
GSE loans as non-QM loans or smallcreditor portfolio QM loans 114 and, if
so, whether actors in the private market
would offer more competitive pricing or
terms.115 For example, as explained in
the Extension Proposal, the Bureau
estimates that 55 percent of High-DTI
GSE loans in 2018 had credit scores at
or above 680 and loan-to-value (LTV)
ratios at or below 80 percent—credit
characteristics traditionally considered
attractive to actors in the private
market.116 The ANPR also noted that
there are certain built-in costs to FHA
loans—namely, mortgage insurance
premiums—which could be a basis for
competition and that depository
institutions in recent years have shied
away from originating and servicing
FHA loans due to the obligations and
risks associated with such loans.117
However, the Assessment Report
found that a robust market for non-QM
loans above the 43 percent DTI limit has
not materialized as the Bureau had
predicted. Therefore, there is limited
capacity in the non-QM market to
provide access to credit if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
were to expire before a final rule
amending the General QM loan
definition has taken effect.118 As
described above, the non-QM market
has been further reduced by the recent
economic disruptions associated with
the COVID–19 pandemic, with most
mortgage credit now available in the
and larger down payments chose FHA loans
relatively rarely in 2018 Home Mortgage Disclosure
Act (HMDA) data on mortgage originations. See
Bureau of Consumer Fin. Prot., Introducing New
and Revised Data Points in HMDA (Aug. 2019),
https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/
cfpb_new-revised-data-points-in-hmda_report.pdf.
113 84 FR 37155, 37159 (July 31, 2019).
114 See 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(5) (extending QM
status to certain portfolio loans originated by
certain small creditors). In addition, section 101 of
the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and
Consumer Protection Act (EGRRCPA), Public Law
115–174, section 101, 132 Stat. 1296, 1297 (2018),
amended TILA to add a safe harbor for smallcreditor portfolio loans. See 15 U.S.C.
1639c(b)(2)(F).
115 84 FR 37155, 37159 (July 31, 2019).
116 Id.
117 Id.
118 Assessment Report, supra note 27, at 198.
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QM lending space. The Bureau
acknowledges that the slow
development of the non-QM market,
and the recent economic disruptions
that may significantly hinder its
development in the near term, may
further reduce access to credit outside
the QM space.
Finally, the ANPR noted that some
consumers who would have sought
High-DTI GSE loans may adapt to
changing options and make different
choices, such as adjusting their
borrowing to result in a lower DTI
ratio.119 However, some consumers who
would have sought High-DTI GSE loans
may not have been able to obtain loans
at all.120
D. Why the Bureau Is Extending the
Temporary GSE QM Loan Definition
The Bureau anticipates that if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
expired as currently scheduled and
there are no changes to the General QM
loan definition prior to expiration, some
High-DTI GSE loans and loans without
appendix Q-required documentation
that are otherwise GSE-eligible would
not be made and some would cost
consumers materially more.121 In the
General QM Proposal, the Bureau
proposed to remove the General QM
loan definition’s DTI limit and replace
it with a limit based on the loan’s
pricing. Under the General QM
Proposal, a loan would meet the General
QM loan definition only if the APR
exceeds the APOR for a comparable
transaction by less than two percentage
points as of the date the interest rate is
set.122 The Bureau expects that the
amendments the Bureau proposed in the
General QM Proposal would, among
other things, allow most loans that
currently could receive QM status under
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
to receive QM status under the General
QM loan definition if they are made
after the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition expires.123
119 84
FR 37155, 37159 (July 31, 2019).
120 Id.
121 See
supra part V.C.
General QM Proposal would preserve the
current threshold separating safe harbor from
rebuttable presumption QMs, under which a loan
is a safe harbor QM if its APR exceeds APOR for
a comparable transaction by less than 1.5
percentage points as of the date the interest rate is
set (or by less than 3.5 percentage points for
subordinate-lien transactions).
123 As described above in part III.C, the Bureau
also recently issued the Seasoned QM Proposal,
which would create a new category of QMs for firstlien, fixed-rate covered transactions that have met
certain performance requirements over a 36-month
seasoning period, are held in portfolio until the end
of the seasoning period, comply with general
restrictions on product features and points and fees,
and meet certain underwriting requirements. 85 FR
122 The
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The Bureau is concerned about the
likely effects on the availability and cost
of credit if the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition were to expire before final
amendments to the General QM loan
definition take effect. As explained in
the Extension Proposal, while the
Bureau can estimate the outer limit of
the share of High-DTI GSE loans that
could be originated by the FHA, the
Bureau cannot estimate with precision
the extent to which loans would be
absorbed by the FHA or the
characteristics of the particular loans
that might be absorbed.124 Similarly,
while the Bureau also anticipates that
the private market might absorb
additional loans that would have been
High-DTI GSE loans, the Bureau is
uncertain as to the private market’s
capacity to absorb these loans in the
short term—as a robust market for nonQM loans above the 43 percent DTI
limit has not materialized as the Bureau
had predicted and as the non-QM
market has been further reduced by the
current economic disruptions associated
with the COVID–19 pandemic. And, as
noted, the Bureau lacks the loan-level
documentation and underwriting data
necessary to estimate with precision the
number of potentially displaced loans
that do not fall within the General QM
loan definition due to appendix Qrelated issues and are not High-DTI GSE
loans. Despite these uncertainties, it is
likely that some consumers who would
have obtained loans under the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition—
and who would be able to obtain loans
under the revised General QM loan
definition, as separately proposed by the
Bureau—would not have been able to
obtain loans at all if the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition were allowed to
expire before final amendments to the
General QM loan definition have gone
53568 (Aug. 28, 2020). The Bureau notes that the
Seasoned QM Proposal, if finalized, would not
address the short-term access to credit concerns
described here. The Seasoned QM Proposal would
not address the likely effects on the availability and
cost of credit if the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition were to expire before final amendments
to the General QM loan definition take effect,
because among other things, as described in the
Seasoned QM Proposal, the Seasoned QM
definition would take effect at the same time that
final amendments to the General QM loan
definition take effect. Id. at 53569.
124 Assuming they are still originated, potentially
displaced loans made with high LTVs or to
consumers with low credit scores are the least
likely to be absorbed by the private market, and
thus most likely to be absorbed by the FHA. The
exact characteristics of loans likely to be absorbed
by the FHA would depend on the relative pricing
and underwriting requirements of FHA and private
market alternatives.
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into effect.125 Further, for loans
absorbed by the FHA and the private
market in the absence of the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition, there is a
significant risk that some consumers
would have paid more for these loans,
although any pricing effects would
depend on the characteristics of the
particular loans that would be
originated as FHA loans or in the
private market.126
To prevent these likely effects on the
availability and cost of credit if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
expired before final amendments to the
General QM loan definition take effect,
the Bureau is extending the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition until the
mandatory compliance date of a final
rule issued by the Bureau amending the
General QM loan definition, or when
the GSEs exit conservatorship,
whichever comes first. As discussed
below in the section-by-section analysis,
commenters to the Extension Proposal
were supportive of the Bureau’s
proposal to extend the sunset of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
rather than allowing it to expire on
January 10, 2021. The Bureau is issuing
this extension to ensure that
responsible, affordable credit remains
available to consumers who may be
affected if the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition expires before these
amendments take effect.127
The Bureau stated in the January 2013
Final Rule that, for a limited period of
time and while the GSEs are under
conservatorship of the FHFA, it believed
that GSE-eligible loans are originated
with appropriate consideration of ability
to repay.128 Under current conditions,
the Bureau finds that it is appropriate to
extend that presumption for a short
period until the mandatory compliance
125 See supra part V.C, noting that some
consumers who would have sought High-DTI GSE
loans may make different choices, such as by
adjusting their borrowing to result in a lower DTI
ratio.
126 The Assessment Report noted that, while there
did not appear to be a marked change in the relative
price of non-QM High-DTI loans immediately
following the implementation of the ATR/QM Rule,
other research has found a 25 basis point premium
for non-QM High-DTI loans in more recent years.
Assessment Report, supra note 27, at 121–22.
127 The Bureau expects to finalize a rule
amending the General QM loan definition, at which
point the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
would expire under this final rule. However, the
Bureau notes that in the unlikely event that such
a rule is not finalized and the current General QM
loan definition remains in place, the Bureau would
revisit the Temporary GSE QM loan definition and
take appropriate action. As noted above, the Bureau
does not intend to maintain indefinitely a
presumption that loans eligible for purchase or
guarantee by either of the GSEs have been
originated with appropriate consideration of the
consumer’s ability to repay.
128 78 FR 6408, 6534 (Jan. 30, 2013).
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date of Bureau amendments to the
General QM loan definition, in light of
concerns about effects on the
availability and cost of credit if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
expires before a rule revising the
General QM loan definition takes effect.
Under the conservatorship clause in
the current rule, the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition expires with respect
to a GSE when that GSE exits
conservatorship, even if that occurs
before January 10, 2021. Consistent with
the Extension Proposal, this final rule
does not amend this provision. The
Bureau addresses the comments it
received related to the conservatorship
clause in the section-by-section analysis
of § 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B), below.
VI. Section-by-Section Analysis
1026.43 Minimum Standards for
Transactions Secured by a Dwelling
43(e)
Qualified Mortgages
43(e)(4) Qualified Mortgage Defined—
Special Rules
43(e)(4)(iii)
Sunset of Special Rules
43(e)(4)(iii)(B)
Section 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) provides
that the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition is available only for covered
transactions consummated on or before
January 10, 2021.129 The Bureau
proposed to revise § 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B)
to state that the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition is available only for
covered transactions consummated on
or before the effective date of a final rule
issued by the Bureau amending
§ 1026.43(e)(2). Proposed
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) also would have
stated that the Bureau will amend
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) as of that effective
date to reflect the new status. The
Bureau also proposed conforming
amendments to comment 43(e)(4)-3. The
Bureau did not propose to amend the
conservatorship clause in
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A). This final rule
amends § 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) largely as
the Bureau proposed, with minor
modifications as described below.
Comments Received
The Bureau received 29 comments in
response to the Extension Proposal from
industry, consumer advocates, and
others. All commenters supported
extending the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition. No commenter
129 Section 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) also applies to the
other temporary QM loan definitions in
§ 1026.43(e)(4). However, as noted above in part II,
these other temporary QM loan definitions have
expired because the relevant Federal agencies have
issued their own QM rules. See, e.g., 24 CFR 203.19
(HUD rule).
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recommended that the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition expire earlier than
the effective date of final amendments
to the General QM loan definition.
Many commenters stated that they
agreed with the Bureau that extending
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
would ensure that responsible,
affordable credit remains available to
consumers who may be affected if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
expires before these amendments take
effect.
Several commenters recommended
that the Bureau finalize the Extension
Proposal as proposed. Several other
commenters recommended
modifications to the proposal, as
described and organized below based on
the topic of concern.
Gap in coverage. Several industry
commenters recommended that the
Bureau modify the proposed sunset date
to prevent a gap around the effective
date of final amendments to the General
QM loan definition in which neither the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition nor
the revised General QM loan definition
would apply to certain loans. These
commenters noted that, under the
Extension Proposal, the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition would be available
only for covered transactions
consummated on or before the effective
date of final amendments to the General
QM loan definition. At the same time,
as these commenters noted, the General
QM Proposal provided that the revised
General QM loan definition would
apply to covered transactions for which
creditors receive an application on or
after the effective date of the final
amendments to the General QM loan
definition. These commenters stated
that, as a result, when a creditor
receives an application before the
effective date of final amendments to
the General QM loan definition, but the
loan is consummated after that effective
date, neither the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition nor the revised General
QM loan definition would apply.
Consequently, loans that would have
been QMs under the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition—and that would
have been eligible for QM status under
the revised General QM loan
definition—would not be eligible for
QM status under either the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition (because the
loan was consummated after the
effective date of a final rule amending
the General QM loan definition) or the
revised General QM loan definition
(because the creditor received the
application before the effective date of
a final rule amending the General QM
loan definition).
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These industry commenters
recommended several options to
prevent such a gap. Several commenters
suggested that the Bureau prevent this
gap by having the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition expire six months after
the effective date of final amendments
to the General QM loan definition,
rather than on the effective date. This
approach would create an overlap
period in which creditors could
originate QMs under either the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition or
the revised General QM loan definition.
Two commenters suggested that the
Bureau align the sunset date with the
effective date of final amendments to
the General QM loan definition based
on the date the creditor received the
consumer’s application. Under this
approach, the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition would be available only for
covered transactions for which the
creditor receives the consumer’s
application before the effective date of
final amendments to the General QM
loan definition, and the revised General
QM loan definition would apply to
covered transactions for which creditors
receive an application on or after this
effective date. One commenter
recommended that the Bureau adopt
this approach but provide that the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
would cease to be available six months
after the effective date of final
amendments to the General QM loan
definition.
Two industry commenters opposed
aligning the sunset date of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
with the effective date of final
amendments to the General QM loan
definition based on the application date.
These commenters argued that this
standard would be unclear because
‘‘application’’ is not clearly defined for
purposes of the ATR/QM Rule. One of
these commenters recommended that, if
the Bureau adopted this approach, it
clarify that ‘‘application’’ has the same
definition as under the Bureau’s TILA–
RESPA 130 Integrated Disclosure Rule
(TRID). The other commenter stated that
the Bureau should not align the sunset
date of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition with the effective date of final
amendments to the General QM loan
definition based on the application date,
because creditors do not typically
maintain a non-TRID application date in
their systems. This commenter also
stated that QM status is not determined
at the time of application, so the
proposed approach may create problems
if a loan application is received prior to
130 Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act of 1974
(RESPA), Public Law 93–533, 88 Stat. 1274 (1974).
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the sunset date but is no longer eligible
for purchase or guarantee by the GSEs
at the time of consummation after the
sunset date.
One industry commenter suggested
that the Bureau could prevent this gap
in coverage by aligning the sunset date
with the effective date of a final rule
amending the General QM loan
definition based on the date of
consummation. Under this approach,
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
would be available for covered
transactions consummated before the
effective date of a final rule amending
the General QM loan definition (as the
Bureau proposed), and then, in that
final rule, the Bureau would provide
that the revised General QM loan
definition would apply to covered
transactions consummated on or after
the effective date. One industry
commenter opposed this approach,
stating that it would effectively reduce
the length of the implementation period
for the revised General QM loan
definition. One industry commenter
also suggested that both the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition and the revised
General QM loan definition be available
for loans in process on the effective date
of the revised General QM loan
definition.
Other comments on the sunset date.
As noted above, several industry
commenters suggested that the Bureau
prevent a gap around the effective date
of final amendments to the General QM
loan definition by having the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition expire six
months after the effective date of final
amendments to the General QM loan
definition, rather than on the effective
date. Several industry commenters and
one individual commenter also
recommended this approach to address
a different concern. These commenters
stated that an overlap between the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition and
the revised General QM loan definition
would help facilitate the
implementation of the revised General
QM loan definition.
Many of these commenters noted that
creditors will need to update their
business processes and information
technology systems as they prepare to
comply with the revised General QM
loan definition. These commenters
stated that an overlap would reduce the
likelihood that unforeseen
implementation problems arising after
the effective date of the General QM
amendments could disrupt creditors’
ability to originate loans. One of these
commenters also noted that secondary
market participants will be adjusting to
the revised definition. Several of these
commenters stated that the COVID–19
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pandemic is straining creditors’
resources and personnel, making it more
difficult for them to adapt to the new
definition. A few of these commenters
stated that an overlap period would
reduce the potential that a revised
General QM loan definition could
disrupt the mortgage market and affect
credit access due to unforeseen changes
in the economy or the mortgage market
due to the COVID–19 pandemic.
Another commenter stated that an
overlap would protect creditors that are
affected by clarifications the Bureau
makes to a final rule amending the
General QM loan definition after it takes
effect. With respect to how long the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition and
the revised General QM loan definition
would overlap, commenters suggested
periods between four months and one
year.
In addition to the comments noted
above, three other commenters
recommended longer extensions of the
sunset date to facilitate implementation
of a final rule amending the General QM
loan definition. An individual
commenter requested a two-year
extension of the sunset date until
January 10, 2023. An industry
commenter recommended an extension
of 18 to 24 months, at a minimum.131
Another industry commenter suggested
that the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition expire in January 2022 or the
effective date of a final rule amending
the General QM loan definition,
whichever is later.
In addition to the general concerns
about implementation noted above, two
industry commenters stated that, in
determining when the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition should expire, the
Bureau should consider the GSEs’
recently mandated changes to the
Uniform Residential Loan Application
(URLA). The GSEs are requiring
creditors to use a redesigned version of
the URLA for all loan applications
received on or after March 1, 2021. The
GSEs have stated that beginning on
March 1, 2022, they will no longer
accept the previous URLA.132 The two
industry commenters stated that
implementing the new URLA will
require creditors to undertake extensive
systems changes. One of these industry
131 These commenters seemed to assume that a
final rule issued by the Bureau amending the
General QM loan definition would take effect
sooner than 18 to 24 months from January 10, 2021,
perhaps in light of the Bureau’s statement in the
Extension NPRM that it does not intend to issue a
final rule amending the General QM loan definition
early enough for it to take effect before April 1,
2021. 85 FR 41448, 41456 (July 10, 2020).
132 Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac, Extended URLA
Implementation Timeline (Apr. 14, 2020), https://
singlefamily.fanniemae.com/media/22661/display.
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commenters stated that requiring
creditors to adapt to a revised General
QM loan definition in the first six
months of 2021 would compound this
burden significantly. This commenter
recommended that the Bureau extend
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
to expire six months after the revised
General QM loan definition. The other
commenter requested that the Bureau
address this concern by extending the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition to
expire on March 1, 2022, or on the
effective date of a final rule amending
the General QM loan definition,
whichever is later.
Two consumer advocate commenters
that submitted a joint comment letter
recommended that the Bureau extend
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
indefinitely in this rulemaking and
determine its sunset date in a final rule
amending the General QM loan
definition. These commenters also
recommended that the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition remain in effect
until the latest of the following events:
A date certain that is no earlier than
January 2022 and preferably in 2023; six
months after the end of the COVID–19
national emergency; or the effective date
of a final rule amending the General QM
loan definition. These commenters
stated that determining the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition’s sunset date in
a final rule amending the General QM
loan definition, instead of in this
rulemaking, would allow the Bureau to
adjust its approach to the expiration of
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
based on the comments the Bureau
receives on the General QM Proposal
regarding the implementation of the
General QM loan definition. In the
commenters’ view, this would better
ensure a smooth transition to any
revised General QM loan definition. The
commenters stated that the Bureau
would tie its hands by linking the
sunset date with the effective date of a
final rule amending the General QM
loan definition; that doing so would
create greater uncertainty for creditors;
and that uncertainty is destabilizing and
tends to reduce access to credit. These
commenters also stated that the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
should remain in place until the Bureau
assesses the impact of the movement for
racial justice on mortgage markets as
well as the impact of the COVID–19
pandemic, including the decline of the
non-QM market and creditors’
increasing reliance on GSE and FHA
loans.133
An industry commenter
recommended that the Bureau not
extend the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition indefinitely. The commenter
stated that the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition provides significant
advantages to the GSEs by codifying
their underwriting parameters into the
QM definition, which, according to the
commenter, produces excessive reliance
on the GSEs while stifling innovation by
other market participants. The
commenter also recommended that the
Bureau not extend the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition to a date certain. In
the commenter’s view, because the
effective date of final amendments to
the General QM loan definition is not
yet known, extending the definition to
a date certain could result in a sunset
date that is too early (causing a gap
between the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition and a revised General QM
loan definition) or too late (causing the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition to
remain in place longer than necessary,
resulting in the perpetuation of the
concerns relating to an indefinite
extension that the commenter
identified).
Several industry commenters
recommended that, in a final rule
amending the General QM loan
definition, the Bureau adopt a longer
implementation period—i.e., the time
period after such a final rule is issued
and before creditors are required to
transition from the current General QM
loan definition to the revised General
QM loan definition—than the six-month
period the Bureau proposed. One
industry commenter requested that the
Bureau provide a 90-day grace period
for compliance with the revised
definition. The Bureau considers these
to be comments on the General QM
Proposal and best addressed in that
rulemaking. The Bureau will consider
these comments as it develops a final
rule to amend the General QM loan
definition.
Conservatorship clause. Three
industry commenters and the two
consumer advocacy groups that
submitted a joint comment letter
recommended that the Bureau remove
the conservatorship clause from
§ 1026.43(e)(ii)(A)(1). Removing the
conservatorship clause would result in
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
not expiring with respect to a GSE if
that GSE exited conservatorship. These
commenters noted that the status of the
conservatorships is outside of the
Bureau’s control and stated that, if one
or both conservatorships were to end on
133 The Bureau addresses this group’s comments
on the conservatorship clause in the subsection
below and on the Bureau’s section 1022 analysis in
part VII.A.1 below.
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short notice, the sudden expiration of
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
would create turmoil in the market and
reduce access to credit. Two industry
commenters stated that the Bureau
should clarify in advance of the end of
conservatorship what steps the Bureau
would take with respect to the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition if
the conservatorships were to end.
The Final Rule
This final rule amends
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) to provide that,
unless otherwise expired under
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(A),134 the special
rules in § 1026.43(e)(4) are available
only for covered transactions for which
the creditor receives the consumer’s
application before the mandatory
compliance date of a final rule issued by
the Bureau amending § 1026.43(e)(2).135
Revised § 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) also states
that the Bureau will amend
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) prior to that
mandatory compliance date to reflect
the new status.
This final rule also makes conforming
changes to comment 43(e)(4)–3. As
revised, comment 43(e)(4)–3 explains
that the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition applies only to loans for
which the creditor receives the
consumer’s application before the
mandatory compliance date of a final
rule issued by the Bureau amending
§ 1026.43(e)(2), regardless of whether
Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (or any
limited-life regulatory entity succeeding
the charter of either) continues to
operate under the conservatorship or
receivership of the FHFA. The comment
also explains that, accordingly, the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition is
available only for covered transactions:
(i) That are consummated on or before
the date Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (or
any limited-life regulatory entity
succeeding the charter of either),
respectively, cease to operate under the
conservatorship or receivership of the
FHFA and (ii) that are transactions for
134 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(A) states that each of
the special rules described in 12 CFR
1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(B) through (E)—which provide that
mortgages eligible to be insured or guaranteed (as
applicable) by HUD, VA, USDA, and RHS are
QMs—shall expire on the effective date of a rule
issued by each respective agency pursuant to its
authority under TILA section 129C(b)(3)(ii) to
define a QM.
135 The Bureau uses the term ‘‘mandatory
compliance date’’ because this is the date on which
creditors that wish to originate General QM loans
will be required to comply with the revised General
QM loan definition. As of the mandatory
compliance date, the current General QM loan
definition will no longer be available. The Bureau’s
use of the term does not imply that creditors are
required to use the General QM loan definition to
comply with the ATR/QM Rule’s ability-to-repay
requirement.
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which the creditor receives the
consumer’s application before the
mandatory compliance date of a final
rule issued by the Bureau amending
§ 1026.43(e)(2), as provided by
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(iii). This final rule also
revises this comment to note that the
Bureau will amend this comment prior
to the mandatory compliance date of a
final rule issued by the Bureau
amending § 1026.43(e)(2) to reflect the
new status.136
The Bureau has made two substantive
modifications to the proposal. The first
is that this final rule links the expiration
of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition to the ‘‘mandatory
compliance date’’ of a final rule
amending the General QM loan
definition instead of to the ‘‘effective
date’’ of such a final rule. Specifically,
under this final rule, the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition will be
available only for covered transactions
for which the creditor receives the
consumer’s application before the
‘‘mandatory compliance date’’ of a final
rule issued by the Bureau amending the
General QM loan definition, rather than
covered transactions consummated on
or before the ‘‘effective date’’ of such a
final rule, as the Bureau proposed.
The Bureau is not adopting an
‘‘overlap period’’ in this final rule by
keeping the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition in effect after the date
creditors are required to transition from
the current General QM loan definition
to the revised General QM loan
definition, as some commenters
suggested. This is because, in a final
rule amending the General QM loan
definition, after considering the
comments in that rulemaking, the
Bureau intends to establish an
implementation period—i.e., the time
period after such a final rule is issued
and before creditors are required to
transition from the current General QM
loan definition to the revised General
QM loan definition—that provides the
amount of time necessary to facilitate a
smooth and orderly transition to a
revised General QM loan definition.
Establishing an ‘‘overlap period’’ that
extends after the date creditors are
required to transition from the current
General QM loan definition to the
revised General QM loan definition
would keep the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition in place longer than
136 The Bureau notes that the proposed extension
to the Temporary GSE QM loan definition’s sunset
date does not apply to the temporary points-andfees cure provision in § 1026.43(e)(3)(iii), which is
also set to expire on January 10, 2021. Comments
on the expiration date for the temporary points-andfees cure provision at § 1026.43(e)(3)(iii) are outside
the scope of this rulemaking.
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necessary to facilitate a smooth and
orderly transition to a revised General
QM loan definition. The Bureau seeks to
maintain the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition only as long as necessary to
facilitate a smooth and orderly
transition to a revised General QM loan
definition, and no longer, because the
Bureau concludes that the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition has certain
negative effects on the mortgage market,
including stifling innovation and the
development of competitive privatesector approaches to underwriting. The
Bureau further concludes that, as long
as the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition continues to be in effect, the
non-GSE private market is less likely to
rebound and that the existence of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition may
be limiting the development of the nonGSE private market. For these reasons,
the Bureau concludes that it is
appropriate for the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition to remain in place no
longer than the date creditors are
required to transition from the current
General QM loan definition to the
revised General QM loan definition.
However, while the Bureau is not
adopting an ‘‘overlap period’’ in this
final rule by keeping the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition in effect after
the date creditors are required to
transition from the current General QM
loan definition to the revised General
QM loan definition, the Bureau may
choose, in a final rule amending the
General QM loan definition, to adopt an
‘‘optional early compliance period’’
whereby the revised General QM loan
definition would become available
before the date creditors are required to
transition from the current General QM
loan definition to the revised General
QM loan definition. Such an approach
would accommodate those creditors that
are able to transition to, and wish to
start using, the revised General QM loan
definition sooner than the date creditors
are required to make the transition, a
date the Bureau expects to select based
on the time needed for the industry as
a whole to make the transition. If the
Bureau adopts such an optional early
compliance period in a final rule
amending the General QM loan
definition, the revised General QM loan
definition would become available on
the ‘‘effective date’’ of such a final rule;
it would coexist with the current
General QM loan definition for a period
of time; and then the current General
QM loan definition would expire on the
‘‘mandatory compliance date’’ of such a
final rule.137 If the Bureau does not
137 For example, the Bureau adopted an optional
early compliance period in 2017 amendments to
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adopt an optional early compliance
period in a final rule amending the
General QM loan definition, the
‘‘effective date’’ and ‘‘mandatory
compliance date’’ would be the same
date. In this case, the revision from
‘‘effective date’’ to ‘‘mandatory
compliance date’’ in this final rule
would have no substantive effect.
