80_FR_37621 80 FR 37496 - Defining Larger Participants of the Automobile Financing Market and Defining Certain Automobile Leasing Activity as a Financial Product or Service

80 FR 37496 - Defining Larger Participants of the Automobile Financing Market and Defining Certain Automobile Leasing Activity as a Financial Product or Service

BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION

Federal Register Volume 80, Issue 125 (June 30, 2015)

Page Range37496-37527
FR Document2015-14630

The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (Bureau or CFPB) amends the regulation defining larger participants of certain consumer financial product and service markets by adding a new section to define larger participants of a market for automobile financing. The new section defines a market that includes: grants of credit for the purchase of an automobile; refinancings of such obligations (and subsequent refinancings thereof) that are secured by an automobile; automobile leases; and purchases or acquisitions of any of the foregoing obligations. The Bureau issues this rule pursuant to its authority, under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act), to supervise certain nonbank covered persons for compliance with Federal consumer financial law and for other purposes. The Bureau has the authority to supervise nonbank covered persons of all sizes in the residential mortgage, private education lending, and payday lending markets. In addition, the Bureau has the authority to supervise nonbank ``larger participant[s]'' of markets for other consumer financial products or services, as the Bureau defines by rule. This final rule identifies a market for automobile financing and defines as larger participants of this market certain nonbank covered persons that will be subject to the Bureau's supervisory authority. It also defines certain automobile leases as a ``financial product or service'' under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the Dodd-Frank Act. Finally, this final rule makes certain technical corrections to existing larger-participant rules.

Federal Register, Volume 80 Issue 125 (Tuesday, June 30, 2015)
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 125 (Tuesday, June 30, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 37496-37527]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2015-14630]



[[Page 37495]]

Vol. 80

Tuesday,

No. 125

June 30, 2015

Part VI





Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection





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12 CFR Parts 1001 and 1090





 Defining Larger Participants of the Automobile Financing Market and 
Defining Certain Automobile Leasing Activity as a Financial Product or 
Service; Final Rule

Federal Register / Vol. 80 , No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules 
and Regulations

[[Page 37496]]


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BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION

12 CFR Parts 1001 and 1090

[Docket No. CFPB-2014-0024]
RIN 3170-AA46


Defining Larger Participants of the Automobile Financing Market 
and Defining Certain Automobile Leasing Activity as a Financial Product 
or Service

AGENCY: Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (Bureau or CFPB) 
amends the regulation defining larger participants of certain consumer 
financial product and service markets by adding a new section to define 
larger participants of a market for automobile financing. The new 
section defines a market that includes: grants of credit for the 
purchase of an automobile; refinancings of such obligations (and 
subsequent refinancings thereof) that are secured by an automobile; 
automobile leases; and purchases or acquisitions of any of the 
foregoing obligations. The Bureau issues this rule pursuant to its 
authority, under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer 
Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act), to supervise certain nonbank covered 
persons for compliance with Federal consumer financial law and for 
other purposes. The Bureau has the authority to supervise nonbank 
covered persons of all sizes in the residential mortgage, private 
education lending, and payday lending markets. In addition, the Bureau 
has the authority to supervise nonbank ``larger participant[s]'' of 
markets for other consumer financial products or services, as the 
Bureau defines by rule. This final rule identifies a market for 
automobile financing and defines as larger participants of this market 
certain nonbank covered persons that will be subject to the Bureau's 
supervisory authority. It also defines certain automobile leases as a 
``financial product or service'' under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of 
the Dodd-Frank Act. Finally, this final rule makes certain technical 
corrections to existing larger-participant rules.

DATES: Effective August 31, 2015.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dania Ayoubi or Jolina Cuaresma, 
Counsels; or Amanda Quester, Senior Counsel, Office of Regulations, 
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, 
DC 20552, at (202) 435-7700.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Summary of Final Rule