The Bureau concludes that, to
preserve the possibility of adopting an
optional early compliance period in a
final rule amending the General QM
loan definition, it is appropriate for the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition to
expire on the mandatory compliance
date of a final rule amending the
General QM loan definition (i.e., the end
of the optional early compliance period)
instead of on the effective date of such
a final rule (i.e., the beginning of the
optional early compliance period). The
Bureau expects that, if it were to adopt
an optional early compliance period in
a final rule amending the General QM
loan definition, some creditors may not
be ready to transition away from the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition and
to the revised General QM loan
definition on the effective date. In
contrast, because the Bureau intends to
establish an adequate implementation
period (as described above), it expects
creditors to be ready to do so by the
mandatory compliance date. Therefore,
linking the expiration of the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition to the
mandatory compliance date of such a
final rule will best ensure a smooth and
orderly transition away from the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition and
toward the revised General QM loan
definition.
Gap in coverage. The second
substantive modification to the proposal
addresses the concern several
commenters raised about the gap around
the effective date of final amendments
to the General QM loan definition when,
under the proposal, neither the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition nor
the revised General QM loan definition
would have applied. This gap in
coverage likely would have resulted in
a temporary reduction in access to
credit for some consumers because
creditors would have been concerned
that loans for which they receive an
application within a few months of the
effective date of final amendments to
the General QM loan definition may
close after that effective date and would
TRID. 82 FR 37656, 37656 (Aug. 11, 2017) (‘‘The
final rule is effective October 10, 2017. However,
the mandatory compliance date is October 1,
2018.’’); see also id. at 37763–37765. The details of
an optional early compliance period for the General
QM loan definition may differ from the 2017 TRID
amendments.
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not be eligible for either the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition or the revised
General QM loan definition. The Bureau
did not intend that result when it issued
the proposed rule.
In this final rule, the Bureau
addresses this concern by providing that
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
will be available only for covered
transactions ‘‘for which the creditor
receives the consumer’s application
before’’ the mandatory compliance date
of final amendments to the General QM
loan definition (rather than covered
transactions ‘‘consummated on or
before’’ the effective date of final
amendments to the General QM loan
definition, as the Bureau proposed).
This approach harmonizes with the
proposed effective date in the General
QM Proposal, under which the revised
General QM loan definition would
apply to covered transactions for which
the creditor receives the consumer’s
application on or after the effective date
of a final rule amending the General QM
loan definition. The Bureau concludes
that aligning the sunset date with the
proposed effective date of final
amendments to the General QM loan
definition based on the date the creditor
received the consumer’s application
would address the Bureau’s access-tocredit concern by preventing a gap
between the two definitions.
For the reasons described above, the
Bureau is not addressing the gap by
extending the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition beyond the date creditors are
required to transition from the current
General QM loan definition to the
revised General QM loan definition, as
some commenters suggested. The
Bureau is also not addressing this gap
by aligning the sunset date with the
General QM Proposal based on the date
of consummation of mortgages. The
Bureau is concerned about this
approach because, as this effective date
draws closer, this approach would
create uncertainty for creditors about
which QM definition (i.e., the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition or
the revised General QM loan definition)
would apply to a particular loan, given
that creditors would not know for
certain when consummation would
occur.
To address concerns raised by
commenters that the meaning of
‘‘application’’ may be unclear if the
Bureau aligned the sunset date with the
effective date of final amendments to
the General QM loan definition based
on the date the creditor received the
consumer’s application, this final rule
adds new comment 43(e)(4)–4. This new
comment clarifies the meaning of
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application for purposes of
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B).138
Regulation Z contains two definitions
of ‘‘application.’’ Section 1026.2(a)(3)(i)
defines ‘‘application’’ as the submission
of a consumer’s financial information
for the purposes of obtaining an
extension of credit. This definition
applies to all transactions covered by
Regulation Z. Section 1026.2(a)(3)(ii)
also contains a more specific definition
of ‘‘application.’’ Under this definition,
for transactions subject to § 1026.19(e),
(f), or (g)—i.e., transactions subject to
TRID—an application consists of the
submission of the consumer’s name, the
consumer’s income, the consumer’s
social security number to obtain a credit
report, the property address, an estimate
of the value of the property, and the
mortgage loan amount sought. The more
specific definition of application in
§ 1026.2(a)(3)(ii) applies not just for
purposes of TRID, but extends to all
transactions subject to TRID. Therefore,
for transactions that are subject to the
ATR/QM Rule and that are also subject
to TRID, the Bureau concludes that the
more specific definition applies for
purposes of the ATR/QM Rule as well.
However, for transactions that are
subject to the ATR/QM Rule but that are
not subject to TRID,139 the Bureau finds
that there may be ambiguity as to when
the creditor received the consumer’s
application for purposes of the sunset
date in § 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B). This
potential ambiguity arises because the
general definition of application in
§ 1026.2(a)(3)(i) is less precise than the
TRID definition.
To address this potential ambiguity,
new comment 43(e)(4)–4 clarifies that,
for transactions that are not subject to
TRID, creditors can determine the date
the creditor received the consumer’s
application for purposes of
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) in accordance
with either § 1026.2(a)(3)(i) or (ii). The
Bureau concludes that this clarification
is appropriate because it will facilitate
compliance with § 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B).
138 This final rule also renumbers previous
comments 43(e)(4)–4 and –5 as 43(e)(4)–5 and –6,
respectively.
139 The ATR/QM Rule generally applies to closedend consumer credit transactions that are secured
by a dwelling, as defined in 12 CFR 1026.2(a)(19),
including any real property attached to a dwelling.
12 CFR 1026.43(a). Therefore, the ATR/QM Rule
applies to a dwelling, as defined in § 1026.19(a),
whether or not it is attached to real property. In
contrast, TRID generally applies to closed-end
consumer credit transactions secured by real
property or a cooperative unit. 12 CFR
1026.19(e)(1)(i). Therefore, some transactions that
are a secured by a dwelling that is not considered
real property under State or other applicable law
will be subject to the ATR/QM Rule but not to
TRID.
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The Bureau disagrees with the
industry commenter’s assertion that it
would be problematic to align the
sunset date with the proposed effective
date in the General QM Proposal based
on the date the creditor received the
consumer’s application. As noted, that
commenter asserted that because
creditors do not determine QM status at
the time of application, defining a loan
as a Temporary GSE QM at the time of
application may create problems if the
loan is later changed and, as a result, is
no longer eligible for sale at the time of
consummation. However, under the
Bureau’s approach, loans would not be
defined as QMs at the time of
application. Rather, the application date
would determine whether the loan is
eligible for the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition or whether it is eligible for
the revised General QM loan definition.
Other comments on the sunset date.
As noted above, the Bureau declines to
extend the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition beyond the mandatory
compliance date of final amendments to
the General QM loan definition. The
Bureau recognizes that creditors will
need to update their business processes
and information technology systems as
they prepare to comply with the revised
General QM loan definition, and that an
update process often includes making
planned system changes, testing those
changes, and making further revisions.
The Bureau also acknowledges that
secondary market participants will need
to adjust to the revised definition.
However, as noted above, the Bureau
plans, in a final rule amending the
General QM loan definition, to establish
an implementation period—i.e., the
time period after such a final rule is
issued and before creditors are required
to transition from the current General
QM loan definition to the revised
General QM loan definition—that
provides the amount of time necessary
to facilitate a smooth and orderly
transition to a revised General QM loan
definition, after considering the
comments in that rulemaking. Thus,
establishing an overlap period beyond
this implementation period would keep
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
in place longer than necessary to
facilitate a smooth and orderly
transition to a revised General QM loan
definition. The Bureau seeks to
maintain the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition only as long as necessary to
facilitate a smooth and orderly
transition to a revised General QM loan
definition, and no longer, because the
Bureau concludes that the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition has certain
negative effects on the mortgage market,
as noted above.
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In the Bureau’s view, commenters
have not established why an overlap
period would be necessary to facilitate
a smooth and orderly transition to a
revised General QM loan definition
when the Bureau establishes a sufficient
implementation period for the final rule
amending that definition. Commenters
expressed general concerns that
unforeseen compliance issues may arise
after the implementation period ends,
but the same is true in adapting to any
new rule of this magnitude and, as
stated above, the Bureau intends to
adopt an implementation period that
gives creditors and the secondary
market enough time to prepare to
comply with the revised definition.140
Commenters also suggested that an
overlap period would reduce the
potential that a revised General QM loan
definition could disrupt the mortgage
market and affect credit access due to
unforeseen changes in the economy or
the mortgage market due to the COVID–
19 pandemic. However, based on its
analysis of the current state of the
mortgage market, as described in part
II.D above, the Bureau does not believe
that current conditions in the mortgage
market justify a longer extension on
these grounds, particularly in light of
the Bureau’s concerns about the
negative effects of the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition on the mortgage
market.
The Bureau also declines to extend
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
indefinitely in this rulemaking and
determine its sunset date in a final rule
amending the General QM loan
definition, as the two consumer
advocate commenters suggest.141 The
Bureau has not yet issued a final rule
amending the General QM loan
definition, so the contours of a revised
General QM loan definition are not yet
clear. However, the Bureau determines
that it is nevertheless appropriate for
this final rule to provide that the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition will
expire on the mandatory compliance
140 As noted above, the Bureau may consider
adopting an optional early compliance period in a
final rule amending the General QM loan definition.
An optional early compliance period would allow
creditors who are ready to begin using the revised
General QM loan definition early to do so—and to
work out unforeseen compliance issues that arise
before the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
expires—without the Bureau having to extend the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition beyond the end
of the implementation period.
141 No commenter recommended that the Bureau
extend the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
indefinitely without stating that the Bureau should
determine the Temporary GSE QM loan definition’s
sunset date in a final rule amending the General
QM loan definition. The Bureau declines to do so
for the reasons stated in the Extension Proposal. See
85 FR 41448, 41457 (July 10, 2020).
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date of a final rule amending the
General QM loan definition. As noted
above in the Bureau’s response to
comments recommending an overlap
period, the Bureau plans, in a final rule
amending the General QM loan
definition, to establish an
implementation period that provides the
amount of time necessary to facilitate a
smooth and orderly transition to a
revised General QM loan definition.
Establishing a sufficient implementation
period—based on the comments
received on the effective date the
Bureau proposed in the General QM
Proposal—will help ensure a smooth
transition away from the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition and toward the
revised General QM loan definition.
Second, as noted above in the Bureau’s
response to the comment recommending
an overlap period to address the
effective date gap issue, the Bureau
seeks to maintain the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition only as long as
necessary to facilitate a smooth and
orderly transition to a revised General
QM loan definition, and no longer,
because the Bureau concludes that the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition has
certain negative effects on the mortgage
market. Third, if market conditions
change or other circumstances arise
between now and the time the Bureau
issues a final rule amending the General
QM loan definition, the Bureau could
choose to extend the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition for a longer period
of time.
The Bureau also declines to extend
the sunset date in § 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B)
to a date certain, as some commenters
suggested. The Bureau is not extending
the sunset date to a date certain because
the chosen date could result in too long
or too short an extension. The Bureau is
concerned that too short an extension
may not provide the Bureau with
adequate time to finalize amendments to
the General QM loan definition and
creditors with enough time to bring
their operations into compliance with
any amendments adopted by the
Bureau. At the same time, the Bureau is
concerned that too long an extension
would have the same type of negative
effects as the Bureau describes above
regarding making the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition permanent, without
any offsetting benefits because a longer
extension is not needed to provide the
Bureau with adequate time to consider,
propose, and promulgate amendments
to the General QM loan definition or
industry to implement those
amendments.
Conservatorship clause. The Bureau
also declines to eliminate the
conservatorship clause in
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§ 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A). When the Bureau
adopted the January 2013 Final Rule,
the FHFA’s conservatorship of the GSEs
was central to its willingness to
presume that loans that are eligible for
purchase, guarantee, or insurance by the
GSEs would be originated with
appropriate consideration of consumers’
ability to repay.142 The Bureau declines
to eliminate the conservatorship clause
because the Bureau is concerned about
presuming that loans eligible for
purchase or guarantee by either of the
GSEs have been originated with
appropriate consideration of the
consumer’s ability to repay, if the GSEs
are not under conservatorship.
Furthermore, as the Bureau stated in the
Extension Proposal, the Bureau expects
that the conservatorships will remain in
place until the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition would expire under this final
rule. As the Bureau stated in the
Extension Proposal, in the event that it
appears that a final rule amending the
General QM loan definition will not be
in effect at the time the conservatorship
of one or both of the GSEs is terminated,
the Bureau will evaluate at that point
what, if any, steps to take in response
to such a termination of
conservatorship.
As with the January 2013 Final Rule,
the Bureau issues this final rule
pursuant to its authority under TILA
sections 129C(b)(3)(B)(i) and 105(a) and
Dodd-Frank Act section 1022(b)(1). For
the reasons described above in part V.D,
the Bureau determines that this final
rule’s extension of the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition’s sunset date is
necessary and proper to ensure that
responsible, affordable mortgage credit
remains available to consumers in a
manner consistent with the purposes of
TILA section 129C, as well as necessary
and appropriate to effectuate the
purposes of TILA section 129C—
including the purpose of assuring that
consumers are offered and receive
residential mortgage loans on terms that
reasonably reflect their ability to repay
the loans and that are understandable
and not unfair, deceptive, or abusive.
For these same reasons, the Bureau
determines that the extension is
necessary to effectuate the purposes of
142 78 FR 6408, 6534 (Jan. 13, 2013) (‘‘In light of
this significant Federal role and the government’s
focus on affordability in the wake of the mortgage
crisis, the Bureau believes it is appropriate, for the
time being, to presume that loans that are eligible
for purchase, guarantee, or insurance by the
designated Federal agencies and the GSEs while
under conservatorship have been originated with
appropriate consideration of consumers’ ability to
repay, where those loans also satisfy the
requirements of § 1026.43(e)(2) concerning
restrictions on product features and total points and
fees limitations.’’).
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TILA, which include, among other
things, the above-described purpose of
TILA section 129C.
VII. Dodd-Frank Act Section 1022(b)
Analysis
A. Overview
As discussed above, this final rule
will delay the scheduled expiration of
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
from January 10, 2021 to the mandatory
compliance date of a final rule issued by
the Bureau amending the General QM
loan definition. The Bureau’s objective
with this final rule is to facilitate a
smooth and orderly transition away
from the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition and to ensure access to
responsible, affordable mortgage credit
upon its expiration.
In developing this final rule, the
Bureau has considered the potential
benefits, costs, and impacts as required
by section 1022(b)(2)(A) of the DoddFrank Act. 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.
The Bureau consulted with appropriate
Federal agencies regarding the
consistency of the proposed rule with
prudential, market, or systemic
objectives administered by such
agencies as required by section
1022(b)(2)(B) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
1. Data and Evidence
The discussion in these impact
analyses relies on data from a range of
sources. These include data collected or
developed by the Bureau, including
HMDA 143 and NMDB 144 data, as well
143 HMDA requires many financial institutions to
maintain, report, and publicly disclose loan-level
information about mortgages. These data help show
whether creditors are serving the housing needs of
their communities; they give public officials
information that helps them make decisions and
policies; and they shed light on lending patterns
that could be discriminatory. HMDA was originally
enacted by Congress in 1975 and is implemented
by Regulation C. See Bureau of Consumer Fin. Prot.,
Mortgage Data (HMDA), https://
www.consumerfinance.gov/data-research/hmda/.
144 The NMDB, jointly developed by the FHFA
and the Bureau, provides de-identified loan
characteristics and performance information for a 5
percent sample of all mortgage originations from
1998 to the present, supplemented by de-identified
loan and borrower characteristics from Federal
administrative sources and credit reporting data.
See Bureau of Consumer Fin. Prot., Sources and
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as data obtained from industry, other
regulatory agencies, and other publicly
available sources. The Bureau also
conducted the assessment and issued
the Assessment Report as required
under section 1022(d) of the DoddFrank Act. The Assessment Report
provides quantitative and qualitative
information on questions relevant to
this final rule, including the extent to
which DTI ratios are probative of a
consumer’s ability to repay, the effect of
rebuttable-presumption status relative to
safe-harbor status on access to credit,
and the effect of QM status relative to
non-QM status on access to credit.
Consultations with other regulatory
agencies, industry, and research
organizations inform the Bureau’s
impact analyses.
The data the Bureau relied upon
provide detailed information on the
number, characteristics, and
performance of mortgage loans
originated in recent years. However,
they do not provide information on
creditor costs. As a result, analyses of
any impacts of the Extension Proposal
on creditor costs, particularly realized
costs of complying with underwriting
criteria or potential costs from legal
liability are based on more qualitative
information. Similarly, estimates of any
changes in burden on consumers
resulting from increased or decreased
documentation requirements are based
on qualitative information.
In the Extension Proposal, the Bureau
set forth a preliminary analysis of these
effects and requested comments and
submissions of additional data that
could inform the Bureau’s analysis of
the benefits, costs, and impacts of the
proposal. The Bureau received several
comments on its analysis. Several
commenters agreed with the Bureau’s
estimates of the baseline effects of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition’s
expiration, and the potential benefits to
covered persons and consumers under
the Extension Proposal. Two consumer
advocate commenters that submitted a
joint comment letter argued for a more
complete analysis of alternatives,
including an indefinite delay of the
scheduled expiration of the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition as well as a
comparison of shorter or longer delays
of the expiration.
The Bureau notes that the potential
benefits and costs to covered persons
and consumers discussed in the
Uses of Data at the Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection, at 55–56 (Sept. 2018), https://
www.consumerfinance.gov/documents/6850/bcfp_
sources-uses-of-data.pdf. Differences in total market
size estimates between NMDB data and HMDA data
are attributable to differences in coverage and data
construction methodology.
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Extension Proposal were estimated for
the duration of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition, and thus encompass the
possibilities of shorter, longer, or
indefinite delays of expiration. In
addition, these commenters argued that
because the mortgage finance market is
in flux, the Bureau should redo its
analysis of benefits and costs when
more data are available. In the Extension
Proposal, the Bureau acknowledged the
important economic disruptions and
mortgage market changes due to the
COVID–19 pandemic. However, the
Bureau did not receive new data from
commenters to inform its analysis and it
does not anticipate that market changes
or other circumstances will significantly
alter its estimates of the benefits and
costs of this final rule. These
commenters also stated that the Bureau
must fulfill its statutory obligation ‘‘to
study ability-to-repay’’ before amending
the ATR/QM Rule. However, the Bureau
has already done so by completing the
Assessment Report and through its
monitoring of the performance of
mortgage loans and the availability of
mortgage credit.
2. Description of the Baseline
The Bureau considers the benefits,
costs, and impacts of this final rule
against the baseline in which the Bureau
takes no action and the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition expires on January
10, 2021, or when the GSEs exit
conservatorship, whichever occurs first.
Under this final rule, the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition will expire
when the GSEs exit conservatorship or
on the mandatory compliance date of a
final rule issued by the Bureau
amending the General QM loan
definition, whichever occurs first. As a
result, this final rule’s direct market
impacts will occur only if the GSEs
remain in conservatorship beyond
January 10, 2021. The impact analyses
assume the GSEs will remain in
conservatorship for the relevant period
of time. Unless described otherwise,
estimates of loan counts under the
baseline and estimates of the benefits
and costs of this final rule relative to the
baseline are annual estimates for the
duration of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition.
Under the baseline, when the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
expires, conventional loans could only
receive QM status under the Bureau’s
rules by underwriting according to the
General QM requirements, Small
Creditor QM requirements, Balloon
Payment QM requirements, or the
expanded portfolio QM amendments
created by the EGRRCPA. The General
QM loan definition, which would be the
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only type of QM available to larger
creditors following the expiration of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition,
requires that consumers’ DTI ratio not
exceed 43 percent and requires creditors
to determine debt and income in
accordance with the standards in
appendix Q of Regulation Z.
As stated above in part V.C, the
Bureau anticipates that, under the
baseline in which the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition expires, there are
two main types of conventional loans
that would be affected: High-DTI GSE
loans (those with DTI ratios above 43
percent) and GSE-eligible loans without
appendix Q-required documentation.
Leaving the current fixed sunset date in
place would affect these loans because
they are currently originated as QM
loans due to the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition but would not be
originated as General QM loans, and
may not be originated at all, if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
were to expire before amendments to
the General QM loan definition are in
effect. This section 1022 analysis refers
to these loans as potentially displaced
loans.
The Extension Proposal’s analysis of
the potential market impact of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition’s
expiration cited data and analysis from
the Bureau’s ANPR, as described below.
None of the comments on the Extension
Proposal challenged the data or analysis
from the ANPR or the Extension
Proposal related to the potential market
impacts of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition’s expiration.145 The Bureau
concludes that the data and analysis in
the Extension Proposal and ANPR
provide an appropriate estimate of the
potential impact of the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition’s expiration for this
final rule.
High-DTI GSE Loans. The ANPR
provided an estimate of the number of
loans potentially affected by the
expiration of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition.146 In providing the
estimate, the ANPR focused on loans
that fall within the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition but not the General QM
loan definition because they have a DTI
ratio above 43 percent. This final rule
refers to these loans as High-DTI GSE
loans. Based on NMDB data, the Bureau
145 As noted above in part VII.A.1, two consumer
advocate commenters that submitted a joint
comment letter argued for a more complete analysis
of reasonable alternatives and that the Bureau
should redo its analysis of benefits and costs when
more data is available. However, these commenters
did not challenge the Bureau’s estimates of the
potential market impacts of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition’s expiration.
146 84 FR 37155, 37158–59 (July 31, 2019).
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estimated that there were approximately
6.01 million closed-end first-lien
residential mortgage originations in the
United States in 2018.147 Based on
supplemental data provided by FHFA,
the Bureau estimated that the GSEs
purchased or guaranteed 52 percent—
roughly 3.12 million—of those loans.148
Of those 3.12 million loans, the Bureau
estimated that 31 percent—
approximately 957,000 loans—had DTI
ratios greater than 43 percent.149 Thus,
the Bureau estimated that as a result of
the General QM loan definition’s 43
percent DTI limit, approximately
957,000 loans—16 percent of all closedend first-lien residential mortgage
originations in 2018—were High-DTI
GSE loans.150 This estimate does not
include Temporary GSE QM loans that
were eligible for purchase by the GSEs
but were not sold to the GSEs.
Loans Without Appendix Q-Required
Documentation That Are Otherwise
GSE-Eligible. In addition to High-DTI
GSE loans, the Bureau noted that an
additional, smaller number of
Temporary GSE QM loans with DTI
ratios of 43 percent or less when
calculated using GSE underwriting
guidelines would not fall within the
General QM loan definition because
their method of documenting and
verifying income or debt is incompatible
with appendix Q.151 These loans would
also likely be affected if the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition were to expire
before amendments to the General QM
loan definition are in effect. As
explained in the Extension Proposal, the
Bureau understands, from extensive
public feedback and its own experience,
that appendix Q does not specifically
address whether and how to document
and include certain forms of income.
The Bureau understands these concerns
are particularly acute for self-employed
consumers, consumers with part-time
employment, and consumers with
irregular or unusual income streams.152
147 Id.
at 37159.
The Bureau estimates that 616,000 of these
loans were for home purchases, and 341,000 were
refinance loans. In addition, the Bureau estimates
that the share of these loans with DTI ratios over
45 percent has varied over time due to changes in
market conditions and GSE underwriting standards,
rising from 47 percent in 2016 to 56 percent in
2017, and further to 69 percent in 2018.
150 Id.
151 Id. at 37159 n.58. Where these types of loans
have DTI ratios above 43 percent, they would be
captured in the estimate above relating to High-DTI
GSE loans.
152 For example, in qualitative responses to the
Bureau’s Lender Survey conducted as part of the
Assessment Report, underwriting for self-employed
consumers was one of the most frequently reported
sources of difficulty in originating mortgages using
appendix Q. These concerns were also raised in
67955
As a result, these consumers’ access to
credit may be affected if the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition were to expire
before amendments to the General QM
loan definition are in effect.
The Bureau’s analysis of the market
under the baseline focuses on High-DTI
GSE loans because the Bureau estimates
that most potentially displaced loans are
High-DTI GSE loans. The Bureau also
lacks the loan-level documentation and
underwriting data necessary to estimate
with precision the number of potentially
displaced loans that do not fall within
the other General QM loan requirements
and are not High-DTI GSE loans.
However, the Assessment Report did
not find evidence of substantial
numbers of loans in the non-GSEeligible jumbo market being displaced
when appendix Q documentation
requirements became effective in
2014.153 Further, the Assessment Report
found evidence of only a limited
reduction in the approval rate of selfemployed applicants for non-GSE
eligible mortgages.154 Based on this
evidence, along with qualitative
comparisons of GSE and appendix Q
documentation requirements and
available data on the prevalence of
borrowers with non-traditional or
difficult-to-document income (e.g., selfemployed borrowers, retired borrowers,
those with irregular income streams),
the Bureau estimates this second
category of potentially displaced loans
is considerably less numerous than the
category of High-DTI GSE loans.
Nevertheless, the Bureau believes that,
for some borrowers, there would be a
meaningful impact on their access to
credit because their method of
documenting and verifying income or
debt is incompatible with appendix Q.
Additional Effects on Loans Not
Displaced. The Extension Proposal
explained that, while the most
significant market effects under the
baseline are displaced loans, loans that
continue to be originated as QM loans
after the expiration of the Temporary
148 Id.
149 Id.
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comments submitted in response to the Assessment
RFI, noting that appendix Q is ambiguous with
respect to how to treat income for consumers who
are self-employed, have irregular income, or want
to use asset depletion as income. See Assessment
Report, supra note 27, at 200.
153 Id. at 107 (‘‘For context, total jumbo purchase
originations increased from an estimated 108,700 to
130,200 between 2013 and 2014, based on
nationally representative NMDB data.’’).
154 Id. at 118 (‘‘The Application Data indicates
that, notwithstanding concerns that have been
expressed about the challenge of documenting and
verifying income for self-employed borrowers under
the General QM standard and the documentation
requirements contained in appendix Q to the Rule,
approval rates for non-High DTI, non-GSE eligible
self-employed borrowers have decreased only
slightly, by two percentage points.’’).
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GSE QM loan definition would also be
affected. After the sunset date, absent
changes to the General QM loan
definition, all loans with DTI ratios at or
below 43 percent that are or would have
been purchased and guaranteed as GSE
loans under the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition—approximately 2.16
million loans in 2018—and that
continue to be originated as General QM
loans after the provision expires would
be required to verify income and debts
according to appendix Q, rather than
only according to GSE guidelines. Given
the concerns raised about appendix Q’s
ambiguity and lack of flexibility, this
would likely entail both increased
documentation burden for some
consumers as well as increased costs or
time-to-origination for creditors on some
loans.155
B. Benefits and Costs to Covered Persons
and Consumers
1. Benefits to Consumers
The primary benefit to consumers of
this final rule is the continued
availability of High-DTI GSE loans
during the period of the extension.
Given the large number of consumers
who obtain such loans rather than
available alternatives, including loans
from the private non-GSE market and
FHA loans, these GSE loans may be
preferred due to their pricing,
underwriting requirements, or other
features.
Under the baseline, a sizeable share of
potentially displaced High-DTI GSE
loans may instead be originated as FHA
loans. Thus, under this final rule, any
price advantage of GSE loans over FHA
loans will be a realized benefit to
consumers. Based on the Bureau’s
analysis of 2018 HMDA data, FHA loans
comparable to the loans received by
High-DTI GSE borrowers, based on loan
purpose, credit score, and combined
LTV ratio, on average have $3,000 to
$5,000 higher upfront total loan costs.
APRs provide an alternative, annualized
measure of costs over the life of a loan.
FHA borrowers typically pay different
APRs, which can be higher or lower
than APRs for GSE loans depending on
a borrower’s credit score and LTV.
Borrowers with credit scores at or above
720 pay an APR 30 to 60 basis points
higher than borrowers of comparable
GSE loans, leading to higher monthly
payments over the life of the loan.
However, FHA borrowers with credit
scores below 680 and combined LTVs
exceeding 85 percent pay an APR 20 to
40 basis points lower than borrowers of
155 See part V.B for additional discussion of
concerns raised about appendix Q.
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comparable GSE loans, leading to lower
monthly payments over the life of the
loan.156 For a loan size of $250,000,
these APR differences amount to $2,800
to $5,600 in additional total monthly
payments over the first five years of
mortgage payments for borrowers with
credit scores above 720, and $1,900 to
$3,800 in reduced total monthly
payments over five years for borrowers
with credit scores below 680 and LTVs
exceeding 85 percent.157 Thus all FHA
borrowers are likely to pay higher costs
at origination, while some pay higher
monthly mortgage payments, and others
pay lower monthly mortgage payments.
Assuming, for comparison, that all
957,000 High-DTI GSE loans would be
made as FHA loans in the absence of
this final rule, the average of the upfront
pricing estimates implies total savings
for consumers of roughly $4 billion per
year on upfront costs while the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
remains in effect.158 While this
comparison assumed all potentially
displaced loans would be made as FHA
loans, higher costs (either upfront or in
monthly payments) are likely to prevent
some borrowers from obtaining loans at
all.
In the absence of this final rule, some
of these potentially displaced
consumers, particularly those with
higher credit scores and the resources to
make larger down payments, likely
would be able to obtain credit in the
non-GSE private market at a cost
comparable or slightly higher than the
costs for GSE loans, but below the cost
of an FHA loan. As a result, the above
cost comparisons between GSE and
FHA loans provide an estimated upper
bound on pricing benefits to consumers
of this final rule. However, under the
baseline, some potentially displaced
consumers may not obtain loans and
thus will experience benefits of credit
access under this final rule.159 As
156 The Bureau expects consumers could continue
to obtain FHA loans where such loans were cheaper
or preferred for other reasons.
157 Based on NMDB data, the Bureau estimates
that the average loan amount among High-DTI GSE
borrowers in 2018 was $250,000. While the time to
repayment for mortgages varies with economic
conditions, the Bureau estimates that half of
mortgages are typically closed or paid off five to
seven years into repayment. Payment comparisons
based on typical 2018 HMDA APRs for GSE loans,
5 percent for borrowers with credit scores over 720,
and 6 percent for borrowers with credit scores
below 680 and LTVs exceeding 85 percent.
158 This approximation assumes $4,000 in savings
from total loan costs for all 957,000 consumers.
Actual expected savings would vary substantially
based on loan and credit characteristics, consumer
choices, and market conditions.
159 In particular, the Assessment Report
concluded that some borrowers with strong credit
characteristics may no longer be able to obtain
conventional QM loans, despite likely possessing
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discussed above, the Assessment Report
found that the January 2013 Final Rule
eliminated between 63 and 70 percent
of high-DTI home purchase loans that
were not Temporary GSE QM loans.160
This final rule will also benefit those
consumers with incomes difficult to
document using appendix Q to obtain
General QM status, as the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition continues to
allow documentation of income and
debt through GSE standards. The greater
flexibility of GSE documentation
standards likely reduces effort and costs
for these consumers under this final
rule, and in the most difficult cases in
which borrowers’ documentation cannot
satisfy appendix Q, this final rule will
allow consumers to receive Temporary
GSE QM loans rather than potential
FHA or non-QM alternatives. These
consumers will likely benefit from cost
savings under this final rule, similar to
those for High-DTI consumers discussed
above.
2. Benefits to Covered Persons
This final rule’s primary benefit to
covered persons, specifically mortgage
creditors, is the continued profits from
originating High-DTI conventional QM
loans. Under the baseline, creditors
would be unable to originate such loans
under the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition after January 10, 2021 and
would instead have to originate loans
with comparable DTI ratios as FHA,
Small Creditor QM, or non-QM loans, or
originate at lower DTI ratios as
conventional General QM loans.
Creditors’ current preference for
originating large numbers of High-DTI
Temporary GSE QM loans likely reflects
advantages in a combination of costs or
guarantee fees (particularly relative to
FHA loans), liquidity (particularly
relative to Small Creditor QM), or
litigation and credit risk (particularly
relative to non-QM). Moreover, QM
loans—including Temporary GSE QM
loans—are exempt from the Dodd-Frank
Act risk retention requirement whereby
creditors that securitize mortgage loans
are required to retain at least 5 percent
of the credit risk of the security, which
adds significant cost. As a result, this
final rule conveys benefits to mortgage
creditors originating Temporary GSE
QM loans on each of these dimensions.
the ability to repay such loans. Assessment Report,
supra note 27, at 150 (‘‘Together, these findings
suggest that the observed decrease in access to
credit in this segment was likely driven by lenders’
desire to avoid the risk of litigation by consumers
asserting a violation of the ATR requirement or
other risks associated with that requirement, rather
than by rejections of borrowers who were unlikely
to repay the loan.’’).
160 See id. at 10–11, 117, 131–47.
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In addition, for those lower-DTI GSE
loans which could satisfy General QM
requirements, creditors may realize cost
savings from continuing to underwrite
loans using only the more flexible GSE
documentation standards as compared
to the appendix Q underwriting
standards required for General QM
loans. For GSE consumers unable to
provide documentation compatible with
appendix Q, this final rule allows such
loans to continue receiving QM status,
providing comparable benefits to
creditors as described for High-DTI GSE
loans above.
Finally, those creditors whose
business models rely most heavily on
originating High-DTI GSE loans will
likely see a competitive benefit from the
continued ability to originate such loans
as Temporary GSE QM loans. This is
effectively a transfer in market share to
these creditors from those who
primarily originate FHA or private nonGSE loans, who likely would have
gained market share after the expiration
of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition.
3. Costs to Consumers
The extension of the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition could delay the
development of the non-QM market,
particularly new mortgage products
which may have become available if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition had
been allowed to expire. To the extent
that some consumers would prefer some
of these products to GSE loans due to
pricing, documentation flexibility, or
other advantages, the delay of their
development will be a cost to
consumers of this final rule.
In addition, consumers who would
have obtained non-QM loans under the
baseline but instead obtain QM loans
under this final rule forgo the benefit of
retaining the ATR causes of action and
defenses against foreclosure.
4. Costs to Covered Persons
This final rule’s most sizable costs to
covered persons are effectively transfers
between lenders for the duration of the
extension, reflecting reduced loan
origination volume for lenders who
primarily originate FHA or private nonGSE loans and increased origination
volume for lenders who primarily
originate GSE loans. Business models
vary substantially within market
segments, with portfolio lenders and
lenders originating non-QM loans most
likely to experience a delay in market
share gains that would have been
possible if the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition had been allowed to expire,
while GSE-focused bank and non-bank
lenders are likely to maintain market
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share that might be lost sooner in the
absence of this final rule.
5. Other Benefits and Costs
In delaying the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition’s expiration, this final
rule will delay any effects of the
expiration on the development of the
secondary market for private (non-GSE)
mortgage loan securities. When the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition
expires, those loans that do not fit
within the General QM loan definition
represent a potential new market for
private securitizations. Thus, this final
rule will reduce the scope of the
potential non-QM market for the
duration of the extension, likely
lowering profits and revenues for
participants in the private secondary
market. This will effectively be a
transfer from these private secondary
market participants to participants in
the agency secondary market.
Impact on Depository Institutions and
Credit Unions With $10 Billion or Less
in Total Assets, as Described in Section
1026
This final rule’s expected impact on
depository institutions and credit
unions that are also creditors making
covered loans (depository creditors)
with $10 billion or less in total assets is
similar to the expected impact on larger
creditors and on non-depository
creditors. As discussed in part VII.B.4
(Costs to Covered Persons), depository
creditors originating portfolio loans may
experience a delay in potential market
share gains that would occur in the
absence of this final rule. In addition,
those smaller creditors originating
portfolio loans can originate High-DTI
Small Creditor QM loans under the rule,
and thus may rely less on the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition for
originating High-DTI loans. If the
expiration of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition would confer a
competitive advantage to these small
creditors in their origination of HighDTI loans, this final rule will delay this
outcome.
Conversely, those small creditors that
primarily rely on the GSEs as a
secondary market outlet because they do
not have the capacity to hold numerous
loans in portfolio or the infrastructure or
scale to securitize loans may continue to
benefit from the ability to make HighDTI GSE loans as Temporary GSE QM
loans. In the absence of this final rule,
these creditors would be limited to
originating GSE loans as QMs only with
DTI at or below 43 percent under the
General QM loan definition. These
creditors may also originate FHA, VA,
or USDA loans or non-QM loans for
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private securitizations, likely at a higher
cost relative to Temporary GSE QM
loans.
Impact on Rural Areas
This final rule’s expected impact on
rural areas is similar to the expected
impact on non-rural areas. Based on
2018 HMDA data, the Bureau estimates
that High-DTI conventional purchase
mortgages are comparably likely to be
reported as initially sold to the GSEs in
rural areas (52.5 percent) as in non-rural
areas (52.0 percent).161
VIII. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (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 not-for-profit
organizations.162 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.163
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 would not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small
entities.164 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.165
In the Extension Proposal, the Bureau
certified that an IRFA was not required
because the proposal, if adopted, would
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. The Bureau did not receive
comments on its analysis of the impact
of the Extension Proposal on small
entities. The Bureau does not expect
this final rule to impose costs on small
entities relative to the baseline. Under
161 These statistics are estimated based on
originations from the first nine months of the year,
to allow time for loans to be sold before HMDA
reporting deadlines. In addition, a higher share of
High-DTI conventional purchase non-rural loans
(33.3 percent) report being sold to other non-GSE
purchasers compared to rural loans (22.3 percent).
162 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
163 5 U.S.C. 601(3) (the Bureau may establish an
alternative definition after consultation with the
Small Business Administration and an opportunity
for public comment).
164 5 U.S.C. 603 through 605.
165 5 U.S.C. 609.
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the baseline, the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition expires, and therefore no
creditor—including small entities—
would be able to originate QM loans
under that definition. Under this final
rule, certain small entities that would
otherwise not be able to originate QM
loans under that definition will be able
to originate such loans with QM status.
Thus, the Bureau anticipates that this
final rule will only reduce the burden
on small entities relative to the baseline.
Accordingly, the Director certifies that
this final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Thus, a FRFA
is not required for this final rule.
IX. Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA),166 Federal agencies are
generally required to seek, prior to
implementation, approval from the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for information collection
requirements. 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 new or
substantively revised information
collection requirements other than those
previously approved by OMB under that
OMB control number 3170–0015. This
final rule will amend 12 CFR part 1026
(Regulation Z), which implements TILA.
OMB control number 3170–0015 is the
Bureau’s OMB control number for
Regulation Z.
X. Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act,167 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 at least 60 days prior to the rule’s
published effective date. The Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs has
designated this rule as a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
XI. Signing Authority
The Director of the Bureau, having
reviewed and approved this document,
is delegating the authority to
electronically sign this document to
Laura Galban, a Bureau Federal Register
Liaison, for purposes of publication in
the Federal Register.
166 44
167 5
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
U.S.C. 801 et seq.
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List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 1026
Advertising, 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:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 2601, 2603–2605,
2607, 2609, 2617, 3353, 5511, 5512, 5532,
5581; 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.
Subpart E—Special Rules for Certain
Home Mortgage Transactions
2. Amend § 1026.43 by revising
paragraph (e)(4)(iii)(B) to read as
follows:
■
§ 1026.43 Minimum standards for
transactions secured by a dwelling.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(4) * * *
(iii) * * *
(B) Unless otherwise expired under
paragraph (e)(4)(iii)(A) of this section,
the special rules in this paragraph (e)(4)
are available only for covered
transactions for which the creditor
receives the consumer’s application
before the mandatory compliance date
of a final rule issued by the Bureau
amending paragraph (e)(2) of this
section. The Bureau will also amend
this paragraph prior to that mandatory
compliance date to reflect the new
status.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. In Supplement I to Part 1026—
Official Interpretations, under Section
1026.43—Minimum Standards for
Transactions Secured by a Dwelling,
revise 43(e)(4) Qualified mortgage
defined—special rules to read as
follows:
Supplement I to Part 1026—Official
Interpretations
*
*
*
*
*
Section 1026.43—Minimum standards
for transactions secured by a dwelling.
*
*
*
*
*
43(e)(4) Qualified mortgage defined—
special rules.
1. Alternative definition. Subject to
the sunset provided under
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(iii), § 1026.43(e)(4)
provides an alternative definition of
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qualified mortgage to the definition
provided in § 1026.43(e)(2). To be a
qualified mortgage under
§ 1026.43(e)(4), the transaction must
satisfy the requirements under
§ 1026.43(e)(2)(i) through (iii), in
addition to being one of the types of
loans specified in § 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A)
through (E).
2. Termination of conservatorship.
Section 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A) requires that
a covered transaction be eligible for
purchase or guarantee by the Federal
National Mortgage Association (Fannie
Mae) or the Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) (or
any limited-life regulatory entity
succeeding the charter of either)
operating under the conservatorship or
receivership of the Federal Housing
Finance Agency pursuant to section
1367 of the Federal Housing Enterprises
Financial Safety and Soundness Act of
1992 (12 U.S.C. 4617). The special rule
under § 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A) does not
apply if Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (or
any limited-life regulatory entity
succeeding the charter of either) has
ceased operating under the
conservatorship or receivership of the
Federal Housing Finance Agency. For
example, if either Fannie Mae or
Freddie Mac (or succeeding limited-life
regulatory entity) ceases to operate
under the conservatorship or
receivership of the Federal Housing
Finance Agency, § 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A)
would no longer apply to loans eligible
for purchase or guarantee by that entity;
however, the special rule would be
available for a loan that is eligible for
purchase or guarantee by the other
entity still operating under
conservatorship or receivership.
3. Timing. Under § 1026.43(e)(4)(iii),
the definition of qualified mortgage
under § 1026.43(e)(4) applies only to
loans for which the creditor receives the
consumer’s application before the
mandatory compliance date of a final
rule issued by the Bureau amending
§ 1026.43(e)(2), regardless of whether
Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (or any
limited-life regulatory entity succeeding
the charter of either) continues to
operate under the conservatorship or
receivership of the Federal Housing
Finance Agency. Accordingly,
§ 1026.43(e)(4) is available only for
covered transactions:
i. That are consummated on or before
the date Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (or
any limited-life regulatory entity
succeeding the charter of either),
respectively, cease to operate under the
conservatorship or receivership of the
Federal Housing Finance Agency
pursuant to section 1367 of the Federal
Housing Enterprises Financial Safety
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and Soundness Act of 1992 (12 U.S.C.
4617); and
ii. That are transactions for which the
creditor receives the consumer’s
application before the mandatory
compliance date of a final rule issued by
the Bureau amending § 1026.43(e)(2), as
provided by § 1026.43(e)(4)(iii). The
Bureau will also amend this
commentary prior to that mandatory
compliance date to reflect the new
status.
4. Application. Under
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B), the special rules
in § 1026.43(e)(4)—unless they are
otherwise expired under
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(A)—are available
only for covered transactions for which
the creditor receives the consumer’s
application before the mandatory
compliance date of a final rule issued by
the Bureau amending paragraph (e)(2) of
this section. Under § 1026.2(a)(3)(i),
application means the submission of a
consumer’s financial information for the
purposes of obtaining an extension of
credit. This definition applies to all
transactions covered by Regulation Z.
Regulation Z also provides a more
specific definition for transactions
subject to § 1026.19(e), (f), or (g). For
such transactions, an application
consists of the submission of the
consumer’s name, the consumer’s
income, the consumer’s social security
number to obtain a credit report, the
property address, an estimate of the
value of the property, and the mortgage
loan amount sought. Therefore, for
transactions subject to § 1026.19(e), (f),
or (g), creditors determine the date the
creditor received the consumer’s
application, for purposes of
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B), in accordance
with § 1026.2(a)(3)(ii). For transactions
that are not subject to § 1026.19(e), (f),
or (g), creditors can determine the date
the creditor received the consumer’s
application, for purposes of
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B), in accordance
with either § 1026.2(a)(3)(i) or (ii).
5. Eligible for purchase, guarantee, or
insurance except with regard to matters
wholly unrelated to ability to repay. To
satisfy § 1026.43(e)(4)(ii), a loan need
not be actually purchased or guaranteed
by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac or
insured or guaranteed by one of the
Agencies (the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development
(HUD), U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA), U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA), or Rural Housing
Service (RHS)). Rather,
§ 1026.43(e)(4)(ii) requires only that the
creditor determine that the loan is
eligible (i.e., meets the criteria) for such
purchase, guarantee, or insurance at
consummation. For example, for
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purposes of § 1026.43(e)(4), a creditor is
not required to sell a loan to Fannie Mae
or Freddie Mac (or any limited-life
regulatory entity succeeding the charter
of either) for that loan to be a qualified
mortgage; however, the loan must be
eligible for purchase or guarantee by
Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (or any
limited-life regulatory entity succeeding
the charter of either), including
satisfying any requirements regarding
consideration and verification of a
consumer’s income or assets, credit
history, debt-to-income ratio or residual
income, and other credit risk factors, but
not any requirements regarding matters
wholly unrelated to ability to repay. To
determine eligibility for purchase,
guarantee or insurance, a creditor may
rely on a valid underwriting
recommendation provided by a GSE
automated underwriting system (AUS)
or an AUS that relies on an Agency
underwriting tool; compliance with the
standards in the GSE or Agency written
guide in effect at the time; a written
agreement between the creditor or a
direct sponsor or aggregator of the
creditor and a GSE or Agency that
permits variation from the standards of
the written guides and/or variation from
the AUSs, in effect at the time of
consummation; or an individual loan
waiver granted by the GSE or Agency to
the creditor. For creditors relying on the
variances of a sponsor or aggregator, a
loan that is transferred directly to or
through the sponsor or aggregator at or
after consummation complies with
§ 1026.43(e)(4). In using any of the four
methods listed above, the creditor need
not satisfy standards that are wholly
unrelated to assessing a consumer’s
ability to repay that the creditor is
required to perform. Matters wholly
unrelated to ability to repay are those
matters that are wholly unrelated to
credit risk or the underwriting of the
loan. Such matters include requirements
related to the status of the creditor
rather than the loan, requirements
related to selling, securitizing, or
delivering the loan, and any
requirement that the creditor must
perform after the consummated loan is
sold, guaranteed, or endorsed for
insurance such as document custody,
quality control, or servicing.
Accordingly, a covered transaction is
eligible for purchase or guarantee by
Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, for
example, if:
i. The loan conforms to the relevant
standards set forth in the Fannie Mae
Single-Family Selling Guide or the
Freddie Mac Single-Family Seller/
Servicer Guide in effect at the time, or
to standards set forth in a written
agreement between the creditor or a
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sponsor or aggregator of the creditor and
Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac in effect at
that time that permits variation from the
standards of those guides;
ii. The loan has been granted an
individual waiver by a GSE, which will
allow purchase or guarantee in spite of
variations from the applicable
standards; or
iii. The creditor inputs accurate
information into the Fannie Mae or
Freddie Mac AUS or another AUS
pursuant to a written agreement
between the creditor and Fannie Mae or
Freddie Mac that permits variation from
the GSE AUS; the loan receives one of
the recommendations specified below in
paragraphs A or B from the
corresponding GSE AUS or an
equivalent recommendation pursuant to
another AUS as authorized in the
written agreement; and the creditor
satisfies any requirements and
conditions specified by the relevant
AUS that are not wholly unrelated to
ability to repay, the non-satisfaction of
which would invalidate that
recommendation:
A. An ‘‘Approve/Eligible’’
recommendation from Desktop
Underwriter (DU); or
B. A risk class of ‘‘Accept’’ and
purchase eligibility of ‘‘Freddie Mac
Eligible’’ from Loan Prospector (LP).
6. Repurchase and indemnification
demands. A repurchase or
indemnification demand by Fannie
Mae, Freddie Mac, HUD, VA, USDA, or
RHS is not dispositive of qualified
mortgage status. Qualified mortgage
status under § 1026.43(e)(4) depends on
whether a loan is eligible to be
purchased, guaranteed, or insured at the
time of consummation, provided that
other requirements under
§ 1026.43(e)(4) are satisfied. Some
repurchase or indemnification demands
are not related to eligibility criteria at
consummation. See comment 43(e)(4)–
4. Further, even where a repurchase or
indemnification demand relates to
whether the loan satisfied relevant
eligibility requirements as of the time of
consummation, the mere fact that a
demand has been made, or even
resolved, between a creditor and GSE or
agency is not dispositive for purposes of
§ 1026.43(e)(4). However, evidence of
whether a particular loan satisfied the
§ 1026.43(e)(4) eligibility criteria at
consummation may be brought to light
in the course of dealing over a particular
demand, depending on the facts and
circumstances. Accordingly, each loan
should be evaluated by the creditor
based on the facts and circumstances
relating to the eligibility of that loan at
the time of consummation. For example:
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i. Assume eligibility to purchase a
loan was based in part on the
consumer’s employment income of
$50,000 per year. The creditor uses the
income figure in obtaining an approve/
eligible recommendation from DU. A
quality control review, however, later
determines that the documentation
provided and verified by the creditor to
comply with Fannie Mae requirements
did not support the reported income of
$50,000 per year. As a result, Fannie
Mae demands that the creditor
repurchase the loan. Assume that the
quality control review is accurate, and
that DU would not have issued an
approve/eligible recommendation if it
had been provided the accurate income
figure. The DU determination at the
time of consummation was invalid
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because it was based on inaccurate
information provided by the creditor;
therefore, the loan was never a qualified
mortgage under § 1026.43(e)(4).
ii. Assume that a creditor delivered a
loan, which the creditor determined was
a qualified mortgage at the time of
consummation under § 1026.43(e)(4), to
Fannie Mae for inclusion in a particular
To-Be-Announced Mortgage-Backed
Security (MBS) pool of loans. The data
submitted by the creditor at the time of
loan delivery indicated that the various
loan terms met the product type,
weighted-average coupon, weightedaverage maturity, and other MBS
pooling criteria, and MBS issuance
disclosures to investors reflected this
loan data. However, after delivery and
MBS issuance, a quality control review
determines that the loan violates the
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
pooling criteria. The loan still meets
eligibility requirements for Fannie Mae
products and loan terms. Fannie Mae,
however, requires the creditor to
repurchase the loan due to the violation
of MBS pooling requirements. Assume
that the quality control review
determination is accurate. Because the
loan still meets Fannie Mae’s eligibility
requirements, it remains a qualified
mortgage based on these facts and
circumstances.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: October 20, 2020.
Laura Galban,
Federal Register Liaison, Bureau of Consumer
Financial Protection.
[FR Doc. 2020–23540 Filed 10–23–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–AM–P
E:\FR\FM\26OCR2.SGM
26OCR2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 207 (Monday, October 26, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 67938-67960]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-23540]
[[Page 67937]]
Vol. 85
Monday,
No. 207
October 26, 2020
Part IV
Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection
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12 CFR Part 1026
Qualified Mortgage Definition Under the Truth in Lending Act
(Regulation Z): Extension of Sunset Date; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 207 / Monday, October 26, 2020 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 67938]]
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BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION
12 CFR Part 1026
[Docket No. CFPB-2020-0021]
Qualified Mortgage Definition Under the Truth in Lending Act
(Regulation Z): Extension of Sunset Date
AGENCY: Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.
ACTION: Final rule; official interpretation.
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SUMMARY: With certain exceptions, Regulation Z requires creditors to
make a reasonable, good faith determination of a consumer's ability to
repay any residential mortgage loan, and loans that meet Regulation Z's
requirements for ``qualified mortgages'' (QMs) obtain certain
protections from liability. One category of QMs consists of loans that
are eligible for purchase or guarantee by either the Federal National
Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) or the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation (Freddie Mac) (collectively, government-sponsored
enterprises, or GSEs), while operating under the conservatorship or
receivership of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA). The GSEs are
currently under Federal conservatorship. In 2013, the Bureau of
Consumer Financial Protection (Bureau) established this category of QMs
(Temporary GSE QM loans) as a temporary measure that would expire with
respect to each GSE on the date that GSE exits conservatorship, or on
January 10, 2021, whichever comes first. In this final rule, the Bureau
amends Regulation Z to replace the January 10, 2021 sunset date of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition with a provision stating that the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition will be available only for covered
transactions for which the creditor receives the consumer's application
before the mandatory compliance date of final amendments to the General
QM loan definition in Regulation Z. This final rule does not amend the
provision stating that the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expires
with respect to a GSE when that GSE exits conservatorship.
DATES: This rule is effective December 28, 2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ben Cady, Counsel; or David Friend or
Priscilla Walton-Fein, Senior Counsels, Office of Regulations, at 202-
435-7700. If you require this document in an alternative electronic
format, please contact [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Summary of the Final Rule
The Ability-to-Repay/Qualified Mortgage Rule (ATR/QM Rule) requires
a creditor to make a reasonable, good faith determination of a
consumer's ability to repay a residential mortgage loan according to
its terms. Loans that meet the ATR/QM Rule's requirements for QMs
obtain certain protections from liability. The ATR/QM Rule defines
several categories of QMs.
One QM category defined in the ATR/QM Rule is the General QM loan
category. General QM loans must comply with the ATR/QM Rule's
prohibitions on certain loan features, its points-and-fees limits, and
its underwriting requirements. For General QM loans, the ratio of the
consumer's total monthly debt to total monthly income (DTI ratio) must
not exceed 43 percent. Creditors must calculate, consider, and verify
debt and income for purposes of determining the consumer's DTI ratio
using the standards contained in appendix Q of Regulation Z.
A second, temporary category of QM loans defined in the ATR/QM Rule
consists of mortgages that (1) comply with the same loan-feature
prohibitions and points-and-fees limits as General QM loans and (2) are
eligible to be purchased or guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac
while under the conservatorship of the FHFA. This final rule refers to
these loans as Temporary GSE QM loans, and the provision that created
this loan category is commonly known as the GSE Patch. Unlike for
General QM loans, the ATR/QM Rule does not prescribe a DTI limit for
Temporary GSE QM loans. Thus, a loan can qualify as a Temporary GSE QM
loan even if the consumer's DTI ratio exceeds 43 percent, as long as
the loan is eligible to be purchased or guaranteed by either of the
GSEs. In addition, for Temporary GSE QM loans, the ATR/QM Rule does not
require creditors to use appendix Q to determine the consumer's income,
debt, or DTI ratio.
In 2013, the Bureau provided in the ATR/QM Rule that the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition would expire with respect to each GSE when that
GSE exits conservatorship or on January 10, 2021, whichever comes
first. The GSEs are currently in conservatorship. Despite the Bureau's
expectations when the ATR/QM Rule was published in 2013, Temporary GSE
QM loan originations continue to represent a large and persistent share
of the residential mortgage loan market. A significant number of
Temporary GSE QM loans would be affected by the expiration of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition, including loans for which the
consumer's DTI ratio is above 43 percent or the creditor's method of
documenting and verifying income or debt is incompatible with appendix
Q. Based on 2018 data, the Bureau estimates that, as a result of the
General QM loan definition's 43 percent DTI limit, approximately
957,000 loans--16 percent of all closed-end first-lien residential
mortgage originations in 2018--would be affected by the expiration of
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition. These loans are currently
originated as QM loans due to the Temporary GSE QM loan definition but
would not be originated under the current General QM loan definition,
and might not be originated at all, if the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition were to expire.
On June 22, 2020, the Bureau issued two proposed rules concerning
the ATR/QM Rule. In one of the proposals--referred to in this final
rule as the Extension Proposal--the Bureau proposed to extend the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition until the effective date of a final
rule issued by the Bureau amending the General QM loan definition.\1\
In the other proposal--referred to in this final rule as the General QM
Proposal--the Bureau proposed amendments to the General QM loan
definition.\2\ In the General QM Proposal, the Bureau proposed, among
other things, to remove the General QM loan definition's DTI limit and
replace it with a limit based on the loan's pricing. The Bureau stated
that it expected such amendments would allow most loans that currently
could receive QM status under the Temporary GSE QM loan definition to
receive QM status under the General QM loan definition if they are made
after the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expires. Based on 2018 data,
the Bureau estimated in the General QM Proposal that 943,000 High-DTI
conventional loans would fall outside the QM definitions if there are
no changes to the General QM loan definition prior to the expiration of
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition but would fall within the General
QM loan definition if it were amended as the Bureau proposed. The
Bureau stated that, as a result, the General QM Proposal would help to
facilitate a smooth and orderly transition away from the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 85 FR 41448 (July 10, 2020).
\2\ 85 FR 41716 (July 10, 2020).
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On August 18, 2020, the Bureau issued a third proposal concerning
the ATR/QM Rule. In that proposal--referred to in this final rule as
the Seasoned QM Proposal--the Bureau
[[Page 67939]]
proposed to create a new category of QMs (Seasoned QMs) for first-lien,
fixed-rate covered transactions that meet certain performance
requirements over a 36-month seasoning period, are held in portfolio
until the end of the seasoning period, comply with general restrictions
on product features and points and fees, and meet certain underwriting
requirements.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ 85 FR 53568 (Aug. 28, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this final rule, the Bureau amends Regulation Z to replace the
January 10, 2021 sunset date of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
with a provision stating that the Temporary GSE QM loan definition will
be available only for covered transactions for which the creditor
receives the consumer's application before the mandatory compliance
date of final amendments to the General QM loan definition in
Regulation Z. This final rule does not amend the provision stating that
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expires with respect to a GSE when
that GSE exits conservatorship (the conservatorship clause). This final
rule does not affect the QM definitions that apply to Federal Housing
Administration (FHA), U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA), or Rural Housing Service (RHS) loans.
The Bureau concludes that this extension of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition's sunset date will ensure that responsible, affordable
mortgage credit remains available to consumers who may be affected if
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expires before the amendments to
the General QM loan definition take effect.
II. Background
A. Dodd-Frank Act Amendments to the Truth in Lending Act
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(Dodd-Frank Act) \4\ amended the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) \5\ to
establish, among other things, ability-to-repay (ATR) requirements in
connection with the origination of most residential mortgage loans.\6\
The amendments were intended ``to assure that consumers are offered and
receive residential mortgage loans on terms that reasonably reflect
their ability to repay the loans and that are understandable and not
unfair, deceptive or abusive.'' \7\ As amended, TILA prohibits a
creditor from making a residential mortgage loan unless the creditor
makes a reasonable and good faith determination based on verified and
documented information that the consumer has a reasonable ability to
repay the loan.\8\
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\4\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
\5\ 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.
\6\ Dodd-Frank Act sections 1411-12, 1414, 124 Stat. 2142-48,
2149; 15 U.S.C. 1639c.
\7\ 15 U.S.C. 1639b(a)(2).
\8\ 15 U.S.C. 1639b(a)(1). TILA section 103 defines
``residential mortgage loan'' to mean, with some exceptions
including open-end credit plans, ``any consumer credit transaction
that is secured by a mortgage deed of trust, or other equivalent
consensual security interest on a dwelling or on residential real
property that includes a dwelling.'' 15 U.S.C. 1639b(dd)(5). TILA
section 129C also exempts certain residential mortgage loans from
the ATR requirements. See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. 1639c(a)(8) (exempting
reverse mortages and temporary or bridge loans with a term of 12
months or less).
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TILA identifies the factors a creditor must consider in making a
reasonable and good faith assessment of a consumer's ability to repay.
These factors are the consumer's credit history, current and expected
income, current obligations, debt-to-income ratio or residual income
after paying non-mortgage debt and mortgage-related obligations,
employment status, and other financial resources other than equity in
the dwelling or real property that secures the repayment of the
loan.\9\ A creditor, however, may not be certain whether its ability-
to-repay determination is reasonable in a particular case, and it risks
liability if a court or an agency, including the Bureau, later
concludes that the ability-to-repay determination was not reasonable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 15 U.S.C. 1639c(a)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
TILA addresses this uncertainty by defining a category of loans--
called QMs--for which a creditor ``may presume that the loan has met''
the ATR requirements.\10\ The statute generally defines a QM to mean
any residential mortgage loan for which:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ 15 U.S.C. 1639c(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The loan does not have negative amortization, interest-
only payments, or balloon payments;
The loan term does not exceed 30 years;
The total points and fees generally do not exceed 3
percent of the loan amount;
The income and assets relied upon for repayment are
verified and documented;
The underwriting uses a monthly payment based on the
maximum rate during the first five years, uses a payment schedule that
fully amortizes the loan over the loan term, and takes into account all
mortgage-related obligations; and
The loan complies with any guidelines or regulations
established by the Bureau relating to the ratio of total monthly debt
to monthly income or alternative measures of ability to pay regular
expenses after payment of total monthly debt.\11\
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\11\ 15 U.S.C. 1639c(b)(2)(A).
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B. The ATR/QM Rule
In January 2013, the Bureau issued the ATR/QM Rule, which amended
Regulation Z to implement TILA's ATR requirements (January 2013 Final
Rule).\12\ The ATR/QM Rule became effective on January 10, 2014, and
the Bureau amended it several times through 2016.\13\ The ATR/QM Rule
implements the statutory ATR provisions discussed above and defines
several categories of QM loans.\14\ Under the ATR/QM Rule, a creditor
that makes a QM loan is protected from liability presumptively or
conclusively, depending on whether the loan is ``higher priced.'' \15\
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\12\ 78 FR 6408 (Jan. 30, 2013).
\13\ See 78 FR 35429 (June 12, 2013); 78 FR 44686 (July 24,
2013); 78 FR 60382 (Oct. 1, 2013); 79 FR 65300 (Nov. 3, 2014); 80 FR
59944 (Oct. 2, 2015); 81 FR 16074 (Mar. 25, 2016).
\14\ 12 CFR 1026.43(c), (e).
\15\ The ATR/QM Rule generally defines a ``higher-priced''
covered transaction for General QM loans and for Temporary GSE QM
loans to mean a first-lien mortgage with an annual percentage rate
(APR) that exceeds the average prime offer rate (APOR) for a
comparable transaction as of the date the interest rate is set by
1.5 or more percentage points; or a subordinate-lien transaction
with an APR that exceeds APOR for a comparable transaction as of the
date the interest rate is set by 3.5 or more percentage points. 12
CFR 1026.43(b)(4). A creditor that makes a QM loan that is not
``higher priced'' is entitled to a conclusive presumption that it
has complied with the ATR/QM Rule--i.e., the creditor receives a
safe harbor. 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(1)(i). A creditor that makes a QM
loan that is ``higher priced'' is entitled to a rebuttable
presumption that it has complied with the ATR/QM Rule. 12 CFR
1026.43(e)(1)(ii).
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1. General QM Loans
One category of QM loans defined by the ATR/QM Rule consists of
General QM loans. A loan is a General QM loan if:
The loan does not have negative-amortization, interest-
only, or balloon-payment features, a term that exceeds 30 years, or
points and fees that exceed specified limits; \16\
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\16\ 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(2)(i) through (iii).
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The creditor underwrites the loan based on a fully
amortizing schedule using the maximum rate permitted during the first
five years; \17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(2)(iv).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The creditor considers and verifies the consumer's income
and debt obligations in accordance with appendix Q; \18\ and
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\18\ 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(2)(v).
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The consumer's DTI ratio is no more than 43 percent,
determined in accordance with appendix Q.\19\
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\19\ 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(2)(vi).
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[[Page 67940]]
Appendix Q contains standards for calculating and verifying debt
and income for purposes of determining whether a mortgage satisfies the
43 percent DTI limit for General QM loans. The standards in appendix Q
were adapted from guidelines maintained by FHA when the January 2013
Final Rule was issued.\20\ Appendix Q addresses how to determine a
consumer's employment-related income (e.g., income from wages,
commissions, and retirement plans); non-employment related income
(e.g., income from alimony and child support payments, investments, and
property rentals); and liabilities, including recurring and contingent
liabilities and projected obligations.\21\
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\20\ 78 FR 6408, 6527-28 (Jan. 30, 2013) (noting that appendix Q
incorporates, with certain modifications, the definitions and
standards in HUD Handbook 4155.1, Mortgage Credit Analysis for
Mortgage Insurance on One- to Four-Unit Mortgage Loans).
\21\ 12 CFR 1026, appendix Q.
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2. Temporary GSE QM Loans
A second, temporary category of QM loans defined by the ATR/QM
Rule, Temporary GSE QM loans, consists of mortgages that (1) comply
with the ATR/QM Rule's prohibitions on certain loan features and its
limitations on points and fees \22\ and (2) are eligible to be
purchased or guaranteed by either GSE while under the conservatorship
of the FHFA.\23\ Unlike for General QM loans, Regulation Z does not
prescribe a DTI limit for Temporary GSE QM loans. Thus, a loan can
qualify as a Temporary GSE QM loan even if the DTI ratio exceeds 43
percent, as long as the DTI ratio meets the applicable GSE's DTI
requirements and other underwriting criteria. In addition, income,
debt, and DTI ratios for such loans generally are verified and
calculated using GSE standards, rather than appendix Q. The January
2013 Final Rule provided that the Temporary GSE QM loan definition--
also known as the GSE Patch--would expire with respect to each GSE when
that GSE exits conservatorship or on January 10, 2021, whichever comes
first.\24\
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\22\ 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(2)(i) through (iii).
\23\ 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(4).
\24\ 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B). The ATR/QM Rule created
several additional categories of QM loans. The ATR/QM Rule provided
that mortgages eligible to be insured or guaranteed (as applicable)
by HUD, VA, USDA, and RHS were QMs. 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(B)
through (E). The ATR/QM Rule stated that these provisions would
expire on the effective date of rules issued by each of these
agencies pursuant to their authority under TILA to define a QM. 12
CFR 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(A). Because each of these agencies has issued
such a rule, these provisions have expired. See, e.g., 24 CFR 203.19
(HUD rule). Other categories of QM loans provide more flexible
standards for certain loans originated by certain small creditors.
12 CFR 1026.43(e)(5), (f); cf. 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(6) (applicable only
to covered transactions for which the application was received
before April 1, 2016).
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C. The Bureau's Assessment of the ATR/QM Rule
Section 1022(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act requires the Bureau to assess
each of its significant rules and orders and to publish a report of
each assessment within five years of the effective date of the rule or
order.\25\ The Bureau noted in the January 2013 Final Rule that its
section 1022(d) assessment of the ATR/QM Rule would provide an
opportunity to analyze the Temporary GSE QM loan definition and
confirm, prior to its expiration, whether it would be appropriate to
allow it to expire.\26\ The Bureau published its report as a result of
its assessment on January 11, 2019 (Assessment Report).\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ 12 U.S.C. 5512(d).
\26\ 78 FR 6408, 6533-34 (Jan. 30, 2013).
\27\ Bureau of Consumer Fin. Prot., Ability-to-Repay and
Qualified Mortgage Rule Assessment Report (Jan. 2019), 2019)
(Assessment Report), https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/cfpb_ability-to-repay-qualified-mortgage_assessment-report.pdf.
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D. Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Mortgage Markets
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant effect on the U.S.
economy. In the early months of the pandemic, economic activity
contracted, millions of workers became unemployed, and mortgage markets
were affected. In recent months, there has been a significant rebound
in mortgage-origination activity, buoyed by historically low interest
rates and by an increasingly large share of government and GSE-backed
loans. However, origination activity outside the government and GSE-
backed origination channels has declined significantly, and mortgage-
credit availability for many consumers--including those who would be
dependent on the non-QM market for financing--remains tight. The
pandemic's impact on both the secondary market for new originations and
on the servicing of existing mortgages is described below.
1. Secondary Market Impacts and Implications for Mortgage Origination
Markets
The early economic disruptions associated with the COVID-19
pandemic restricted the flow of credit in the U.S. economy,
particularly as tensions and uncertainty rose in mid-March 2020, and
investors moved rapidly towards cash and government securities.\28\ The
lack of investor demand to purchase mortgages, combined with a large
supply of agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) entering the
market,\29\ resulted in widening spreads between the rates on a 10-year
Treasury note and mortgage interest rates.\30\ This dynamic made it
difficult for creditors to originate loans, as many creditors rely on
the ability to profitably sell loans in the secondary market to
generate the liquidity to originate new loans. This resulted in
mortgages becoming more expensive for both homebuyers and homeowners
looking to refinance. After the actions taken by the Federal Reserve
Board of Governors (Board) in March 2020 to purchase agency MBS ``in
the amounts needed to support smooth market functioning and effective
transmission of monetary policy to broader financial conditions and the
economy,'' \31\ market conditions have improved substantially.\32\ This
has helped to tighten interest rate spreads, which stabilizes mortgage
rates, resulting in a decline in mortgage rates since the Board's
intervention and in a significant increase in refinance activity.
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\28\ The Quarterly CARES Act Report to Congress: Hearing Before
the S. Comm. on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, 116th Cong. 2-3
(2020) (statement of Jerome H. Powell, Chairman, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System).
\29\ Agency MBS are backed by loans guaranteed by Fannie Mae,
Freddie Mac, and the Government National Mortgage Association
(Ginnie Mae).
\30\ Laurie Goodman et al., Urban Inst., Housing Finance at a
Glance, Monthly Chartbook (Mar. 26, 2020), https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/101926/housing-finance-at-a-glance-a-monthly-chartbook-march-2020.pdf.
\31\ Press Release, Bd. of Governors of the Fed. Reserve Sys.,
Federal Reserve announces extensive new measures to support the
economy (Mar. 23, 2020), https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20200323b.htm.
\32\ The Quarterly CARES Act Report to Congress: Hearing Before
the S. Comm. on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, 116th Cong. 3
(2020) (statement of Jerome H. Powell, Chairman, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System).
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However, non-agency MBS \33\ are generally perceived by investors
as riskier than agency MBS. As a result, private capital has remained
tight and non-agency mortgage credit, including non-QM lending, has
declined. Issuance of non-agency MBS declined by 8.2 percent in the
first quarter of 2020, with nearly all the transactions completed in
January and February before the COVID-19 pandemic began to affect the
economy significantly.\34\ Nearly all major non-QM creditors ceased
making loans in March and April 2020. Beginning in May 2020, issuers of
non-
[[Page 67941]]
agency MBS began to test the market with deals collateralized by non-QM
loans largely originated prior to the pandemic, and investor demand for
these securitizations has begun to recover. However, no securitization
has been completed that is predominantly collateralized by non-QM loans
originated since the pandemic began.\35\ As a result, many non-QM
creditors--which largely depend on the ability to sell loans in the
secondary market in order to fund new loans--have begun to resume
originations, albeit with a tighter credit box.\36\ Prime jumbo
financing dropped nearly 22 percent in the first quarter of 2020. Banks
increased interest rates and narrowed the product offerings such that
only consumers with pristine credit profiles were eligible, as these
loans must be held in portfolio when the secondary market for non-
agency MBS contracts.\37\
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\33\ Non-agency MBS are not backed by loans guaranteed by Fannie
Mae, Freddie Mac or Ginnie Mae. This includes securities
collateralized by non-QM loans.
\34\ Brandon Ivey, Non-Agency MBS Issuance Slowed in First
Quarter (Apr. 3, 2020), https://www.insidemortgagefinance.com/articles/217623-non-agency-mbs-issuance-slowed-in-first-quarter.
\35\ Brandon Ivey, Non-Agency MBS Issuance Slow in Mid-August
(Aug. 21, 2020), https://www.insidemortgagefinance.com/articles/218973-non-agency-mbs-issuance-slow-in-mid-august.
\36\ Brandon Ivey, Non-Agency Mortgage Securitization Opening Up
After Pause (May 14, 2020), https://www.insidemortgagefinance.com/articles/218034-non-agency-mortgage-securitization-opening-up-after-pause.
\37\ Brandon Ivey, Jumbo Originations Drop Nearly 22% in First
Quarter (May 15, 2020) https://www.insidemortgagefinance.com/articles/218028-jumbo-originations-drop-nearly-22-in-first-quarter.
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The GSEs and government agencies continue to play a dominant role
in the market recovery, with the GSE share of first-lien mortgage
originations at 65.2 percent in the second quarter of 2020, up from
42.1 percent in the second quarter of 2019 and the FHA and VA share
growing to 21.1 percent from 17.7 percent a year prior, according to an
analysis by the Urban Institute. Portfolio lending declined to 12.7
percent in the second quarter of 2020, down from 38.6 percent in the
second quarter of 2019, and private label securitizations declined to 1
percent from 1.6 percent a year prior.\38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ Laurie Goodman et al., Urban Inst., Housing Finance at a
Glance, Monthly Chartbook (Aug. 27, 2020), https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/102776/august-chartbook-2020.pdf.
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2. Servicing Market Impacts and Implications for Origination Markets
In addition to the direct impact on origination volume and
composition, the pandemic's impact on the mortgage servicing market has
downstream effects on mortgage originations as many of the same
entities both originate and service mortgages. Anticipating that a
number of homeowners would struggle to pay their mortgages due to the
pandemic and related economic impacts, Congress passed and the
President signed into law the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic
Security Act (CARES Act) \39\ in March 2020. The CARES Act provides
additional protections for borrowers whose mortgages are purchased or
securitized by a GSE and certain federally backed mortgages. The CARES
Act mandated a 60-day foreclosure moratorium for such mortgages, which
has since been extended by the agencies until the end of the year.\40\
The CARES Act also allows borrowers to request up to 180 days of
forbearance due to a COVID-19-related financial hardship, with an
option to extend the forbearance period for an additional 180 days.
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\39\ Public Law 116-136, 134 Stat. 281 (2020) (includes loans
backed by HUD, USDA, VA, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac).
\40\ See, e.g., Fed. Hous. Fin. Agency, FHFA Extends Foreclosure
and REO Eviction Moratoriums (Aug. 27, 2020), https://www.fhfa.gov/Media/PublicAffairs/Pages/FHFA-Extends-Foreclosure-and-REO-Eviction-Moratoriums.aspx; Press Release, U.S. Dep't of Hous. & Urban Dev.,
FHA Extends Foreclosure And Eviction Moratorium For Homeowners
Through Year End (Aug. 27, 2020), https://www.hud.gov/press/press_releases_media_advisories/HUD_No_20_134; Veterans Benefits
Admin., Extended Foreclosure Moratorium for Borrowers Affected by
COVID-19 (Aug. 24, 2020), https://www.benefits.va.gov/HOMELOANS/documents/circulars/26-20-30.pdf; Rural Dev., U.S. Dep't of Agric.,
Extension of Foreclosure and Eviction Moratorium for Single Family
Housing Direct Loans (Aug. 28, 2020), https://content.govdelivery.com/accounts/USDARD/bulletins/29c3a9e.
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Following the passage of the CARES Act, some mortgage servicers
remain obligated to make some principal and interest payments to
investors in GSE and Ginnie Mae securities, even if consumers are not
making payments.\41\ Servicers also remain obligated to make escrowed
real estate tax and insurance payments to local taxing authorities and
insurance companies. While servicers are required to hold liquid
reserves to cover anticipated advances, significantly higher-than-
expected forbearance rates over an extended period of time may lead to
liquidity shortages, particularly among many non-bank servicers.
According to a weekly survey from the Mortgage Bankers Association,
while forbearance rates remain elevated at 6.32 percent for the week
ending October 4, 2020, they have decreased since reaching their high
of 8.55 percent on June 7, 2020.\42\
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\41\ The GSEs typically repurchase loans out of the trust after
they fall 120 days delinquent, after which the servicer is no longer
required to advance principal and interest, but Ginnie Mae requires
servicers to advance principal and interest until the default is
resolved. On April 21, 2020, the FHFA confirmed that servicers of
GSE loans will only be required to advance four months of mortgage
payments, regardless of whether the GSEs repurchase the loans from
the trust after 120 days of delinquency. Fed. Hous. Fin. Agency,
FHFA Addresses Servicer Liquidity Concerns, Announces Four Month
Advance Obligation Limit for Loans in Forbearance (Apr. 21, 2020),
https://www.fhfa.gov/Media/PublicAffairs/Pages/FHFA-Addresses-Servicer-Liquidity-Concerns-Announces-Four-Month-Advance-Obligation-Limit-for-Loans-in-Forbearance.aspx.
\42\ Press Release, Mortg. Bankers Ass'n, Share of Mortgage
Loans in Forbearance Declines to 6.32% (Oct. 12, 2020), https://www.mba.org/2020-press-releases/october/share-of-mortgage-loans-in-forbearance-declines-to-632.
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Because many mortgage servicers also originate the loans they
service, many creditors, as well as several warehouse providers,\43\
initially responded to the risk of elevated forbearances and higher-
than-expected monthly advances by imposing credit overlays--i.e.,
additional underwriting standards--for new originations. These new
underwriting standards include more stringent requirements for non-QM,
jumbo, and government loans.\44\ The GSEs also imposed an ``adverse
market fee'' of 50 basis points on most refinances, effective for new
originations delivered to the GSEs on or after December 1, 2020, to
cover projected losses due to forbearances, the foreclosure
moratoriums, and other default servicing expenses.\45\ However, due to
refinance origination profits resulting from historically low interest
rates, the leveling off in forbearance rates, and actions taken at the
Federal level to alleviate servicer liquidity pressure,\46\ concerns
over non-bank liquidity and related credit overlays have begun to
ease.\47\ While the non-QM market has begun to recover, it is unclear
how quickly non-banks who originate non-QM loans will fully return
[[Page 67942]]
to their pre-pandemic level of operations and loan production.
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\43\ Warehouse providers are creditors that provide financing to
mortgage originators and servicers to fund and service loans.
\44\ Maria Volkova, FHA/VA Lenders Raise Credit Score
Requirements (Apr. 3, 2020), https://www.insidemortgagefinance.com/articles/217636-fhava-lenders-raise-fico-credit-score-requirements.
\45\ Press Release, Fed. Hous. Fin. Agency, Adverse Market
Refinance Fee Implementation now December 1 (Aug. 25, 2020), https://www.fhfa.gov/Media/PublicAffairs/Pages/Adverse-Market-Refinance-Fee-Implementation-Now-December-1.aspx.
\46\ On April 10, 2020, Ginnie Mae released guidance on a Pass-
Through Assistance Program whereby Ginnie Mae will provide financial
assistance at a fixed interest rate to servicers facing a principal
and interest shortfall as a last resort. All Participant Memorandum
(APM) 20-03, https://www.ginniemae.gov/issuers/program_guidelines/Pages/mbsguideapmslibdisppage.aspx?ParamID=105. On April 7, 2020,
Ginnie Mae also announced approval of a servicing advance financing
facility, whereby mortgage servicing rights are securitized and sold
to private investors. Press Release, Ginnie Mae approves private
market servicer liquidity facility, https://www.ginniemae.gov/newsroom/Pages/PressReleaseDispPage.aspx?ParamID=194.
\47\ Brandon Ivey, Non-QM Lenders Regaining Footing (July 24,
2020), https://www.insidemortgagefinance.com/articles/218696-non-qm-lenders-regaining-footing-with-a-positive-outlook (on file).
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III. Summary of the Rulemaking Process
The Bureau has solicited and received substantial public and
stakeholder input on issues related to the substance of this final
rule. In addition to the Bureau's discussions with and communications
from industry stakeholders, consumer advocates, other Federal
agencies,\48\ and members of Congress, the Bureau issued requests for
information (RFIs) in 2017 and 2018 and in July 2019 issued an advance
notice of proposed rulemaking regarding the ATR/QM Rule (ANPR). The
Bureau issued the Extension Proposal and the General QM Proposal on
June 22, 2020 and the Seasoned QM Proposal on August 18, 2020.
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\48\ The Bureau has consulted with agencies including the FHFA,
the Board, FHA, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Trade
Commission, the National Credit Union Administration, and the
Department of the Treasury.
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A. The Requests for Information
In June 2017, the Bureau published an RFI in connection with the
Assessment Report (Assessment RFI).\49\ In response to the Assessment
RFI, the Bureau received approximately 480 comments from creditors,
industry groups, consumer advocacy groups, and individuals.\50\ The
comments addressed a variety of topics, including the General QM loan
definition and the 43 percent DTI limit; perceived problems with, and
potential changes and alternatives to, appendix Q; and how the Bureau
should address the expiration of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition.
The comments expressed a range of ideas for addressing the expiration
of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition. Some commenters recommended
making the definition permanent or extending it for various periods of
time. Other comments stated that the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
should be eliminated or permitted to expire.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ 82 FR 25246 (June 1, 2017).
\50\ See Assessment Report, supra note 27, at appendix B
(summarizing comments received in response to the Assessment RFI).
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Beginning in January 2018, the Bureau issued a general call for
evidence seeking comment on its enforcement, supervision, rulemaking,
market monitoring, and financial education activities.\51\ As part of
the call for evidence, the Bureau published requests for information
relating to, among other things, the Bureau's rulemaking process,\52\
the Bureau's adopted regulations and new rulemaking authorities,\53\
and the Bureau's inherited regulations and inherited rulemaking
authorities.\54\ In response to the call for evidence, the Bureau
received comments on the ATR/QM Rule from stakeholders, including
consumer advocacy groups and industry groups. The comments addressed a
variety of topics, including the General QM loan definition, appendix
Q, and the Temporary GSE QM loan definition. The comments also raised
concerns about, among other things, the risks of allowing the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition to expire without any changes to the General QM
loan definition or appendix Q. The concerns raised in these comments
were similar to those raised in response to the Assessment RFI,
discussed above.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ See Bureau of Consumer Fin. Prot., Call for Evidence,
https://www.consumerfinance.gov/policy-compliance/notice-opportunities-comment/archive-closed/call-for-evidence (last updated
Apr. 17, 2018).
\52\ 83 FR 10437 (Mar. 9, 2018).
\53\ 83 FR 12286 (Mar. 21, 2018).
\54\ 83 FR 12881 (Mar. 26, 2018).
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B. The ANPR
On July 25, 2019, the Bureau issued the ANPR.\55\ The ANPR stated
the Bureau's tentative plans to allow the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition to expire in January 2021 or after a short extension, if
necessary, to facilitate a smooth and orderly transition away from the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition. The Bureau also stated that it was
considering whether to propose revisions to the General QM loan
definition in light of the potential expiration of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition and requested comments on several topics related to the
General QM loan definition, including whether and how the Bureau should
revise the DTI limit in the General QM loan definition; whether the
Bureau should supplement or replace the DTI limit with another method
for directly measuring a consumer's personal finances; whether the
Bureau should revise appendix Q or replace it with other standards for
calculating and verifying a consumer's debt and income; and whether,
instead of a DTI limit, the Bureau should adopt standards that do not
directly measure a consumer's personal finances.\56\ The Bureau
requested comment on how much time industry would need to change its
practices in response to any revisions the Bureau makes to the General
QM loan definition.\57\ The Bureau received 85 comments on the ANPR
from businesses in the mortgage industry (including creditors),
consumer advocacy groups, elected officials, individuals, and research
centers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ 84 FR 37155 (July 31, 2019).
\56\ Id. at 37155, 37160-62.
\57\ Id. at 37162. The Bureau stated that if the answer to this
question depends on how the Bureau revises the definition, the
Bureau requested answers based on alternative possible definitions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. The Extension Proposal, General QM Proposal, and Seasoned QM
Proposal
The Bureau issued the Extension Proposal and the General QM
Proposal on June 22, 2020. In the Extension Proposal, the Bureau
proposed to replace the January 10, 2021 sunset date of the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition with a provision that extends the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition until the effective date of final amendments to the
General QM loan definition in Regulation Z (i.e., a final rule relating
to the General QM Proposal). The Bureau did not propose to amend the
conservatorship clause. The comment period for the Extension Proposal
ended on August 10, 2020.
In the General QM Proposal, the Bureau proposed, among other
things, to remove the General QM loan definition's DTI limit and
replace it with a limit based on the loan's pricing. Under the
proposal, a loan would meet the General QM loan definition in Sec.
1026.43(e)(2) only if the APR exceeds APOR for a comparable transaction
by less than two percentage points as of the date the interest rate is
set. The Bureau proposed higher thresholds for loans with smaller loan
amounts and subordinate-lien transactions. The Bureau also proposed to
retain the existing product-feature and underwriting requirements and
limits on points and fees. Although the Bureau proposed to remove the
43 percent DTI limit from the General QM loan definition, the General
QM Proposal would require that the creditor consider and verify the
consumer's income or assets, debt obligations, alimony, child support,
and monthly DTI ratio or residual income. The Bureau proposed to remove
appendix Q. To mitigate the uncertainty that may result from appendix
Q's removal, the General QM Proposal would clarify the requirements to
consider and verify a consumer's income, assets, debt obligations,
alimony, and child support. The Bureau proposed to preserve the current
threshold separating safe harbor from rebuttable presumption QMs, under
which a loan is a safe harbor QM if its APR exceeds APOR for a
comparable transaction by less than 1.5 percentage
[[Page 67943]]
points as of the date the interest rate is set (or by less than 3.5
percentage points for subordinate-lien transactions).
Although the Bureau proposed to remove the 43 percent DTI limit and
adopt a price-based approach for the General QM loan definition, the
Bureau also requested comment on two alternative approaches: (1)
Retaining the DTI limit and increasing it to a specific threshold
between 45 percent and 48 percent or (2) using a hybrid approach
involving both pricing and a DTI limit, such as applying a DTI limit to
loans that are above specified rate spreads. Under these alternative
approaches, creditors would not be required to verify debt and income
using appendix Q.
The Bureau stated in the General QM Proposal that it expected such
amendments would allow most loans that currently could receive QM
status under the Temporary GSE QM loan definition to receive QM status
under the General QM loan definition if they are made after the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition expires.\58\ The Bureau stated that,
as a result, the General QM Proposal would help to facilitate a smooth
and orderly transition away from the Temporary GSE QM loan definition.
The Bureau proposed that the effective date of a final rule relating to
the General QM Proposal would be six months after publication of the
final rule in the Federal Register. The revised regulations would apply
to covered transactions for which creditors receive an application on
or after this effective date. The comment period for the General QM
Proposal ended on September 8, 2020.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ Based on 2018 data, the Bureau estimated in the General QM
Proposal that 943,000 High-DTI conventional loans would fall outside
the QM definitions if there are no changes to the General QM loan
definition prior to the expiration of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition but would fall within the General QM loan definition if
amended as the Bureau proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On August 18, 2020, the Bureau issued the Seasoned QM Proposal. The
Bureau proposed to create a new category of QMs for first-lien, fixed-
rate covered transactions that have met certain performance
requirements over a 36-month seasoning period, are held in portfolio
until the end of the seasoning period, comply with general restrictions
on product features and points and fees, and meet certain underwriting
requirements.\59\ The Bureau stated that the primary objective of the
Seasoned QM Proposal was to ensure access to responsible, affordable
mortgage credit by adding a Seasoned QM definition to the existing QM
definitions. The Bureau proposed that a final rule relating to the
Seasoned QM Proposal would take effect on the same date as a final rule
relating to the General QM Proposal. Under the Seasoned QM Proposal--as
under the General QM Proposal--the revised regulations would apply to
covered transactions for which creditors receive an application on or
after this effective date. Thus, due to the 36-month seasoning period,
no loan would be eligible to become a Seasoned QM until at least 36
months after the effective date of a final rule relating to the
Seasoned QM Proposal. The comment period for the Seasoned QM Proposal
was extended to October 1, 2020.\60\
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\59\ 85 FR 53568 (Aug. 28, 2020).
\60\ 85 FR 60096 (Sept. 24, 2020).
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IV. Legal Authority
The Bureau is issuing this final rule pursuant to its authority
under TILA and the Dodd-Frank Act. Section 1061 of the Dodd-Frank Act
transferred to the Bureau the ``consumer financial protection
functions'' previously vested in certain other Federal agencies,
including the Board. The Dodd-Frank Act defines the term ``consumer
financial protection function'' to include ``all authority to prescribe
rules or issue orders or guidelines pursuant to any Federal consumer
financial law, including performing appropriate functions to promulgate
and review such rules, orders, and guidelines.'' \61\ Title X of the
Dodd-Frank Act (including section 1061), along with TILA and certain
subtitles and provisions of title XIV of the Dodd-Frank Act, are
Federal consumer financial laws.\62\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ 12 U.S.C. 5581(a)(1)(A).
\62\ Dodd-Frank Act section 1002(14), 12 U.S.C. 5481(14)
(defining ``Federal consumer financial law'' to include the
``enumerated consumer laws'' and the provisions of title X of the
Dodd-Frank Act), Dodd-Frank Act section 1002(12)(O), 12 U.S.C.
5481(12)(O) (defining ``enumerated consumer laws'' to include TILA).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 105(a) of TILA directs the Bureau to prescribe regulations
to carry out the purposes of TILA and states that such regulations may
contain such 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.\63\ 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 credit terms available to him and avoid the
uninformed use of credit.'' \64\ Additionally, a purpose of TILA
sections 129B and 129C is to assure that consumers are offered and
receive residential mortgage loans on terms that reasonably reflect
their ability to repay the loans and that are understandable and not
unfair, deceptive, or abusive.\65\ As discussed in the section-by-
section analysis below, the Bureau is issuing certain provisions of
this final rule pursuant to its rulemaking, adjustment, and exception
authority under TILA section 105(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ 15 U.S.C. 1604(a).
\64\ 15 U.S.C. 1601(a).
\65\ 15 U.S.C. 1639b(a)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 129C(b)(3)(B)(i) of TILA authorizes the Bureau to prescribe
regulations that revise, add to, or subtract from the criteria that
define a QM upon a finding that such regulations are necessary or
proper to ensure that responsible, affordable mortgage credit remains
available to consumers in a manner consistent with the purposes of TILA
section 129C; or are necessary and appropriate to effectuate the
purposes of TILA sections 129B and 129C, to prevent circumvention or
evasion thereof, or to facilitate compliance with such sections.\66\ In
addition, TILA section 129C(b)(3)(A) directs the Bureau to prescribe
regulations to carry out the purposes of section 129C.\67\ As discussed
in the section-by-section analysis below, the Bureau is issuing certain
provisions of this final rule pursuant to its authority under TILA
section 129C(b)(3)(B)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ 15 U.S.C. 1639c(b)(3)(B)(i).
\67\ 15 U.S.C. 1639c(b)(3)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 1022(b)(1) of the Dodd-Frank Act authorizes the Bureau to
prescribe rules to enable the Bureau to administer and carry out the
purposes and objectives of the Federal consumer financial laws, and to
prevent evasions thereof.\68\ TILA and title X of the Dodd-Frank Act
are Federal consumer financial laws. Accordingly, in this final rule,
the Bureau is exercising its authority under Dodd-Frank Act section
1022(b) to prescribe rules that carry out the purposes and objectives
of TILA and title X and prevent evasion of those laws.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. Why the Bureau Is Issuing This Final Rule
This final rule replaces the January 10, 2021 sunset date of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition with a provision that extends the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition until the mandatory compliance date of
final amendments to the General QM loan
[[Page 67944]]
definition in Regulation Z.\69\ The Bureau is issuing this final rule
because it is concerned about the likely effects on the availability
and cost of credit if the Temporary GSE QM loan definition were to
expire before final amendments to the General QM loan definition take
effect.\70\ The Bureau proposed amendments to the General QM loan
definition in the General QM Proposal, which the Bureau issued on June
22, 2020.\71\
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\69\ This final rule does not amend the conservatorship clause
in Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A), which provides that the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition will expire with respect to each GSE when that
GSE exits conservatorship.
\70\ As described in the section-by-section analysis below, the
mandatory compliance date for a final rule amending the General QM
loan definition either would be the same as the effective date of
such a final rule or would occur after the effective date of such a
final rule. So, under this final rule, the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition would cease to be available no earlier than the effective
date of a final rule amending the General QM loan definition.
\71\ 85 FR 41448 (July 10, 2020).
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As explained above, the General QM Proposal would remove the
General QM loan definition's 43 percent DTI limit and replace it with a
price-based approach. Specifically, the General QM Proposal provides
that a loan meets the General QM loan definition in Sec. 1026.43(e)(2)
only if the APR exceeds the APOR for a comparable transaction by less
than two percentage points as of the date the interest rate is set.\72\
The Bureau expects that the amendments the Bureau proposed in the
General QM Proposal would, among other things, allow most loans that
currently could receive QM status under the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition to receive QM status under the General QM loan definition if
they are made after the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expires.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\72\ The General QM Proposal would also provide higher
thresholds for loans with smaller loan amounts and for subordinate-
lien transactions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, the Bureau believes that some consumers who would have
obtained loans under the Temporary GSE QM loan definition--and who
would be able to obtain loans under the revised General QM loan
definition, as separately proposed in the General QM Proposal--would
not be able to obtain loans at all if the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition expired before final amendments to the General QM loan
definition have gone into effect. Further, for loans absorbed by FHA
and the private market in the absence of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition, there is a significant risk that some consumers would have
paid more for these loans. Any such pricing effects, however, would
depend on the characteristics of the particular loans that would be
originated as FHA loans or in the private market.
To prevent these likely effects on the availability and cost of
credit if the Temporary GSE QM loan definition were to expire before
final amendments to the General QM loan definition take effect, the
Bureau is revising the ATR/QM Rule to provide that the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition will expire on the mandatory compliance date of a final
rule issued by the Bureau amending the General QM loan definition or
when the GSEs exit conservatorship, whichever comes first. The Bureau
concludes that this extension of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition's
sunset date will ensure that responsible, affordable credit remains
available to consumers who may have been affected if the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition were to expire before amendments to the General QM
loan definition take effect.
Consistent with the Extension Proposal, and for the reasons
discussed below in the section-by-section analysis of Sec.
1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B), the Bureau is not amending the conservatorship
clause in Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A).
A. Why the Bureau Created the Temporary GSE QM Loan Definition
In the January 2013 Final Rule, the Bureau explained why it created
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition. The Bureau observed that it did
not believe that a 43 percent DTI ratio ``represents the outer boundary
of responsible lending'' and acknowledged that historically, and even
after the financial crisis, over 20 percent of mortgages exceeded that
threshold.\73\ However, the Bureau stated that, as DTI ratios increase,
``the general ability-to-repay procedures, rather than the qualified
mortgage framework, is better suited for consideration of all relevant
factors that go to a consumer's ability to repay a mortgage loan'' and
that ``[o]ver the long term . . . there will be a robust and sizable
market for prudent loans beyond the 43 percent threshold even without
the benefit of the presumption of compliance that applies to qualified
mortgages.'' \74\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\73\ 78 FR 6408, 6527 (Jan. 30, 2013).
\74\ Id. at 6527-28.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
At the same time, the Bureau noted that the mortgage market was
especially fragile following the financial crisis and that GSE-eligible
loans and federally insured or guaranteed loans made up a significant
majority of the market.\75\ The Bureau believed that it was appropriate
to consider for a period of time that GSE-eligible loans were
originated with an appropriate assessment of the consumer's ability to
repay and therefore warranted being treated as QMs.\76\ The Bureau
believed in 2013 that this temporary category of QM loans would, in the
near term, help to ensure access to responsible, affordable credit for
consumers with DTI ratios above 43 percent, as well as facilitate
compliance by creditors by promoting the use of widely recognized,
federally related underwriting standards.\77\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\75\ Id. at 6533-34.
\76\ Id. at 6534.
\77\ Id. at 6533.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The January 2013 Final Rule established a sunset date for the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition of January 10, 2021 (seven years after
that rule's effective date). The January 2013 Final Rule also stated
that the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expires with respect to a GSE
when that GSE exits conservatorship, even if that occurs before January
10, 2021.\78\ The Bureau stated that it believed a seven-year period
between the January 2013 Final Rule's effective date and the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition's sunset date would ``provide an adequate period
for economic, market, and regulatory conditions to stabilize'' and ``a
reasonable transition period to the general qualified mortgage
definition.'' \79\ The Bureau believed that the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition would benefit consumers by preserving access to credit while
the mortgage industry adjusted to the ATR/QM Rule.\80\ The Bureau also
explained that it structured the Temporary GSE QM loan definition to
cover loans eligible to be purchased or guaranteed by either of the
GSEs--regardless of whether the loans are actually purchased or
guaranteed--to leave room for non-GSE private investors to return to
the market and secure the same legal protections as the GSEs.\81\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\78\ See 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A)(1) and (iii)(B).
\79\ 78 FR 6408, 6534 (Jan. 30, 2013).
\80\ Id. at 6536.
\81\ Id. at 6534.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Bureau believed that, as the market recovered, the GSEs and the
Federal agencies would be able to reduce their market presence, the
percentage of Temporary GSE QM loans would decrease, and the market
would shift toward General QM loans and non-QM loans above a 43 percent
DTI ratio.\82\ The Bureau's view was that a shift towards non-QM loans
could be supported by the non-GSE private market--i.e., by institutions
holding such loans in portfolio, selling them in
[[Page 67945]]
whole, or securitizing them in a rejuvenated private-label securities
(PLS) market. The Bureau noted that pursuant to its statutory
obligations under the Dodd-Frank Act, it would assess the impact of the
ATR/QM Rule five years after the ATR/QM Rule's effective date, and the
assessment would provide an opportunity to analyze the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition.\83\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ Id.
\83\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. The Continued Prevalence of Temporary GSE QM Loan Originations
The mortgage market has evolved differently than the Bureau
predicted when it issued the January 2013 Final Rule. Contrary to the
Bureau's expectations in 2013, the market has not shifted away from
Temporary GSE QM originations and the private market \84\ remains
small. As noted in the Assessment Report, Temporary GSE QM originations
continue to represent ``a large and persistent'' share of originations
in the conforming segment of the mortgage market, and a robust and
sizable market to support non-QM lending has not emerged.\85\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\84\ Consistent with the Assessment Report, references to the
private market herein include loans securitized by PLS and loans
financed by portfolio lending by commercial banks, credit unions,
savings banks, savings associations, mortgage banks, life insurance
companies, finance companies, their affiliate institutions, and
other private purchasers. See Assessment Report, supra note 27, at
74.
\85\ Id. at 198.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The GSEs' share of the conventional, conforming purchase-mortgage
market was large before the ATR/QM Rule, and the Assessment Report
found a small increase in that share since the ATR/QM Rule's effective
date, reaching 71 percent in 2017.\86\ The Assessment Report noted
that, at least for loans intended for sale in the secondary market,
creditors generally offer a Temporary GSE QM loan even when a General
QM loan could be originated.\87\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\86\ Id. at 191.
\87\ Id. at 192.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As explained in the Extension Proposal, the continued prevalence of
Temporary GSE QM loan originations is contrary to the Bureau's
expectation at the time it issued the January 2013 Final Rule.\88\ The
Assessment Report discussed several possible reasons for the continued
prevalence of Temporary GSE QM loan originations. The Assessment Report
first highlighted concerns that Assessment RFI commenters expressed
about the perceived lack of clarity in appendix Q. The Assessment
Report found that such concerns ``may have contributed to investors'--
and at least derivatively, creditors'--preference'' for Temporary GSE
QM loans instead of originating loans under the General QM loan
definition.\89\ The Assessment Report noted that a second possible
reason for the continued prevalence of Temporary GSE QM loans is that
the GSEs were able to accommodate demand for mortgages above the
General QM loan definition's DTI limit of 43 percent as the DTI ratio
distribution in the market shifted upward.\90\ The Assessment Report
found that a third possible reason for the persistence of Temporary GSE
QM loans is the structure of the secondary market.\91\ If creditors
adhere to the GSEs' guidelines, they gain access to a robust, highly
liquid secondary market.\92\ In contrast, while private market
securitizations have grown somewhat in recent years, their volume is
still a fraction of their pre-crisis levels.\93\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ Id. at 13, 190, 238.
\89\ Id. at 193.
\90\ Id. at 194.
\91\ Id. at 196.
\92\ Id.
\93\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. The Potential Market Impact of the Temporary GSE QM Loan
Definition's Expiration
As the Extension Proposal explained, the Bureau anticipates that
two main types of conventional loans would be affected by the
expiration of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition: High-DTI GSE loans
(those with DTI ratios above 43 percent) and GSE-eligible loans without
appendix Q-required documentation. Leaving the current fixed sunset
date in place would affect these loans because they are currently
originated as QM loans due to the Temporary GSE QM loan definition but
would not be originated as General QM loans, and may not be originated
at all, if the Temporary GSE QM loan definition were to expire before
amendments to the General QM loan definition are in effect. This final
rule refers to these loans as potentially displaced loans.
The Extension Proposal's analysis of the potential market impact of
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition's expiration cited data and
analysis from the Bureau's ANPR, as described below. None of the
comments on the Extension Proposal challenged the data or analysis from
the ANPR or the Extension Proposal related to the potential market
impacts of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition's expiration.\94\ The
Bureau concludes that the data and analysis in the Extension Proposal
and ANPR provide an appropriate estimate of the potential impact of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition's expiration for this final rule.
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\94\ As noted below in the Bureau's section 1022(b) analysis,
two consumer advocate commenters that submitted a joint comment
letter argued for a more complete analysis of reasonable
alternatives and that the Bureau should redo its analysis of
benefits and costs when more data is available. However, these
commenters did not challenge the Bureau's estimates of the potential
market impacts of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition's expiration.
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High-DTI GSE Loans. The ANPR provided an estimate of the number of
loans potentially affected by the expiration of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition.\95\ In providing the estimate, the ANPR focused on
loans that fall within the Temporary GSE QM loan definition but not the
General QM loan definition because they have a DTI ratio above 43
percent. This final rule refers to these loans as High-DTI GSE loans.
Based on data from the National Mortgage Database (NMDB), the Bureau
estimated that there were approximately 6.01 million closed-end first-
lien residential mortgage originations in the United States in
2018.\96\ Based on supplemental data provided by the FHFA, the Bureau
estimated that the GSEs purchased or guaranteed 52 percent--roughly
3.12 million--of those loans.\97\ Of those 3.12 million loans, the
Bureau estimated that 31 percent--approximately 957,000 loans--had DTI
ratios greater than 43 percent.\98\ Thus, the Bureau estimated that as
a result of the General QM loan definition's 43 percent DTI limit,
approximately 957,000 loans--16 percent of all closed-end first-lien
residential mortgage originations in 2018--were High-DTI GSE loans.\99\
This estimate does not include Temporary GSE QM loans that were
eligible for purchase by either of the GSEs but were not sold to the
GSEs.
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\95\ 84 FR 37155, 37158-59 (July 31, 2019).
\96\ Id.
\97\ Id. at 37159.
\98\ Id. The Bureau estimates that 616,000 of these loans were
for home purchases, and 341,000 were refinance loans. In addition,
the Bureau estimates that the share of these loans with DTI ratios
over 45 percent has varied over time due to changes in market
conditions and GSE underwriting standards, rising from 47 percent in
2016 to 56 percent in 2017, and further to 69 percent in 2018.
\99\ Id.
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Loans Without Appendix Q-Required Documentation That Are Otherwise
GSE-Eligible. In addition to High-DTI GSE loans, an additional, smaller
number of Temporary GSE QM loans with DTI ratios of 43 percent or less
when calculated using GSE underwriting guides would not fall within the
General QM loan definition because their method of documenting and
verifying income or debt is
[[Page 67946]]
incompatible with appendix Q.\100\ These loans would also likely be
affected if the Temporary GSE QM loan definition were to expire before
amendments to the General QM loan definition are in effect. As
explained in the Extension Proposal, the Bureau understands, from
extensive public feedback and its own experience, that appendix Q does
not specifically address whether and how to document and include
certain forms of income. The Bureau understands these concerns are
particularly acute for self-employed consumers, consumers with part-
time employment, and consumers with irregular or unusual income
streams.\101\ As a result, these consumers' access to credit may be
affected if the Temporary GSE QM loan definition were to expire before
amendments to the General QM loan definition are in effect.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\100\ Id. at 37159 n.58. Where these types of loans have DTI
ratios above 43 percent, they would be captured in the estimate
above relating to High-DTI GSE loans.
\101\ For example, in qualitative responses to the Bureau's
Lender Survey conducted as part of the Assessment Report,
underwriting for self-employed consumers was one of the most
frequently reported sources of difficulty in originating mortgages
using appendix Q. These concerns were also raised in comments
submitted in response to the Assessment RFI, noting that appendix Q
is ambiguous with respect to how to treat income for consumers who
are self-employed, have irregular income, or want to use asset
depletion as income. See Assessment Report, supra note 27, at 200.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Bureau's analysis of the market under the baseline focuses on
High-DTI GSE loans because the Bureau estimates that most potentially
displaced loans are High-DTI GSE loans. The Bureau also lacks the loan-
level documentation and underwriting data necessary to estimate with
precision the number of potentially displaced loans that do not fall
within the other General QM loan requirements and are not High-DTI GSE
loans. However, the Assessment Report did not find evidence of
substantial numbers of loans in the non-GSE-eligible jumbo market being
displaced when appendix Q verification requirements became effective in
2014.\102\ Further, the Assessment Report found evidence of only a
limited reduction in the approval rate of self-employed applicants for
non-GSE eligible mortgages.\103\ Based on this evidence, along with
qualitative comparisons of GSE and appendix Q documentation
requirements and available data on the prevalence of borrowers with
non-traditional or difficult-to-document income (e.g., self-employed
borrowers, retired borrowers, those with irregular income streams), the
Bureau estimates this second category of potentially displaced loans is
considerably less numerous than the category of High-DTI GSE loans.
Nevertheless, the Bureau believes that, for some borrowers, there would
be a meaningful impact on their access to credit because their method
of documenting and verifying income or debt is incompatible with
appendix Q.
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\102\ Id. at 107 (``For context, total jumbo purchase
originations increased from an estimated 108,700 to 130,200 between
2013 and 2014, based on nationally representative NMDB data.'').
\103\ Id. at 118 (``The Application Data indicates that,
notwithstanding concerns that have been expressed about the
challenge of documenting and verifying income for self-employed
borrowers under the General QM standard and the documentation
requirements contained in appendix Q to the Rule, approval rates for
non-High-DTI, non-GSE eligible self-employed borrowers have
decreased only slightly, by two percentage points.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional Effects on Loans Not Displaced. The Extension Proposal
explained that, in addition to potentially displaced loans, loans that
continue to be originated as QM loans after the expiration of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition would also be affected. After the
sunset date, absent changes to the General QM loan definition, all
loans with DTI ratios at or below 43 percent that are or would have
been purchased and guaranteed as GSE loans under the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition--approximately 2.16 million loans in 2018--and that
continue to be originated as General QM loans after the provision
expires would be required to verify income and debts according to
appendix Q, rather than only according to GSE guidelines. Given the
concerns raised about appendix Q's ambiguity and lack of flexibility,
this would likely entail both increased documentation burden for some
consumers as well as increased costs or time-to-origination for
creditors on some loans.\104\ Commenters on the Extension Proposal did
not offer additional estimates regarding the number of potentially
displaced loans.
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\104\ See part V.B for additional discussion of concerns raised
about appendix Q.
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Focusing on High-DTI GSE loans, the Bureau expects that these loans
will continue to comprise a significant proportion of mortgage
originations through January 10, 2021, when the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition was scheduled to expire.\105\ The ANPR identified several
ways that the market for loans that would have been High-DTI GSE loans
may respond to the expiration of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition.\106\ In doing so, the Bureau made assumptions about the
future behavior of certain mortgage market participants: (1) That there
is no change to the GSEs' current policy that does not allow purchase
of non-QM loans; and (2) that creditors' preference for making
Temporary GSE QM loans, and investors' preference for purchasing such
loans, is driven in part by the safe harbor provided to such loans and
that these preferences would continue at least for some creditors and
investors.\107\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\105\ 84 FR 37155, 37159 (July 31, 2019).
\106\ Id.
\107\ Id.
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The Bureau concludes that this analysis from the ANPR continues to
provide an appropriate assessment of how the market for loans that
would have been High-DTI GSE loans may have responded to the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition's expiration prior to the effective date of
amendments to the General QM definition. Therefore, the Bureau expects
that many consumers who would have obtained High-DTI GSE loans would
instead have obtained FHA-insured loans because FHA currently insures
loans with DTI ratios up to 57 percent (with compensating
factors).\108\ The number of loans that would have moved to FHA would
depend on FHA's willingness and ability to insure such loans, on
whether the FHA mortgage payment would be affordable to the consumer
relative to any options in the private mortgage market, on whether FHA
continues to treat all loans that it insures as QMs under its own QM
rule, and on how many High-DTI GSE loans exceed FHA's loan-amount
limit.\109\ For example, the Extension Proposal estimated that, in
2018, 11 percent of High-DTI GSE loans exceeded FHA's loan-amount
limit.\110\ The Bureau considers this an outer limit on the share of
High-DTI GSE loans that could have moved to FHA.\111\ As explained in
the Extension Proposal, the Bureau expects that loans that would have
been originated as FHA loans instead of under the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition would generally have cost materially more for many
consumers.\112\ The Bureau also expects
[[Page 67947]]
that some consumers offered FHA loans might have chosen not to take out
a mortgage because of these higher costs.
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\108\ Id. In fiscal year 2019, approximately 57 percent of FHA-
insured purchase mortgages had a DTI ratio above 43 percent. U.S.
Dep't of Hous. & Urban Dev., Annual Report to Congress Regarding the
Financial Status of the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund, Fiscal
Year 2019, at 33 (Nov. 14, 2019), https://www.hud.gov/sites/dfiles/Housing/documents/2019FHAAnnualReportMMIFund.pdf.
\109\ 84 FR 37155, 37159 (July 31, 2019).
\110\ Id. In 2018, FHA's county-level maximum loan limits ranged
from $271,050 to $721,050. See U.S. Dep't of Hous. & Urban Dev., FHA
Mortgage Limits, https://entp.hud.gov/idapp/html/hicostlook.cfm
(last visited Oct. 17, 2020).
\111\ 84 FR 37155, 37159 (July 31, 2019).
\112\ Interest rates and insurance premiums on FHA loans
generally feature less risk-based pricing than conventional loans,
charging more similar rates and premiums to all consumers. As a
result, they are likely to cost more than conventional loans for
consumers with stronger credit scores and larger down payments.
Consistent with this pricing differential, consumers with higher
credit scores and larger down payments chose FHA loans relatively
rarely in 2018 Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) data on mortgage
originations. See Bureau of Consumer Fin. Prot., Introducing New and
Revised Data Points in HMDA (Aug. 2019), https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/cfpb_new-revised-data-points-in-hmda_report.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is also possible that some consumers who would have sought High-
DTI GSE loans would have been able to obtain loans in the private
market.\113\ The ANPR noted that the number of loans absorbed by the
private market would likely depend, in part, on whether actors in the
private market are willing to assume the legal and credit risk
associated with funding High-DTI GSE loans as non-QM loans or small-
creditor portfolio QM loans \114\ and, if so, whether actors in the
private market would offer more competitive pricing or terms.\115\ For
example, as explained in the Extension Proposal, the Bureau estimates
that 55 percent of High-DTI GSE loans in 2018 had credit scores at or
above 680 and loan-to-value (LTV) ratios at or below 80 percent--credit
characteristics traditionally considered attractive to actors in the
private market.\116\ The ANPR also noted that there are certain built-
in costs to FHA loans--namely, mortgage insurance premiums--which could
be a basis for competition and that depository institutions in recent
years have shied away from originating and servicing FHA loans due to
the obligations and risks associated with such loans.\117\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\113\ 84 FR 37155, 37159 (July 31, 2019).
\114\ See 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(5) (extending QM status to certain
portfolio loans originated by certain small creditors). In addition,
section 101 of the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer
Protection Act (EGRRCPA), Public Law 115-174, section 101, 132 Stat.
1296, 1297 (2018), amended TILA to add a safe harbor for small-
creditor portfolio loans. See 15 U.S.C. 1639c(b)(2)(F).
\115\ 84 FR 37155, 37159 (July 31, 2019).
\116\ Id.
\117\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, the Assessment Report found that a robust market for non-
QM loans above the 43 percent DTI limit has not materialized as the
Bureau had predicted. Therefore, there is limited capacity in the non-
QM market to provide access to credit if the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition were to expire before a final rule amending the General QM
loan definition has taken effect.\118\ As described above, the non-QM
market has been further reduced by the recent economic disruptions
associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, with most mortgage credit now
available in the QM lending space. The Bureau acknowledges that the
slow development of the non-QM market, and the recent economic
disruptions that may significantly hinder its development in the near
term, may further reduce access to credit outside the QM space.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\118\ Assessment Report, supra note 27, at 198.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, the ANPR noted that some consumers who would have sought
High-DTI GSE loans may adapt to changing options and make different
choices, such as adjusting their borrowing to result in a lower DTI
ratio.\119\ However, some consumers who would have sought High-DTI GSE
loans may not have been able to obtain loans at all.\120\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\119\ 84 FR 37155, 37159 (July 31, 2019).
\120\ Id.
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D. Why the Bureau Is Extending the Temporary GSE QM Loan Definition
The Bureau anticipates that if the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
expired as currently scheduled and there are no changes to the General
QM loan definition prior to expiration, some High-DTI GSE loans and
loans without appendix Q-required documentation that are otherwise GSE-
eligible would not be made and some would cost consumers materially
more.\121\ In the General QM Proposal, the Bureau proposed to remove
the General QM loan definition's DTI limit and replace it with a limit
based on the loan's pricing. Under the General QM Proposal, a loan
would meet the General QM loan definition only if the APR exceeds the
APOR for a comparable transaction by less than two percentage points as
of the date the interest rate is set.\122\ The Bureau expects that the
amendments the Bureau proposed in the General QM Proposal would, among
other things, allow most loans that currently could receive QM status
under the Temporary GSE QM loan definition to receive QM status under
the General QM loan definition if they are made after the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition expires.\123\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\121\ See supra part V.C.
\122\ The General QM Proposal would preserve the current
threshold separating safe harbor from rebuttable presumption QMs,
under which a loan is a safe harbor QM if its APR exceeds APOR for a
comparable transaction by less than 1.5 percentage points as of the
date the interest rate is set (or by less than 3.5 percentage points
for subordinate-lien transactions).
\123\ As described above in part III.C, the Bureau also recently
issued the Seasoned QM Proposal, which would create a new category
of QMs for first-lien, fixed-rate covered transactions that have met
certain performance requirements over a 36-month seasoning period,
are held in portfolio until the end of the seasoning period, comply
with general restrictions on product features and points and fees,
and meet certain underwriting requirements. 85 FR 53568 (Aug. 28,
2020). The Bureau notes that the Seasoned QM Proposal, if finalized,
would not address the short-term access to credit concerns described
here. The Seasoned QM Proposal would not address the likely effects
on the availability and cost of credit if the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition were to expire before final amendments to the General QM
loan definition take effect, because among other things, as
described in the Seasoned QM Proposal, the Seasoned QM definition
would take effect at the same time that final amendments to the
General QM loan definition take effect. Id. at 53569.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Bureau is concerned about the likely effects on the
availability and cost of credit if the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
were to expire before final amendments to the General QM loan
definition take effect. As explained in the Extension Proposal, while
the Bureau can estimate the outer limit of the share of High-DTI GSE
loans that could be originated by the FHA, the Bureau cannot estimate
with precision the extent to which loans would be absorbed by the FHA
or the characteristics of the particular loans that might be
absorbed.\124\ Similarly, while the Bureau also anticipates that the
private market might absorb additional loans that would have been High-
DTI GSE loans, the Bureau is uncertain as to the private market's
capacity to absorb these loans in the short term--as a robust market
for non-QM loans above the 43 percent DTI limit has not materialized as
the Bureau had predicted and as the non-QM market has been further
reduced by the current economic disruptions associated with the COVID-
19 pandemic. And, as noted, the Bureau lacks the loan-level
documentation and underwriting data necessary to estimate with
precision the number of potentially displaced loans that do not fall
within the General QM loan definition due to appendix Q-related issues
and are not High-DTI GSE loans. Despite these uncertainties, it is
likely that some consumers who would have obtained loans under the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition--and who would be able to obtain loans
under the revised General QM loan definition, as separately proposed by
the Bureau--would not have been able to obtain loans at all if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition were allowed to expire before final
amendments to the General QM loan definition have gone
[[Page 67948]]
into effect.\125\ Further, for loans absorbed by the FHA and the
private market in the absence of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition,
there is a significant risk that some consumers would have paid more
for these loans, although any pricing effects would depend on the
characteristics of the particular loans that would be originated as FHA
loans or in the private market.\126\
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\124\ Assuming they are still originated, potentially displaced
loans made with high LTVs or to consumers with low credit scores are
the least likely to be absorbed by the private market, and thus most
likely to be absorbed by the FHA. The exact characteristics of loans
likely to be absorbed by the FHA would depend on the relative
pricing and underwriting requirements of FHA and private market
alternatives.
\125\ See supra part V.C, noting that some consumers who would
have sought High-DTI GSE loans may make different choices, such as
by adjusting their borrowing to result in a lower DTI ratio.
\126\ The Assessment Report noted that, while there did not
appear to be a marked change in the relative price of non-QM High-
DTI loans immediately following the implementation of the ATR/QM
Rule, other research has found a 25 basis point premium for non-QM
High-DTI loans in more recent years. Assessment Report, supra note
27, at 121-22.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To prevent these likely effects on the availability and cost of
credit if the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expired before final
amendments to the General QM loan definition take effect, the Bureau is
extending the Temporary GSE QM loan definition until the mandatory
compliance date of a final rule issued by the Bureau amending the
General QM loan definition, or when the GSEs exit conservatorship,
whichever comes first. As discussed below in the section-by-section
analysis, commenters to the Extension Proposal were supportive of the
Bureau's proposal to extend the sunset of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition rather than allowing it to expire on January 10, 2021. The
Bureau is issuing this extension to ensure that responsible, affordable
credit remains available to consumers who may be affected if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition expires before these amendments take
effect.\127\
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\127\ The Bureau expects to finalize a rule amending the General
QM loan definition, at which point the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition would expire under this final rule. However, the Bureau
notes that in the unlikely event that such a rule is not finalized
and the current General QM loan definition remains in place, the
Bureau would revisit the Temporary GSE QM loan definition and take
appropriate action. As noted above, the Bureau does not intend to
maintain indefinitely a presumption that loans eligible for purchase
or guarantee by either of the GSEs have been originated with
appropriate consideration of the consumer's ability to repay.
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The Bureau stated in the January 2013 Final Rule that, for a
limited period of time and while the GSEs are under conservatorship of
the FHFA, it believed that GSE-eligible loans are originated with
appropriate consideration of ability to repay.\128\ Under current
conditions, the Bureau finds that it is appropriate to extend that
presumption for a short period until the mandatory compliance date of
Bureau amendments to the General QM loan definition, in light of
concerns about effects on the availability and cost of credit if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition expires before a rule revising the
General QM loan definition takes effect.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\128\ 78 FR 6408, 6534 (Jan. 30, 2013).
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Under the conservatorship clause in the current rule, the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition expires with respect to a GSE when that GSE
exits conservatorship, even if that occurs before January 10, 2021.
Consistent with the Extension Proposal, this final rule does not amend
this provision. The Bureau addresses the comments it received related
to the conservatorship clause in the section-by-section analysis of
Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B), below.
VI. Section-by-Section Analysis
1026.43 Minimum Standards for Transactions Secured by a Dwelling
43(e) Qualified Mortgages
43(e)(4) Qualified Mortgage Defined--Special Rules
43(e)(4)(iii) Sunset of Special Rules
43(e)(4)(iii)(B)
Section 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) provides that the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition is available only for covered transactions consummated
on or before January 10, 2021.\129\ The Bureau proposed to revise Sec.
1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) to state that the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition is available only for covered transactions consummated on or
before the effective date of a final rule issued by the Bureau amending
Sec. 1026.43(e)(2). Proposed Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) also would
have stated that the Bureau will amend Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) as
of that effective date to reflect the new status. The Bureau also
proposed conforming amendments to comment 43(e)(4)-3. The Bureau did
not propose to amend the conservatorship clause in Sec.
1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A). This final rule amends Sec.
1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) largely as the Bureau proposed, with minor
modifications as described below.
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\129\ Section 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) also applies to the other
temporary QM loan definitions in Sec. 1026.43(e)(4). However, as
noted above in part II, these other temporary QM loan definitions
have expired because the relevant Federal agencies have issued their
own QM rules. See, e.g., 24 CFR 203.19 (HUD rule).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comments Received
The Bureau received 29 comments in response to the Extension
Proposal from industry, consumer advocates, and others. All commenters
supported extending the Temporary GSE QM loan definition. No commenter
recommended that the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expire earlier
than the effective date of final amendments to the General QM loan
definition. Many commenters stated that they agreed with the Bureau
that extending the Temporary GSE QM loan definition would ensure that
responsible, affordable credit remains available to consumers who may
be affected if the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expires before
these amendments take effect.
Several commenters recommended that the Bureau finalize the
Extension Proposal as proposed. Several other commenters recommended
modifications to the proposal, as described and organized below based
on the topic of concern.
Gap in coverage. Several industry commenters recommended that the
Bureau modify the proposed sunset date to prevent a gap around the
effective date of final amendments to the General QM loan definition in
which neither the Temporary GSE QM loan definition nor the revised
General QM loan definition would apply to certain loans. These
commenters noted that, under the Extension Proposal, the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition would be available only for covered transactions
consummated on or before the effective date of final amendments to the
General QM loan definition. At the same time, as these commenters
noted, the General QM Proposal provided that the revised General QM
loan definition would apply to covered transactions for which creditors
receive an application on or after the effective date of the final
amendments to the General QM loan definition. These commenters stated
that, as a result, when a creditor receives an application before the
effective date of final amendments to the General QM loan definition,
but the loan is consummated after that effective date, neither the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition nor the revised General QM loan
definition would apply. Consequently, loans that would have been QMs
under the Temporary GSE QM loan definition--and that would have been
eligible for QM status under the revised General QM loan definition--
would not be eligible for QM status under either the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition (because the loan was consummated after the effective
date of a final rule amending the General QM loan definition) or the
revised General QM loan definition (because the creditor received the
application before the effective date of a final rule amending the
General QM loan definition).
[[Page 67949]]
These industry commenters recommended several options to prevent
such a gap. Several commenters suggested that the Bureau prevent this
gap by having the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expire six months
after the effective date of final amendments to the General QM loan
definition, rather than on the effective date. This approach would
create an overlap period in which creditors could originate QMs under
either the Temporary GSE QM loan definition or the revised General QM
loan definition. Two commenters suggested that the Bureau align the
sunset date with the effective date of final amendments to the General
QM loan definition based on the date the creditor received the
consumer's application. Under this approach, the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition would be available only for covered transactions for which
the creditor receives the consumer's application before the effective
date of final amendments to the General QM loan definition, and the
revised General QM loan definition would apply to covered transactions
for which creditors receive an application on or after this effective
date. One commenter recommended that the Bureau adopt this approach but
provide that the Temporary GSE QM loan definition would cease to be
available six months after the effective date of final amendments to
the General QM loan definition.
Two industry commenters opposed aligning the sunset date of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition with the effective date of final
amendments to the General QM loan definition based on the application
date. These commenters argued that this standard would be unclear
because ``application'' is not clearly defined for purposes of the ATR/
QM Rule. One of these commenters recommended that, if the Bureau
adopted this approach, it clarify that ``application'' has the same
definition as under the Bureau's TILA-RESPA \130\ Integrated Disclosure
Rule (TRID). The other commenter stated that the Bureau should not
align the sunset date of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition with the
effective date of final amendments to the General QM loan definition
based on the application date, because creditors do not typically
maintain a non-TRID application date in their systems. This commenter
also stated that QM status is not determined at the time of
application, so the proposed approach may create problems if a loan
application is received prior to the sunset date but is no longer
eligible for purchase or guarantee by the GSEs at the time of
consummation after the sunset date.
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\130\ Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act of 1974 (RESPA),
Public Law 93-533, 88 Stat. 1274 (1974).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One industry commenter suggested that the Bureau could prevent this
gap in coverage by aligning the sunset date with the effective date of
a final rule amending the General QM loan definition based on the date
of consummation. Under this approach, the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition would be available for covered transactions consummated
before the effective date of a final rule amending the General QM loan
definition (as the Bureau proposed), and then, in that final rule, the
Bureau would provide that the revised General QM loan definition would
apply to covered transactions consummated on or after the effective
date. One industry commenter opposed this approach, stating that it
would effectively reduce the length of the implementation period for
the revised General QM loan definition. One industry commenter also
suggested that both the Temporary GSE QM loan definition and the
revised General QM loan definition be available for loans in process on
the effective date of the revised General QM loan definition.
Other comments on the sunset date. As noted above, several industry
commenters suggested that the Bureau prevent a gap around the effective
date of final amendments to the General QM loan definition by having
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expire six months after the
effective date of final amendments to the General QM loan definition,
rather than on the effective date. Several industry commenters and one
individual commenter also recommended this approach to address a
different concern. These commenters stated that an overlap between the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition and the revised General QM loan
definition would help facilitate the implementation of the revised
General QM loan definition.
Many of these commenters noted that creditors will need to update
their business processes and information technology systems as they
prepare to comply with the revised General QM loan definition. These
commenters stated that an overlap would reduce the likelihood that
unforeseen implementation problems arising after the effective date of
the General QM amendments could disrupt creditors' ability to originate
loans. One of these commenters also noted that secondary market
participants will be adjusting to the revised definition. Several of
these commenters stated that the COVID-19 pandemic is straining
creditors' resources and personnel, making it more difficult for them
to adapt to the new definition. A few of these commenters stated that
an overlap period would reduce the potential that a revised General QM
loan definition could disrupt the mortgage market and affect credit
access due to unforeseen changes in the economy or the mortgage market
due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Another commenter stated that an overlap would protect creditors
that are affected by clarifications the Bureau makes to a final rule
amending the General QM loan definition after it takes effect. With
respect to how long the Temporary GSE QM loan definition and the
revised General QM loan definition would overlap, commenters suggested
periods between four months and one year.
In addition to the comments noted above, three other commenters
recommended longer extensions of the sunset date to facilitate
implementation of a final rule amending the General QM loan definition.
An individual commenter requested a two-year extension of the sunset
date until January 10, 2023. An industry commenter recommended an
extension of 18 to 24 months, at a minimum.\131\ Another industry
commenter suggested that the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expire in
January 2022 or the effective date of a final rule amending the General
QM loan definition, whichever is later.
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\131\ These commenters seemed to assume that a final rule issued
by the Bureau amending the General QM loan definition would take
effect sooner than 18 to 24 months from January 10, 2021, perhaps in
light of the Bureau's statement in the Extension NPRM that it does
not intend to issue a final rule amending the General QM loan
definition early enough for it to take effect before April 1, 2021.
85 FR 41448, 41456 (July 10, 2020).
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In addition to the general concerns about implementation noted
above, two industry commenters stated that, in determining when the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition should expire, the Bureau should
consider the GSEs' recently mandated changes to the Uniform Residential
Loan Application (URLA). The GSEs are requiring creditors to use a
redesigned version of the URLA for all loan applications received on or
after March 1, 2021. The GSEs have stated that beginning on March 1,
2022, they will no longer accept the previous URLA.\132\ The two
industry commenters stated that implementing the new URLA will require
creditors to undertake extensive systems changes. One of these industry
[[Page 67950]]
commenters stated that requiring creditors to adapt to a revised
General QM loan definition in the first six months of 2021 would
compound this burden significantly. This commenter recommended that the
Bureau extend the Temporary GSE QM loan definition to expire six months
after the revised General QM loan definition. The other commenter
requested that the Bureau address this concern by extending the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition to expire on March 1, 2022, or on the
effective date of a final rule amending the General QM loan definition,
whichever is later.
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\132\ Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac, Extended URLA Implementation
Timeline (Apr. 14, 2020), https://singlefamily.fanniemae.com/media/22661/display.
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Two consumer advocate commenters that submitted a joint comment
letter recommended that the Bureau extend the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition indefinitely in this rulemaking and determine its sunset
date in a final rule amending the General QM loan definition. These
commenters also recommended that the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
remain in effect until the latest of the following events: A date
certain that is no earlier than January 2022 and preferably in 2023;
six months after the end of the COVID-19 national emergency; or the
effective date of a final rule amending the General QM loan definition.
These commenters stated that determining the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition's sunset date in a final rule amending the General QM loan
definition, instead of in this rulemaking, would allow the Bureau to
adjust its approach to the expiration of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition based on the comments the Bureau receives on the General QM
Proposal regarding the implementation of the General QM loan
definition. In the commenters' view, this would better ensure a smooth
transition to any revised General QM loan definition. The commenters
stated that the Bureau would tie its hands by linking the sunset date
with the effective date of a final rule amending the General QM loan
definition; that doing so would create greater uncertainty for
creditors; and that uncertainty is destabilizing and tends to reduce
access to credit. These commenters also stated that the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition should remain in place until the Bureau assesses the
impact of the movement for racial justice on mortgage markets as well
as the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, including the decline of the
non-QM market and creditors' increasing reliance on GSE and FHA
loans.\133\
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\133\ The Bureau addresses this group's comments on the
conservatorship clause in the subsection below and on the Bureau's
section 1022 analysis in part VII.A.1 below.
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An industry commenter recommended that the Bureau not extend the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition indefinitely. The commenter stated
that the Temporary GSE QM loan definition provides significant
advantages to the GSEs by codifying their underwriting parameters into
the QM definition, which, according to the commenter, produces
excessive reliance on the GSEs while stifling innovation by other
market participants. The commenter also recommended that the Bureau not
extend the Temporary GSE QM loan definition to a date certain. In the
commenter's view, because the effective date of final amendments to the
General QM loan definition is not yet known, extending the definition
to a date certain could result in a sunset date that is too early
(causing a gap between the Temporary GSE QM loan definition and a
revised General QM loan definition) or too late (causing the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition to remain in place longer than necessary,
resulting in the perpetuation of the concerns relating to an indefinite
extension that the commenter identified).
Several industry commenters recommended that, in a final rule
amending the General QM loan definition, the Bureau adopt a longer
implementation period--i.e., the time period after such a final rule is
issued and before creditors are required to transition from the current
General QM loan definition to the revised General QM loan definition--
than the six-month period the Bureau proposed. One industry commenter
requested that the Bureau provide a 90-day grace period for compliance
with the revised definition. The Bureau considers these to be comments
on the General QM Proposal and best addressed in that rulemaking. The
Bureau will consider these comments as it develops a final rule to
amend the General QM loan definition.
Conservatorship clause. Three industry commenters and the two
consumer advocacy groups that submitted a joint comment letter
recommended that the Bureau remove the conservatorship clause from
Sec. 1026.43(e)(ii)(A)(1). Removing the conservatorship clause would
result in the Temporary GSE QM loan definition not expiring with
respect to a GSE if that GSE exited conservatorship. These commenters
noted that the status of the conservatorships is outside of the
Bureau's control and stated that, if one or both conservatorships were
to end on short notice, the sudden expiration of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition would create turmoil in the market and reduce access to
credit. Two industry commenters stated that the Bureau should clarify
in advance of the end of conservatorship what steps the Bureau would
take with respect to the Temporary GSE QM loan definition if the
conservatorships were to end.
The Final Rule
This final rule amends Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) to provide that,
unless otherwise expired under Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(A),\134\ the
special rules in Sec. 1026.43(e)(4) are available only for covered
transactions for which the creditor receives the consumer's application
before the mandatory compliance date of a final rule issued by the
Bureau amending Sec. 1026.43(e)(2).\135\ Revised Sec.
1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) also states that the Bureau will amend Sec.
1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) prior to that mandatory compliance date to
reflect the new status.
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\134\ 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(A) states that each of the
special rules described in 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(B) through (E)--
which provide that mortgages eligible to be insured or guaranteed
(as applicable) by HUD, VA, USDA, and RHS are QMs--shall expire on
the effective date of a rule issued by each respective agency
pursuant to its authority under TILA section 129C(b)(3)(ii) to
define a QM.
\135\ The Bureau uses the term ``mandatory compliance date''
because this is the date on which creditors that wish to originate
General QM loans will be required to comply with the revised General
QM loan definition. As of the mandatory compliance date, the current
General QM loan definition will no longer be available. The Bureau's
use of the term does not imply that creditors are required to use
the General QM loan definition to comply with the ATR/QM Rule's
ability-to-repay requirement.
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This final rule also makes conforming changes to comment 43(e)(4)-
3. As revised, comment 43(e)(4)-3 explains that the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition applies only to loans for which the creditor receives
the consumer's application before the mandatory compliance date of a
final rule issued by the Bureau amending Sec. 1026.43(e)(2),
regardless of whether Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (or any limited-life
regulatory entity succeeding the charter of either) continues to
operate under the conservatorship or receivership of the FHFA. The
comment also explains that, accordingly, the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition is available only for covered transactions: (i) That are
consummated on or before the date Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (or any
limited-life regulatory entity succeeding the charter of either),
respectively, cease to operate under the conservatorship or
receivership of the FHFA and (ii) that are transactions for
[[Page 67951]]
which the creditor receives the consumer's application before the
mandatory compliance date of a final rule issued by the Bureau amending
Sec. 1026.43(e)(2), as provided by Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(iii). This
final rule also revises this comment to note that the Bureau will amend
this comment prior to the mandatory compliance date of a final rule
issued by the Bureau amending Sec. 1026.43(e)(2) to reflect the new
status.\136\
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\136\ The Bureau notes that the proposed extension to the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition's sunset date does not apply to the
temporary points-and-fees cure provision in Sec.
1026.43(e)(3)(iii), which is also set to expire on January 10, 2021.
Comments on the expiration date for the temporary points-and-fees
cure provision at Sec. 1026.43(e)(3)(iii) are outside the scope of
this rulemaking.
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The Bureau has made two substantive modifications to the proposal.
The first is that this final rule links the expiration of the Temporary
GSE QM loan definition to the ``mandatory compliance date'' of a final
rule amending the General QM loan definition instead of to the
``effective date'' of such a final rule. Specifically, under this final
rule, the Temporary GSE QM loan definition will be available only for
covered transactions for which the creditor receives the consumer's
application before the ``mandatory compliance date'' of a final rule
issued by the Bureau amending the General QM loan definition, rather
than covered transactions consummated on or before the ``effective
date'' of such a final rule, as the Bureau proposed.
The Bureau is not adopting an ``overlap period'' in this final rule
by keeping the Temporary GSE QM loan definition in effect after the
date creditors are required to transition from the current General QM
loan definition to the revised General QM loan definition, as some
commenters suggested. This is because, in a final rule amending the
General QM loan definition, after considering the comments in that
rulemaking, the Bureau intends to establish an implementation period--
i.e., the time period after such a final rule is issued and before
creditors are required to transition from the current General QM loan
definition to the revised General QM loan definition--that provides the
amount of time necessary to facilitate a smooth and orderly transition
to a revised General QM loan definition. Establishing an ``overlap
period'' that extends after the date creditors are required to
transition from the current General QM loan definition to the revised
General QM loan definition would keep the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition in place longer than necessary to facilitate a smooth and
orderly transition to a revised General QM loan definition. The Bureau
seeks to maintain the Temporary GSE QM loan definition only as long as
necessary to facilitate a smooth and orderly transition to a revised
General QM loan definition, and no longer, because the Bureau concludes
that the Temporary GSE QM loan definition has certain negative effects
on the mortgage market, including stifling innovation and the
development of competitive private-sector approaches to underwriting.
The Bureau further concludes that, as long as the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition continues to be in effect, the non-GSE private market is
less likely to rebound and that the existence of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition may be limiting the development of the non-GSE private
market. For these reasons, the Bureau concludes that it is appropriate
for the Temporary GSE QM loan definition to remain in place no longer
than the date creditors are required to transition from the current
General QM loan definition to the revised General QM loan definition.
However, while the Bureau is not adopting an ``overlap period'' in
this final rule by keeping the Temporary GSE QM loan definition in
effect after the date creditors are required to transition from the
current General QM loan definition to the revised General QM loan
definition, the Bureau may choose, in a final rule amending the General
QM loan definition, to adopt an ``optional early compliance period''
whereby the revised General QM loan definition would become available
before the date creditors are required to transition from the current
General QM loan definition to the revised General QM loan definition.
Such an approach would accommodate those creditors that are able to
transition to, and wish to start using, the revised General QM loan
definition sooner than the date creditors are required to make the
transition, a date the Bureau expects to select based on the time
needed for the industry as a whole to make the transition. If the
Bureau adopts such an optional early compliance period in a final rule
amending the General QM loan definition, the revised General QM loan
definition would become available on the ``effective date'' of such a
final rule; it would coexist with the current General QM loan
definition for a period of time; and then the current General QM loan
definition would expire on the ``mandatory compliance date'' of such a
final rule.\137\ If the Bureau does not adopt an optional early
compliance period in a final rule amending the General QM loan
definition, the ``effective date'' and ``mandatory compliance date''
would be the same date. In this case, the revision from ``effective
date'' to ``mandatory compliance date'' in this final rule would have
no substantive effect.
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\137\ For example, the Bureau adopted an optional early
compliance period in 2017 amendments to TRID. 82 FR 37656, 37656
(Aug. 11, 2017) (``The final rule is effective October 10, 2017.
However, the mandatory compliance date is October 1, 2018.''); see
also id. at 37763-37765. The details of an optional early compliance
period for the General QM loan definition may differ from the 2017
TRID amendments.
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The Bureau concludes that, to preserve the possibility of adopting
an optional early compliance period in a final rule amending the
General QM loan definition, it is appropriate for the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition to expire on the mandatory compliance date of a final
rule amending the General QM loan definition (i.e., the end of the
optional early compliance period) instead of on the effective date of
such a final rule (i.e., the beginning of the optional early compliance
period). The Bureau expects that, if it were to adopt an optional early
compliance period in a final rule amending the General QM loan
definition, some creditors may not be ready to transition away from the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition and to the revised General QM loan
definition on the effective date. In contrast, because the Bureau
intends to establish an adequate implementation period (as described
above), it expects creditors to be ready to do so by the mandatory
compliance date. Therefore, linking the expiration of the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition to the mandatory compliance date of such a final
rule will best ensure a smooth and orderly transition away from the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition and toward the revised General QM loan
definition.
Gap in coverage. The second substantive modification to the
proposal addresses the concern several commenters raised about the gap
around the effective date of final amendments to the General QM loan
definition when, under the proposal, neither the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition nor the revised General QM loan definition would have
applied. This gap in coverage likely would have resulted in a temporary
reduction in access to credit for some consumers because creditors
would have been concerned that loans for which they receive an
application within a few months of the effective date of final
amendments to the General QM loan definition may close after that
effective date and would
[[Page 67952]]
not be eligible for either the Temporary GSE QM loan definition or the
revised General QM loan definition. The Bureau did not intend that
result when it issued the proposed rule.
In this final rule, the Bureau addresses this concern by providing
that the Temporary GSE QM loan definition will be available only for
covered transactions ``for which the creditor receives the consumer's
application before'' the mandatory compliance date of final amendments
to the General QM loan definition (rather than covered transactions
``consummated on or before'' the effective date of final amendments to
the General QM loan definition, as the Bureau proposed). This approach
harmonizes with the proposed effective date in the General QM Proposal,
under which the revised General QM loan definition would apply to
covered transactions for which the creditor receives the consumer's
application on or after the effective date of a final rule amending the
General QM loan definition. The Bureau concludes that aligning the
sunset date with the proposed effective date of final amendments to the
General QM loan definition based on the date the creditor received the
consumer's application would address the Bureau's access-to-credit
concern by preventing a gap between the two definitions.
For the reasons described above, the Bureau is not addressing the
gap by extending the Temporary GSE QM loan definition beyond the date
creditors are required to transition from the current General QM loan
definition to the revised General QM loan definition, as some
commenters suggested. The Bureau is also not addressing this gap by
aligning the sunset date with the General QM Proposal based on the date
of consummation of mortgages. The Bureau is concerned about this
approach because, as this effective date draws closer, this approach
would create uncertainty for creditors about which QM definition (i.e.,
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition or the revised General QM loan
definition) would apply to a particular loan, given that creditors
would not know for certain when consummation would occur.
To address concerns raised by commenters that the meaning of
``application'' may be unclear if the Bureau aligned the sunset date
with the effective date of final amendments to the General QM loan
definition based on the date the creditor received the consumer's
application, this final rule adds new comment 43(e)(4)-4. This new
comment clarifies the meaning of application for purposes of Sec.
1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B).\138\
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\138\ This final rule also renumbers previous comments 43(e)(4)-
4 and -5 as 43(e)(4)-5 and -6, respectively.
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Regulation Z contains two definitions of ``application.'' Section
1026.2(a)(3)(i) defines ``application'' as the submission of a
consumer's financial information for the purposes of obtaining an
extension of credit. This definition applies to all transactions
covered by Regulation Z. Section 1026.2(a)(3)(ii) also contains a more
specific definition of ``application.'' Under this definition, for
transactions subject to Sec. 1026.19(e), (f), or (g)--i.e.,
transactions subject to TRID--an application consists of the submission
of the consumer's name, the consumer's income, the consumer's social
security number to obtain a credit report, the property address, an
estimate of the value of the property, and the mortgage loan amount
sought. The more specific definition of application in Sec.
1026.2(a)(3)(ii) applies not just for purposes of TRID, but extends to
all transactions subject to TRID. Therefore, for transactions that are
subject to the ATR/QM Rule and that are also subject to TRID, the
Bureau concludes that the more specific definition applies for purposes
of the ATR/QM Rule as well. However, for transactions that are subject
to the ATR/QM Rule but that are not subject to TRID,\139\ the Bureau
finds that there may be ambiguity as to when the creditor received the
consumer's application for purposes of the sunset date in Sec.
1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B). This potential ambiguity arises because the
general definition of application in Sec. 1026.2(a)(3)(i) is less
precise than the TRID definition.
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\139\ The ATR/QM Rule generally applies to closed-end consumer
credit transactions that are secured by a dwelling, as defined in 12
CFR 1026.2(a)(19), including any real property attached to a
dwelling. 12 CFR 1026.43(a). Therefore, the ATR/QM Rule applies to a
dwelling, as defined in Sec. 1026.19(a), whether or not it is
attached to real property. In contrast, TRID generally applies to
closed-end consumer credit transactions secured by real property or
a cooperative unit. 12 CFR 1026.19(e)(1)(i). Therefore, some
transactions that are a secured by a dwelling that is not considered
real property under State or other applicable law will be subject to
the ATR/QM Rule but not to TRID.
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To address this potential ambiguity, new comment 43(e)(4)-4
clarifies that, for transactions that are not subject to TRID,
creditors can determine the date the creditor received the consumer's
application for purposes of Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) in accordance
with either Sec. 1026.2(a)(3)(i) or (ii). The Bureau concludes that
this clarification is appropriate because it will facilitate compliance
with Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B).
The Bureau disagrees with the industry commenter's assertion that
it would be problematic to align the sunset date with the proposed
effective date in the General QM Proposal based on the date the
creditor received the consumer's application. As noted, that commenter
asserted that because creditors do not determine QM status at the time
of application, defining a loan as a Temporary GSE QM at the time of
application may create problems if the loan is later changed and, as a
result, is no longer eligible for sale at the time of consummation.
However, under the Bureau's approach, loans would not be defined as QMs
at the time of application. Rather, the application date would
determine whether the loan is eligible for the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition or whether it is eligible for the revised General QM loan
definition.
Other comments on the sunset date. As noted above, the Bureau
declines to extend the Temporary GSE QM loan definition beyond the
mandatory compliance date of final amendments to the General QM loan
definition. The Bureau recognizes that creditors will need to update
their business processes and information technology systems as they
prepare to comply with the revised General QM loan definition, and that
an update process often includes making planned system changes, testing
those changes, and making further revisions. The Bureau also
acknowledges that secondary market participants will need to adjust to
the revised definition.
However, as noted above, the Bureau plans, in a final rule amending
the General QM loan definition, to establish an implementation period--
i.e., the time period after such a final rule is issued and before
creditors are required to transition from the current General QM loan
definition to the revised General QM loan definition--that provides the
amount of time necessary to facilitate a smooth and orderly transition
to a revised General QM loan definition, after considering the comments
in that rulemaking. Thus, establishing an overlap period beyond this
implementation period would keep the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
in place longer than necessary to facilitate a smooth and orderly
transition to a revised General QM loan definition. The Bureau seeks to
maintain the Temporary GSE QM loan definition only as long as necessary
to facilitate a smooth and orderly transition to a revised General QM
loan definition, and no longer, because the Bureau concludes that the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition has certain negative effects on the
mortgage market, as noted above.
[[Page 67953]]
In the Bureau's view, commenters have not established why an
overlap period would be necessary to facilitate a smooth and orderly
transition to a revised General QM loan definition when the Bureau
establishes a sufficient implementation period for the final rule
amending that definition. Commenters expressed general concerns that
unforeseen compliance issues may arise after the implementation period
ends, but the same is true in adapting to any new rule of this
magnitude and, as stated above, the Bureau intends to adopt an
implementation period that gives creditors and the secondary market
enough time to prepare to comply with the revised definition.\140\
Commenters also suggested that an overlap period would reduce the
potential that a revised General QM loan definition could disrupt the
mortgage market and affect credit access due to unforeseen changes in
the economy or the mortgage market due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
However, based on its analysis of the current state of the mortgage
market, as described in part II.D above, the Bureau does not believe
that current conditions in the mortgage market justify a longer
extension on these grounds, particularly in light of the Bureau's
concerns about the negative effects of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition on the mortgage market.
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\140\ As noted above, the Bureau may consider adopting an
optional early compliance period in a final rule amending the
General QM loan definition. An optional early compliance period
would allow creditors who are ready to begin using the revised
General QM loan definition early to do so--and to work out
unforeseen compliance issues that arise before the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition expires--without the Bureau having to extend the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition beyond the end of the
implementation period.
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The Bureau also declines to extend the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition indefinitely in this rulemaking and determine its sunset
date in a final rule amending the General QM loan definition, as the
two consumer advocate commenters suggest.\141\ The Bureau has not yet
issued a final rule amending the General QM loan definition, so the
contours of a revised General QM loan definition are not yet clear.
However, the Bureau determines that it is nevertheless appropriate for
this final rule to provide that the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
will expire on the mandatory compliance date of a final rule amending
the General QM loan definition. As noted above in the Bureau's response
to comments recommending an overlap period, the Bureau plans, in a
final rule amending the General QM loan definition, to establish an
implementation period that provides the amount of time necessary to
facilitate a smooth and orderly transition to a revised General QM loan
definition. Establishing a sufficient implementation period--based on
the comments received on the effective date the Bureau proposed in the
General QM Proposal--will help ensure a smooth transition away from the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition and toward the revised General QM loan
definition. Second, as noted above in the Bureau's response to the
comment recommending an overlap period to address the effective date
gap issue, the Bureau seeks to maintain the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition only as long as necessary to facilitate a smooth and orderly
transition to a revised General QM loan definition, and no longer,
because the Bureau concludes that the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
has certain negative effects on the mortgage market. Third, if market
conditions change or other circumstances arise between now and the time
the Bureau issues a final rule amending the General QM loan definition,
the Bureau could choose to extend the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
for a longer period of time.
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\141\ No commenter recommended that the Bureau extend the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition indefinitely without stating that
the Bureau should determine the Temporary GSE QM loan definition's
sunset date in a final rule amending the General QM loan definition.
The Bureau declines to do so for the reasons stated in the Extension
Proposal. See 85 FR 41448, 41457 (July 10, 2020).
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The Bureau also declines to extend the sunset date in Sec.
1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B) to a date certain, as some commenters suggested.
The Bureau is not extending the sunset date to a date certain because
the chosen date could result in too long or too short an extension. The
Bureau is concerned that too short an extension may not provide the
Bureau with adequate time to finalize amendments to the General QM loan
definition and creditors with enough time to bring their operations
into compliance with any amendments adopted by the Bureau. At the same
time, the Bureau is concerned that too long an extension would have the
same type of negative effects as the Bureau describes above regarding
making the Temporary GSE QM loan definition permanent, without any
offsetting benefits because a longer extension is not needed to provide
the Bureau with adequate time to consider, propose, and promulgate
amendments to the General QM loan definition or industry to implement
those amendments.
Conservatorship clause. The Bureau also declines to eliminate the
conservatorship clause in Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A). When the Bureau
adopted the January 2013 Final Rule, the FHFA's conservatorship of the
GSEs was central to its willingness to presume that loans that are
eligible for purchase, guarantee, or insurance by the GSEs would be
originated with appropriate consideration of consumers' ability to
repay.\142\ The Bureau declines to eliminate the conservatorship clause
because the Bureau is concerned about presuming that loans eligible for
purchase or guarantee by either of the GSEs have been originated with
appropriate consideration of the consumer's ability to repay, if the
GSEs are not under conservatorship. Furthermore, as the Bureau stated
in the Extension Proposal, the Bureau expects that the conservatorships
will remain in place until the Temporary GSE QM loan definition would
expire under this final rule. As the Bureau stated in the Extension
Proposal, in the event that it appears that a final rule amending the
General QM loan definition will not be in effect at the time the
conservatorship of one or both of the GSEs is terminated, the Bureau
will evaluate at that point what, if any, steps to take in response to
such a termination of conservatorship.
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\142\ 78 FR 6408, 6534 (Jan. 13, 2013) (``In light of this
significant Federal role and the government's focus on affordability
in the wake of the mortgage crisis, the Bureau believes it is
appropriate, for the time being, to presume that loans that are
eligible for purchase, guarantee, or insurance by the designated
Federal agencies and the GSEs while under conservatorship have been
originated with appropriate consideration of consumers' ability to
repay, where those loans also satisfy the requirements of Sec.
1026.43(e)(2) concerning restrictions on product features and total
points and fees limitations.'').
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As with the January 2013 Final Rule, the Bureau issues this final
rule pursuant to its authority under TILA sections 129C(b)(3)(B)(i) and
105(a) and Dodd-Frank Act section 1022(b)(1). For the reasons described
above in part V.D, the Bureau determines that this final rule's
extension of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition's sunset date is
necessary and proper to ensure that responsible, affordable mortgage
credit remains available to consumers in a manner consistent with the
purposes of TILA section 129C, as well as necessary and appropriate to
effectuate the purposes of TILA section 129C--including the purpose of
assuring that consumers are offered and receive residential mortgage
loans on terms that reasonably reflect their ability to repay the loans
and that are understandable and not unfair, deceptive, or abusive. For
these same reasons, the Bureau determines that the extension is
necessary to effectuate the purposes of
[[Page 67954]]
TILA, which include, among other things, the above-described purpose of
TILA section 129C.
VII. Dodd-Frank Act Section 1022(b) Analysis
A. Overview
As discussed above, this final rule will delay the scheduled
expiration of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition from January 10,
2021 to the mandatory compliance date of a final rule issued by the
Bureau amending the General QM loan definition. The Bureau's objective
with this final rule is to facilitate a smooth and orderly transition
away from the Temporary GSE QM loan definition and to ensure access to
responsible, affordable mortgage credit upon its expiration.
In developing this final rule, the Bureau has considered the
potential benefits, costs, and impacts as required by section
1022(b)(2)(A) of the Dodd-Frank Act. 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. The Bureau consulted with
appropriate Federal agencies regarding the consistency of the proposed
rule with prudential, market, or systemic objectives administered by
such agencies as required by section 1022(b)(2)(B) of the Dodd-Frank
Act.
1. Data and Evidence
The discussion in these impact analyses relies on data from a range
of sources. These include data collected or developed by the Bureau,
including HMDA \143\ and NMDB \144\ data, as well as data obtained from
industry, other regulatory agencies, and other publicly available
sources. The Bureau also conducted the assessment and issued the
Assessment Report as required under section 1022(d) of the Dodd-Frank
Act. The Assessment Report provides quantitative and qualitative
information on questions relevant to this final rule, including the
extent to which DTI ratios are probative of a consumer's ability to
repay, the effect of rebuttable-presumption status relative to safe-
harbor status on access to credit, and the effect of QM status relative
to non-QM status on access to credit. Consultations with other
regulatory agencies, industry, and research organizations inform the
Bureau's impact analyses.
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\143\ HMDA requires many financial institutions to maintain,
report, and publicly disclose loan-level information about
mortgages. These data help show whether creditors are serving the
housing needs of their communities; they give public officials
information that helps them make decisions and policies; and they
shed light on lending patterns that could be discriminatory. HMDA
was originally enacted by Congress in 1975 and is implemented by
Regulation C. See Bureau of Consumer Fin. Prot., Mortgage Data
(HMDA), https://www.consumerfinance.gov/data-research/hmda/.
\144\ The NMDB, jointly developed by the FHFA and the Bureau,
provides de-identified loan characteristics and performance
information for a 5 percent sample of all mortgage originations from
1998 to the present, supplemented by de-identified loan and borrower
characteristics from Federal administrative sources and credit
reporting data. See Bureau of Consumer Fin. Prot., Sources and Uses
of Data at the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection, at 55-56
(Sept. 2018), https://www.consumerfinance.gov/documents/6850/bcfp_sources-uses-of-data.pdf. Differences in total market size
estimates between NMDB data and HMDA data are attributable to
differences in coverage and data construction methodology.
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The data the Bureau relied upon provide detailed information on the
number, characteristics, and performance of mortgage loans originated
in recent years. However, they do not provide information on creditor
costs. As a result, analyses of any impacts of the Extension Proposal
on creditor costs, particularly realized costs of complying with
underwriting criteria or potential costs from legal liability are based
on more qualitative information. Similarly, estimates of any changes in
burden on consumers resulting from increased or decreased documentation
requirements are based on qualitative information.
In the Extension Proposal, the Bureau set forth a preliminary
analysis of these effects and requested comments and submissions of
additional data that could inform the Bureau's analysis of the
benefits, costs, and impacts of the proposal. The Bureau received
several comments on its analysis. Several commenters agreed with the
Bureau's estimates of the baseline effects of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition's expiration, and the potential benefits to covered persons
and consumers under the Extension Proposal. Two consumer advocate
commenters that submitted a joint comment letter argued for a more
complete analysis of alternatives, including an indefinite delay of the
scheduled expiration of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition as well as
a comparison of shorter or longer delays of the expiration.
The Bureau notes that the potential benefits and costs to covered
persons and consumers discussed in the Extension Proposal were
estimated for the duration of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition, and
thus encompass the possibilities of shorter, longer, or indefinite
delays of expiration. In addition, these commenters argued that because
the mortgage finance market is in flux, the Bureau should redo its
analysis of benefits and costs when more data are available. In the
Extension Proposal, the Bureau acknowledged the important economic
disruptions and mortgage market changes due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
However, the Bureau did not receive new data from commenters to inform
its analysis and it does not anticipate that market changes or other
circumstances will significantly alter its estimates of the benefits
and costs of this final rule. These commenters also stated that the
Bureau must fulfill its statutory obligation ``to study ability-to-
repay'' before amending the ATR/QM Rule. However, the Bureau has
already done so by completing the Assessment Report and through its
monitoring of the performance of mortgage loans and the availability of
mortgage credit.
2. Description of the Baseline
The Bureau considers the benefits, costs, and impacts of this final
rule against the baseline in which the Bureau takes no action and the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition expires on January 10, 2021, or when
the GSEs exit conservatorship, whichever occurs first. Under this final
rule, the Temporary GSE QM loan definition will expire when the GSEs
exit conservatorship or on the mandatory compliance date of a final
rule issued by the Bureau amending the General QM loan definition,
whichever occurs first. As a result, this final rule's direct market
impacts will occur only if the GSEs remain in conservatorship beyond
January 10, 2021. The impact analyses assume the GSEs will remain in
conservatorship for the relevant period of time. Unless described
otherwise, estimates of loan counts under the baseline and estimates of
the benefits and costs of this final rule relative to the baseline are
annual estimates for the duration of the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition.
Under the baseline, when the Temporary GSE QM loan definition
expires, conventional loans could only receive QM status under the
Bureau's rules by underwriting according to the General QM
requirements, Small Creditor QM requirements, Balloon Payment QM
requirements, or the expanded portfolio QM amendments created by the
EGRRCPA. The General QM loan definition, which would be the
[[Page 67955]]
only type of QM available to larger creditors following the expiration
of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition, requires that consumers' DTI
ratio not exceed 43 percent and requires creditors to determine debt
and income in accordance with the standards in appendix Q of Regulation
Z.
As stated above in part V.C, the Bureau anticipates that, under the
baseline in which the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expires, there
are two main types of conventional loans that would be affected: High-
DTI GSE loans (those with DTI ratios above 43 percent) and GSE-eligible
loans without appendix Q-required documentation. Leaving the current
fixed sunset date in place would affect these loans because they are
currently originated as QM loans due to the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition but would not be originated as General QM loans, and may not
be originated at all, if the Temporary GSE QM loan definition were to
expire before amendments to the General QM loan definition are in
effect. This section 1022 analysis refers to these loans as potentially
displaced loans.
The Extension Proposal's analysis of the potential market impact of
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition's expiration cited data and
analysis from the Bureau's ANPR, as described below. None of the
comments on the Extension Proposal challenged the data or analysis from
the ANPR or the Extension Proposal related to the potential market
impacts of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition's expiration.\145\ The
Bureau concludes that the data and analysis in the Extension Proposal
and ANPR provide an appropriate estimate of the potential impact of the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition's expiration for this final rule.
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\145\ As noted above in part VII.A.1, two consumer advocate
commenters that submitted a joint comment letter argued for a more
complete analysis of reasonable alternatives and that the Bureau
should redo its analysis of benefits and costs when more data is
available. However, these commenters did not challenge the Bureau's
estimates of the potential market impacts of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition's expiration.
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High-DTI GSE Loans. The ANPR provided an estimate of the number of
loans potentially affected by the expiration of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition.\146\ In providing the estimate, the ANPR focused on
loans that fall within the Temporary GSE QM loan definition but not the
General QM loan definition because they have a DTI ratio above 43
percent. This final rule refers to these loans as High-DTI GSE loans.
Based on NMDB data, the Bureau estimated that there were approximately
6.01 million closed-end first-lien residential mortgage originations in
the United States in 2018.\147\ Based on supplemental data provided by
FHFA, the Bureau estimated that the GSEs purchased or guaranteed 52
percent--roughly 3.12 million--of those loans.\148\ Of those 3.12
million loans, the Bureau estimated that 31 percent--approximately
957,000 loans--had DTI ratios greater than 43 percent.\149\ Thus, the
Bureau estimated that as a result of the General QM loan definition's
43 percent DTI limit, approximately 957,000 loans--16 percent of all
closed-end first-lien residential mortgage originations in 2018--were
High-DTI GSE loans.\150\ This estimate does not include Temporary GSE
QM loans that were eligible for purchase by the GSEs but were not sold
to the GSEs.
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\146\ 84 FR 37155, 37158-59 (July 31, 2019).
\147\ Id.
\148\ Id. at 37159.
\149\ Id. The Bureau estimates that 616,000 of these loans were
for home purchases, and 341,000 were refinance loans. In addition,
the Bureau estimates that the share of these loans with DTI ratios
over 45 percent has varied over time due to changes in market
conditions and GSE underwriting standards, rising from 47 percent in
2016 to 56 percent in 2017, and further to 69 percent in 2018.
\150\ Id.
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Loans Without Appendix Q-Required Documentation That Are Otherwise
GSE-Eligible. In addition to High-DTI GSE loans, the Bureau noted that
an additional, smaller number of Temporary GSE QM loans with DTI ratios
of 43 percent or less when calculated using GSE underwriting guidelines
would not fall within the General QM loan definition because their
method of documenting and verifying income or debt is incompatible with
appendix Q.\151\ These loans would also likely be affected if the
Temporary GSE QM loan definition were to expire before amendments to
the General QM loan definition are in effect. As explained in the
Extension Proposal, the Bureau understands, from extensive public
feedback and its own experience, that appendix Q does not specifically
address whether and how to document and include certain forms of
income. The Bureau understands these concerns are particularly acute
for self-employed consumers, consumers with part-time employment, and
consumers with irregular or unusual income streams.\152\ As a result,
these consumers' access to credit may be affected if the Temporary GSE
QM loan definition were to expire before amendments to the General QM
loan definition are in effect.
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\151\ Id. at 37159 n.58. Where these types of loans have DTI
ratios above 43 percent, they would be captured in the estimate
above relating to High-DTI GSE loans.
\152\ For example, in qualitative responses to the Bureau's
Lender Survey conducted as part of the Assessment Report,
underwriting for self-employed consumers was one of the most
frequently reported sources of difficulty in originating mortgages
using appendix Q. These concerns were also raised in comments
submitted in response to the Assessment RFI, noting that appendix Q
is ambiguous with respect to how to treat income for consumers who
are self-employed, have irregular income, or want to use asset
depletion as income. See Assessment Report, supra note 27, at 200.
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The Bureau's analysis of the market under the baseline focuses on
High-DTI GSE loans because the Bureau estimates that most potentially
displaced loans are High-DTI GSE loans. The Bureau also lacks the loan-
level documentation and underwriting data necessary to estimate with
precision the number of potentially displaced loans that do not fall
within the other General QM loan requirements and are not High-DTI GSE
loans. However, the Assessment Report did not find evidence of
substantial numbers of loans in the non-GSE-eligible jumbo market being
displaced when appendix Q documentation requirements became effective
in 2014.\153\ Further, the Assessment Report found evidence of only a
limited reduction in the approval rate of self-employed applicants for
non-GSE eligible mortgages.\154\ Based on this evidence, along with
qualitative comparisons of GSE and appendix Q documentation
requirements and available data on the prevalence of borrowers with
non-traditional or difficult-to-document income (e.g., self-employed
borrowers, retired borrowers, those with irregular income streams), the
Bureau estimates this second category of potentially displaced loans is
considerably less numerous than the category of High-DTI GSE loans.
Nevertheless, the Bureau believes that, for some borrowers, there would
be a meaningful impact on their access to credit because their method
of documenting and verifying income or debt is incompatible with
appendix Q.
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\153\ Id. at 107 (``For context, total jumbo purchase
originations increased from an estimated 108,700 to 130,200 between
2013 and 2014, based on nationally representative NMDB data.'').
\154\ Id. at 118 (``The Application Data indicates that,
notwithstanding concerns that have been expressed about the
challenge of documenting and verifying income for self-employed
borrowers under the General QM standard and the documentation
requirements contained in appendix Q to the Rule, approval rates for
non-High DTI, non-GSE eligible self-employed borrowers have
decreased only slightly, by two percentage points.'').
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Additional Effects on Loans Not Displaced. The Extension Proposal
explained that, while the most significant market effects under the
baseline are displaced loans, loans that continue to be originated as
QM loans after the expiration of the Temporary
[[Page 67956]]
GSE QM loan definition would also be affected. After the sunset date,
absent changes to the General QM loan definition, all loans with DTI
ratios at or below 43 percent that are or would have been purchased and
guaranteed as GSE loans under the Temporary GSE QM loan definition--
approximately 2.16 million loans in 2018--and that continue to be
originated as General QM loans after the provision expires would be
required to verify income and debts according to appendix Q, rather
than only according to GSE guidelines. Given the concerns raised about
appendix Q's ambiguity and lack of flexibility, this would likely
entail both increased documentation burden for some consumers as well
as increased costs or time-to-origination for creditors on some
loans.\155\
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\155\ See part V.B for additional discussion of concerns raised
about appendix Q.
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B. Benefits and Costs to Covered Persons and Consumers
1. Benefits to Consumers
The primary benefit to consumers of this final rule is the
continued availability of High-DTI GSE loans during the period of the
extension. Given the large number of consumers who obtain such loans
rather than available alternatives, including loans from the private
non-GSE market and FHA loans, these GSE loans may be preferred due to
their pricing, underwriting requirements, or other features.
Under the baseline, a sizeable share of potentially displaced High-
DTI GSE loans may instead be originated as FHA loans. Thus, under this
final rule, any price advantage of GSE loans over FHA loans will be a
realized benefit to consumers. Based on the Bureau's analysis of 2018
HMDA data, FHA loans comparable to the loans received by High-DTI GSE
borrowers, based on loan purpose, credit score, and combined LTV ratio,
on average have $3,000 to $5,000 higher upfront total loan costs. APRs
provide an alternative, annualized measure of costs over the life of a
loan. FHA borrowers typically pay different APRs, which can be higher
or lower than APRs for GSE loans depending on a borrower's credit score
and LTV. Borrowers with credit scores at or above 720 pay an APR 30 to
60 basis points higher than borrowers of comparable GSE loans, leading
to higher monthly payments over the life of the loan. However, FHA
borrowers with credit scores below 680 and combined LTVs exceeding 85
percent pay an APR 20 to 40 basis points lower than borrowers of
comparable GSE loans, leading to lower monthly payments over the life
of the loan.\156\ For a loan size of $250,000, these APR differences
amount to $2,800 to $5,600 in additional total monthly payments over
the first five years of mortgage payments for borrowers with credit
scores above 720, and $1,900 to $3,800 in reduced total monthly
payments over five years for borrowers with credit scores below 680 and
LTVs exceeding 85 percent.\157\ Thus all FHA borrowers are likely to
pay higher costs at origination, while some pay higher monthly mortgage
payments, and others pay lower monthly mortgage payments. Assuming, for
comparison, that all 957,000 High-DTI GSE loans would be made as FHA
loans in the absence of this final rule, the average of the upfront
pricing estimates implies total savings for consumers of roughly $4
billion per year on upfront costs while the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition remains in effect.\158\ While this comparison assumed all
potentially displaced loans would be made as FHA loans, higher costs
(either upfront or in monthly payments) are likely to prevent some
borrowers from obtaining loans at all.
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\156\ The Bureau expects consumers could continue to obtain FHA
loans where such loans were cheaper or preferred for other reasons.
\157\ Based on NMDB data, the Bureau estimates that the average
loan amount among High-DTI GSE borrowers in 2018 was $250,000. While
the time to repayment for mortgages varies with economic conditions,
the Bureau estimates that half of mortgages are typically closed or
paid off five to seven years into repayment. Payment comparisons
based on typical 2018 HMDA APRs for GSE loans, 5 percent for
borrowers with credit scores over 720, and 6 percent for borrowers
with credit scores below 680 and LTVs exceeding 85 percent.
\158\ This approximation assumes $4,000 in savings from total
loan costs for all 957,000 consumers. Actual expected savings would
vary substantially based on loan and credit characteristics,
consumer choices, and market conditions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the absence of this final rule, some of these potentially
displaced consumers, particularly those with higher credit scores and
the resources to make larger down payments, likely would be able to
obtain credit in the non-GSE private market at a cost comparable or
slightly higher than the costs for GSE loans, but below the cost of an
FHA loan. As a result, the above cost comparisons between GSE and FHA
loans provide an estimated upper bound on pricing benefits to consumers
of this final rule. However, under the baseline, some potentially
displaced consumers may not obtain loans and thus will experience
benefits of credit access under this final rule.\159\ As discussed
above, the Assessment Report found that the January 2013 Final Rule
eliminated between 63 and 70 percent of high-DTI home purchase loans
that were not Temporary GSE QM loans.\160\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\159\ In particular, the Assessment Report concluded that some
borrowers with strong credit characteristics may no longer be able
to obtain conventional QM loans, despite likely possessing the
ability to repay such loans. Assessment Report, supra note 27, at
150 (``Together, these findings suggest that the observed decrease
in access to credit in this segment was likely driven by lenders'
desire to avoid the risk of litigation by consumers asserting a
violation of the ATR requirement or other risks associated with that
requirement, rather than by rejections of borrowers who were
unlikely to repay the loan.'').
\160\ See id. at 10-11, 117, 131-47.
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This final rule will also benefit those consumers with incomes
difficult to document using appendix Q to obtain General QM status, as
the Temporary GSE QM loan definition continues to allow documentation
of income and debt through GSE standards. The greater flexibility of
GSE documentation standards likely reduces effort and costs for these
consumers under this final rule, and in the most difficult cases in
which borrowers' documentation cannot satisfy appendix Q, this final
rule will allow consumers to receive Temporary GSE QM loans rather than
potential FHA or non-QM alternatives. These consumers will likely
benefit from cost savings under this final rule, similar to those for
High-DTI consumers discussed above.
2. Benefits to Covered Persons
This final rule's primary benefit to covered persons, specifically
mortgage creditors, is the continued profits from originating High-DTI
conventional QM loans. Under the baseline, creditors would be unable to
originate such loans under the Temporary GSE QM loan definition after
January 10, 2021 and would instead have to originate loans with
comparable DTI ratios as FHA, Small Creditor QM, or non-QM loans, or
originate at lower DTI ratios as conventional General QM loans.
Creditors' current preference for originating large numbers of High-DTI
Temporary GSE QM loans likely reflects advantages in a combination of
costs or guarantee fees (particularly relative to FHA loans), liquidity
(particularly relative to Small Creditor QM), or litigation and credit
risk (particularly relative to non-QM). Moreover, QM loans--including
Temporary GSE QM loans--are exempt from the Dodd-Frank Act risk
retention requirement whereby creditors that securitize mortgage loans
are required to retain at least 5 percent of the credit risk of the
security, which adds significant cost. As a result, this final rule
conveys benefits to mortgage creditors originating Temporary GSE QM
loans on each of these dimensions.
[[Page 67957]]
In addition, for those lower-DTI GSE loans which could satisfy
General QM requirements, creditors may realize cost savings from
continuing to underwrite loans using only the more flexible GSE
documentation standards as compared to the appendix Q underwriting
standards required for General QM loans. For GSE consumers unable to
provide documentation compatible with appendix Q, this final rule
allows such loans to continue receiving QM status, providing comparable
benefits to creditors as described for High-DTI GSE loans above.
Finally, those creditors whose business models rely most heavily on
originating High-DTI GSE loans will likely see a competitive benefit
from the continued ability to originate such loans as Temporary GSE QM
loans. This is effectively a transfer in market share to these
creditors from those who primarily originate FHA or private non-GSE
loans, who likely would have gained market share after the expiration
of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition.
3. Costs to Consumers
The extension of the Temporary GSE QM loan definition could delay
the development of the non-QM market, particularly new mortgage
products which may have become available if the Temporary GSE QM loan
definition had been allowed to expire. To the extent that some
consumers would prefer some of these products to GSE loans due to
pricing, documentation flexibility, or other advantages, the delay of
their development will be a cost to consumers of this final rule.
In addition, consumers who would have obtained non-QM loans under
the baseline but instead obtain QM loans under this final rule forgo
the benefit of retaining the ATR causes of action and defenses against
foreclosure.
4. Costs to Covered Persons
This final rule's most sizable costs to covered persons are
effectively transfers between lenders for the duration of the
extension, reflecting reduced loan origination volume for lenders who
primarily originate FHA or private non-GSE loans and increased
origination volume for lenders who primarily originate GSE loans.
Business models vary substantially within market segments, with
portfolio lenders and lenders originating non-QM loans most likely to
experience a delay in market share gains that would have been possible
if the Temporary GSE QM loan definition had been allowed to expire,
while GSE-focused bank and non-bank lenders are likely to maintain
market share that might be lost sooner in the absence of this final
rule.
5. Other Benefits and Costs
In delaying the Temporary GSE QM loan definition's expiration, this
final rule will delay any effects of the expiration on the development
of the secondary market for private (non-GSE) mortgage loan securities.
When the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expires, those loans that do
not fit within the General QM loan definition represent a potential new
market for private securitizations. Thus, this final rule will reduce
the scope of the potential non-QM market for the duration of the
extension, likely lowering profits and revenues for participants in the
private secondary market. This will effectively be a transfer from
these private secondary market participants to participants in the
agency secondary market.
Impact on Depository Institutions and Credit Unions With $10 Billion or
Less in Total Assets, as Described in Section 1026
This final rule's expected impact on depository institutions and
credit unions that are also creditors making covered loans (depository
creditors) with $10 billion or less in total assets is similar to the
expected impact on larger creditors and on non-depository creditors. As
discussed in part VII.B.4 (Costs to Covered Persons), depository
creditors originating portfolio loans may experience a delay in
potential market share gains that would occur in the absence of this
final rule. In addition, those smaller creditors originating portfolio
loans can originate High-DTI Small Creditor QM loans under the rule,
and thus may rely less on the Temporary GSE QM loan definition for
originating High-DTI loans. If the expiration of the Temporary GSE QM
loan definition would confer a competitive advantage to these small
creditors in their origination of High-DTI loans, this final rule will
delay this outcome.
Conversely, those small creditors that primarily rely on the GSEs
as a secondary market outlet because they do not have the capacity to
hold numerous loans in portfolio or the infrastructure or scale to
securitize loans may continue to benefit from the ability to make High-
DTI GSE loans as Temporary GSE QM loans. In the absence of this final
rule, these creditors would be limited to originating GSE loans as QMs
only with DTI at or below 43 percent under the General QM loan
definition. These creditors may also originate FHA, VA, or USDA loans
or non-QM loans for private securitizations, likely at a higher cost
relative to Temporary GSE QM loans.
Impact on Rural Areas
This final rule's expected impact on rural areas is similar to the
expected impact on non-rural areas. Based on 2018 HMDA data, the Bureau
estimates that High-DTI conventional purchase mortgages are comparably
likely to be reported as initially sold to the GSEs in rural areas
(52.5 percent) as in non-rural areas (52.0 percent).\161\
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\161\ These statistics are estimated based on originations from
the first nine months of the year, to allow time for loans to be
sold before HMDA reporting deadlines. In addition, a higher share of
High-DTI conventional purchase non-rural loans (33.3 percent) report
being sold to other non-GSE purchasers compared to rural loans (22.3
percent).
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VIII. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (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 not-for-profit organizations.\162\ 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.\163\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\162\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
\163\ 5 U.S.C. 601(3) (the Bureau may establish an alternative
definition after consultation with the Small Business Administration
and an opportunity for public comment).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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
would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities.\164\ 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.\165\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\164\ 5 U.S.C. 603 through 605.
\165\ 5 U.S.C. 609.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the Extension Proposal, the Bureau certified that an IRFA was
not required because the proposal, if adopted, would not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
The Bureau did not receive comments on its analysis of the impact of
the Extension Proposal on small entities. The Bureau does not expect
this final rule to impose costs on small entities relative to the
baseline. Under
[[Page 67958]]
the baseline, the Temporary GSE QM loan definition expires, and
therefore no creditor--including small entities--would be able to
originate QM loans under that definition. Under this final rule,
certain small entities that would otherwise not be able to originate QM
loans under that definition will be able to originate such loans with
QM status. Thus, the Bureau anticipates that this final rule will only
reduce the burden on small entities relative to the baseline.
Accordingly, the Director certifies that this final rule will not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. Thus, a FRFA is not required for this final rule.
IX. Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA),\166\ Federal
agencies are generally required to seek, prior to implementation,
approval from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for information
collection requirements. 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\166\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
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The Bureau has determined that this final rule does not contain any
new or substantively revised information collection requirements other
than those previously approved by OMB under that OMB control number
3170-0015. This final rule will amend 12 CFR part 1026 (Regulation Z),
which implements TILA. OMB control number 3170-0015 is the Bureau's OMB
control number for Regulation Z.
X. Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review Act,\167\ 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 at least 60 days prior to the rule's
published effective date. The Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs has designated this rule as a ``major rule'' as defined by 5
U.S.C. 804(2).
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\167\ 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.
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XI. Signing Authority
The Director of the Bureau, having reviewed and approved this
document, is delegating the authority to electronically sign this
document to Laura Galban, a Bureau Federal Register Liaison, for
purposes of publication in the Federal Register.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 1026
Advertising, 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:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 2601, 2603-2605, 2607, 2609, 2617, 3353,
5511, 5512, 5532, 5581; 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.
Subpart E--Special Rules for Certain Home Mortgage Transactions
0
2. Amend Sec. 1026.43 by revising paragraph (e)(4)(iii)(B) to read as
follows:
Sec. 1026.43 Minimum standards for transactions secured by a
dwelling.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(4) * * *
(iii) * * *
(B) Unless otherwise expired under paragraph (e)(4)(iii)(A) of this
section, the special rules in this paragraph (e)(4) are available only
for covered transactions for which the creditor receives the consumer's
application before the mandatory compliance date of a final rule issued
by the Bureau amending paragraph (e)(2) of this section. The Bureau
will also amend this paragraph prior to that mandatory compliance date
to reflect the new status.
* * * * *
0
3. In Supplement I to Part 1026--Official Interpretations, under
Section 1026.43--Minimum Standards for Transactions Secured by a
Dwelling, revise 43(e)(4) Qualified mortgage defined--special rules to
read as follows:
Supplement I to Part 1026--Official Interpretations
* * * * *
Section 1026.43--Minimum standards for transactions secured by a
dwelling.
* * * * *
43(e)(4) Qualified mortgage defined--special rules.
1. Alternative definition. Subject to the sunset provided under
Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(iii), Sec. 1026.43(e)(4) provides an alternative
definition of qualified mortgage to the definition provided in Sec.
1026.43(e)(2). To be a qualified mortgage under Sec. 1026.43(e)(4),
the transaction must satisfy the requirements under Sec.
1026.43(e)(2)(i) through (iii), in addition to being one of the types
of loans specified in Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A) through (E).
2. Termination of conservatorship. Section 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A)
requires that a covered transaction be eligible for purchase or
guarantee by the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) or
the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) (or any
limited-life regulatory entity succeeding the charter of either)
operating under the conservatorship or receivership of the Federal
Housing Finance Agency pursuant to section 1367 of the Federal Housing
Enterprises Financial Safety and Soundness Act of 1992 (12 U.S.C.
4617). The special rule under Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A) does not apply
if Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (or any limited-life regulatory entity
succeeding the charter of either) has ceased operating under the
conservatorship or receivership of the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
For example, if either Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (or succeeding
limited-life regulatory entity) ceases to operate under the
conservatorship or receivership of the Federal Housing Finance Agency,
Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(ii)(A) would no longer apply to loans eligible for
purchase or guarantee by that entity; however, the special rule would
be available for a loan that is eligible for purchase or guarantee by
the other entity still operating under conservatorship or receivership.
3. Timing. Under Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(iii), the definition of
qualified mortgage under Sec. 1026.43(e)(4) applies only to loans for
which the creditor receives the consumer's application before the
mandatory compliance date of a final rule issued by the Bureau amending
Sec. 1026.43(e)(2), regardless of whether Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac
(or any limited-life regulatory entity succeeding the charter of
either) continues to operate under the conservatorship or receivership
of the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Accordingly, Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)
is available only for covered transactions:
i. That are consummated on or before the date Fannie Mae or Freddie
Mac (or any limited-life regulatory entity succeeding the charter of
either), respectively, cease to operate under the conservatorship or
receivership of the Federal Housing Finance Agency pursuant to section
1367 of the Federal Housing Enterprises Financial Safety
[[Page 67959]]
and Soundness Act of 1992 (12 U.S.C. 4617); and
ii. That are transactions for which the creditor receives the
consumer's application before the mandatory compliance date of a final
rule issued by the Bureau amending Sec. 1026.43(e)(2), as provided by
Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(iii). The Bureau will also amend this commentary
prior to that mandatory compliance date to reflect the new status.
4. Application. Under Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B), the special
rules in Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)--unless they are otherwise expired under
Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(A)--are available only for covered
transactions for which the creditor receives the consumer's application
before the mandatory compliance date of a final rule issued by the
Bureau amending paragraph (e)(2) of this section. Under Sec.
1026.2(a)(3)(i), application means the submission of a consumer's
financial information for the purposes of obtaining an extension of
credit. This definition applies to all transactions covered by
Regulation Z. Regulation Z also provides a more specific definition for
transactions subject to Sec. 1026.19(e), (f), or (g). For such
transactions, an application consists of the submission of the
consumer's name, the consumer's income, the consumer's social security
number to obtain a credit report, the property address, an estimate of
the value of the property, and the mortgage loan amount sought.
Therefore, for transactions subject to Sec. 1026.19(e), (f), or (g),
creditors determine the date the creditor received the consumer's
application, for purposes of Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B), in accordance
with Sec. 1026.2(a)(3)(ii). For transactions that are not subject to
Sec. 1026.19(e), (f), or (g), creditors can determine the date the
creditor received the consumer's application, for purposes of Sec.
1026.43(e)(4)(iii)(B), in accordance with either Sec. 1026.2(a)(3)(i)
or (ii).
5. Eligible for purchase, guarantee, or insurance except with
regard to matters wholly unrelated to ability to repay. To satisfy
Sec. 1026.43(e)(4)(ii), a loan need not be actually purchased or
guaranteed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac or insured or guaranteed by one
of the Agencies (the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD), U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA), or Rural Housing Service (RHS)). Rather, Sec.
1026.43(e)(4)(ii) requires only that the creditor determine that the
loan is eligible (i.e., meets the criteria) for such purchase,
guarantee, or insurance at consummation. For example, for purposes of
Sec. 1026.43(e)(4), a creditor is not required to sell a loan to
Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (or any limited-life regulatory entity
succeeding the charter of either) for that loan to be a qualified
mortgage; however, the loan must be eligible for purchase or guarantee
by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (or any limited-life regulatory entity
succeeding the charter of either), including satisfying any
requirements regarding consideration and verification of a consumer's
income or assets, credit history, debt-to-income ratio or residual
income, and other credit risk factors, but not any requirements
regarding matters wholly unrelated to ability to repay. To determine
eligibility for purchase, guarantee or insurance, a creditor may rely
on a valid underwriting recommendation provided by a GSE automated
underwriting system (AUS) or an AUS that relies on an Agency
underwriting tool; compliance with the standards in the GSE or Agency
written guide in effect at the time; a written agreement between the
creditor or a direct sponsor or aggregator of the creditor and a GSE or
Agency that permits variation from the standards of the written guides
and/or variation from the AUSs, in effect at the time of consummation;
or an individual loan waiver granted by the GSE or Agency to the
creditor. For creditors relying on the variances of a sponsor or
aggregator, a loan that is transferred directly to or through the
sponsor or aggregator at or after consummation complies with Sec.
1026.43(e)(4). In using any of the four methods listed above, the
creditor need not satisfy standards that are wholly unrelated to
assessing a consumer's ability to repay that the creditor is required
to perform. Matters wholly unrelated to ability to repay are those
matters that are wholly unrelated to credit risk or the underwriting of
the loan. Such matters include requirements related to the status of
the creditor rather than the loan, requirements related to selling,
securitizing, or delivering the loan, and any requirement that the
creditor must perform after the consummated loan is sold, guaranteed,
or endorsed for insurance such as document custody, quality control, or
servicing.
Accordingly, a covered transaction is eligible for purchase or
guarantee by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, for example, if:
i. The loan conforms to the relevant standards set forth in the
Fannie Mae Single-Family Selling Guide or the Freddie Mac Single-Family
Seller/Servicer Guide in effect at the time, or to standards set forth
in a written agreement between the creditor or a sponsor or aggregator
of the creditor and Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac in effect at that time
that permits variation from the standards of those guides;
ii. The loan has been granted an individual waiver by a GSE, which
will allow purchase or guarantee in spite of variations from the
applicable standards; or
iii. The creditor inputs accurate information into the Fannie Mae
or Freddie Mac AUS or another AUS pursuant to a written agreement
between the creditor and Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac that permits
variation from the GSE AUS; the loan receives one of the
recommendations specified below in paragraphs A or B from the
corresponding GSE AUS or an equivalent recommendation pursuant to
another AUS as authorized in the written agreement; and the creditor
satisfies any requirements and conditions specified by the relevant AUS
that are not wholly unrelated to ability to repay, the non-satisfaction
of which would invalidate that recommendation:
A. An ``Approve/Eligible'' recommendation from Desktop Underwriter
(DU); or
B. A risk class of ``Accept'' and purchase eligibility of ``Freddie
Mac Eligible'' from Loan Prospector (LP).
6. Repurchase and indemnification demands. A repurchase or
indemnification demand by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, HUD, VA, USDA, or
RHS is not dispositive of qualified mortgage status. Qualified mortgage
status under Sec. 1026.43(e)(4) depends on whether a loan is eligible
to be purchased, guaranteed, or insured at the time of consummation,
provided that other requirements under Sec. 1026.43(e)(4) are
satisfied. Some repurchase or indemnification demands are not related
to eligibility criteria at consummation. See comment 43(e)(4)-4.
Further, even where a repurchase or indemnification demand relates to
whether the loan satisfied relevant eligibility requirements as of the
time of consummation, the mere fact that a demand has been made, or
even resolved, between a creditor and GSE or agency is not dispositive
for purposes of Sec. 1026.43(e)(4). However, evidence of whether a
particular loan satisfied the Sec. 1026.43(e)(4) eligibility criteria
at consummation may be brought to light in the course of dealing over a
particular demand, depending on the facts and circumstances.
Accordingly, each loan should be evaluated by the creditor based on the
facts and circumstances relating to the eligibility of that loan at the
time of consummation. For example:
[[Page 67960]]
i. Assume eligibility to purchase a loan was based in part on the
consumer's employment income of $50,000 per year. The creditor uses the
income figure in obtaining an approve/eligible recommendation from DU.
A quality control review, however, later determines that the
documentation provided and verified by the creditor to comply with
Fannie Mae requirements did not support the reported income of $50,000
per year. As a result, Fannie Mae demands that the creditor repurchase
the loan. Assume that the quality control review is accurate, and that
DU would not have issued an approve/eligible recommendation if it had
been provided the accurate income figure. The DU determination at the
time of consummation was invalid because it was based on inaccurate
information provided by the creditor; therefore, the loan was never a
qualified mortgage under Sec. 1026.43(e)(4).
ii. Assume that a creditor delivered a loan, which the creditor
determined was a qualified mortgage at the time of consummation under
Sec. 1026.43(e)(4), to Fannie Mae for inclusion in a particular To-Be-
Announced Mortgage-Backed Security (MBS) pool of loans. The data
submitted by the creditor at the time of loan delivery indicated that
the various loan terms met the product type, weighted-average coupon,
weighted-average maturity, and other MBS pooling criteria, and MBS
issuance disclosures to investors reflected this loan data. However,
after delivery and MBS issuance, a quality control review determines
that the loan violates the pooling criteria. The loan still meets
eligibility requirements for Fannie Mae products and loan terms. Fannie
Mae, however, requires the creditor to repurchase the loan due to the
violation of MBS pooling requirements. Assume that the quality control
review determination is accurate. Because the loan still meets Fannie
Mae's eligibility requirements, it remains a qualified mortgage based
on these facts and circumstances.
* * * * *
Dated: October 20, 2020.
Laura Galban,
Federal Register Liaison, Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.
[FR Doc. 2020-23540 Filed 10-23-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-AM-P