    The Dodd-Frank Act authorizes the Bureau to define by regulation 
larger participants of certain markets for financial products or 
services.\1\ On September 17, 2014, the Bureau proposed a rule to 
define larger participants of a market for automobile financing and to 
make certain technical amendments to its rules defining larger 
participants of other consumer financial product and service markets 
(Proposed Rule).\2\ Pursuant to authority granted by the Dodd-Frank 
Act, the Proposed Rule also defines the term ``financial product or 
service'' for purposes of title X of the Dodd-Frank Act to include 
certain automobile leases that are not currently defined as a financial 
product or service under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act. 
The Bureau is now issuing this final rule (Final Rule) largely as 
proposed.
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    \1\ Public Law 111-203, section 1024, 124 Stat. 1376, 1987 
(2010) (codified at 12 U.S.C. 5514).
    \2\ 79 FR 60762 (Oct. 8, 2014).
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    The Final Rule defines a market for automobile financing that 
covers specific activities and sets forth a test to determine whether a 
nonbank covered person is a larger participant of that market. The 
Final Rule defines ``automobile'' to mean any self-propelled vehicle 
primarily used for personal, family, or household purposes for on-road 
transportation, with certain exclusions (motor homes, recreational 
vehicles (RVs), golf carts, and motor scooters). The Final Rule defines 
``annual originations'' to mean the sum of the following transactions 
for the preceding calendar year:
     credit granted for the purchase of an automobile;
     refinancings of such obligations (and any subsequent 
refinancings thereof) that are secured by an automobile;
     automobile leases; and
     purchases or acquisitions of any of the foregoing 
obligations.
For purposes of the Final Rule, refinancing has the same meaning as it 
does in Regulation Z, except that, for a refinancing to be considered 
an annual origination under this Final Rule, the nonbank covered person 
need not be the original creditor or a holder or servicer of the 
original obligation. The term ``automobile lease'' means a lease that 
is for the use of an automobile and that meets the requirements of 
section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act or of new Sec.  
1001.2(a), which is discussed below.
    As in the Proposed Rule, the term ``annual originations'' in the 
Final Rule does not include investments in asset-backed securities. The 
Final Rule also excludes certain purchases or acquisitions by special 
purpose entities that are established for the purpose of facilitating 
asset-backed securities transactions.
    Under the Final Rule, a nonbank covered person that engages in 
automobile financing \3\ is a larger participant of the automobile 
financing market if it has at least 10,000 aggregate annual 
originations. To determine a nonbank covered person's aggregate annual 
originations, the Final Rule provides that the annual originations of a 
nonbank covered person must be aggregated with the annual originations 
of any person (other than a dealer that is excluded from larger-
participant status under the Final Rule \4\) that was an affiliated 
company of the nonbank covered person at any time during the preceding 
calendar year.
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    \3\ For purposes of the Final Rule, ``automobile financing'' 
means providing or engaging in any annual originations as defined in 
the rule. The terms ``automobile'' and ``automobile financing'' are 
used in this Supplementary Information in a manner consistent with 
how they are defined in the Final Rule. The terms ``auto'' and 
``auto financing'' are used more generically.
    \4\ The Final Rule provides that certain auto dealers do not 
qualify as larger participants. Under section 1029 of the Dodd-Frank 
Act, the Bureau may not exercise its authority over certain auto 
dealers, as outlined in that section. As explained below, the final 
larger-participant rule also excludes certain dealers that extend 
retail credit or retail leases directly to consumers without 
routinely assigning them to unaffiliated third party finance or 
leasing sources, even though such dealers are not subject to the 
statutory exclusion of section 1029.
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    As noted above, the Bureau is including automobile leases in the 
criterion it uses to define larger participants in the market for 
automobile financing. Certain consumer leases are identified as a 
financial product or service under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-
Frank Act, and therefore count toward the aggregate annual originations 
threshold for the larger-participant test in this Final Rule. For the 
reasons explained below, the Bureau believes that the purpose of the 
Final Rule and the Bureau's overall mission are best served by covering 
automobile leasing more broadly. Accordingly, under its authority 
granted by section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the Dodd-Frank Act, the 
Bureau is adding Sec. Sec.  1001.1 and 1001.2 in new part 1001 to title 
12 of the Code of Federal Regulations. Section 1001.1 states the 
authority and purpose of part 1001, which is to implement the Bureau's 
authority, granted by section 1002(15)(A)(xi) of the Dodd-Frank Act, to 
define the term ``financial product or service'' for purposes of title 
X of the

[[Page 37497]]

Dodd-Frank Act to include certain financial products or services in 
addition to those defined in section 1002(15)(A)(i)-(x). Section 
1001.2(a) defines the term ``financial product or service'' under that 
same authority to include certain automobile leases that national banks 
are authorized to offer and that do not fall under the definition in 
section 1002(15)(A)(ii).
    The Final Rule also makes certain technical corrections to existing 
larger-participant rules. Specifically, the Final Rule inserts the word 
``financial'' before the term ``product or service'' in the definition 
of ``nonbank covered person'' in Sec.  1090.101. The Final Rule also 
amends Sec. Sec.  1090.104(a) and 1090.105(a) to clarify that if a 
company ceases to be an affiliated company of a nonbank covered person 
during the relevant measurement period, its annual receipts must be 
aggregated for the entire period of measurement for purposes of the 
consumer reporting and consumer debt collection larger-participant 
rules.

II. Background

    Section 1024 of the Dodd-Frank Act gives the Bureau supervisory 
authority over all nonbank covered persons \5\ offering or providing 
three enumerated types of consumer financial products or services: (1) 
origination, brokerage, or servicing of consumer loans secured by real 
estate, and related mortgage loan modification or foreclosure relief 
services; (2) private education loans; and (3) payday loans.\6\ The 
Bureau also has supervisory authority over ``larger participant[s] of a 
market for other consumer financial products or services,'' as the 
Bureau defines by rule.\7\
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    \5\ The provisions of 12 U.S.C. 5514 apply to certain categories 
of nondepository (nonbank) covered persons, described in subsection 
(a)(1), and expressly exclude from coverage persons described in 12 
U.S.C. 5515(a) or 5516(a). ``Covered persons'' include: ``(A) any 
person that engages in offering or providing a consumer financial 
product or service; and (B) any affiliate of a person described [in 
(A)] if such affiliate acts as a service provider to such person.'' 
12 U.S.C. 5481(6).
    \6\ 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)(A), (D), (E). The Bureau also has the 
authority to supervise any nonbank covered person that it ``has 
reasonable cause to determine, by order, after notice to the covered 
person and a reasonable opportunity . . . to respond . . . is 
engaging, or has engaged, in conduct that poses risks to consumers 
with regard to the offering or provision of consumer financial 
products or services.'' 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)(C); see also 12 CFR 
part 1091 (prescribing procedures for making determinations under 12 
U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)(C)). In addition, the Bureau has supervisory 
authority over very large depository institutions and credit unions 
and their affiliates. 12 U.S.C. 5515(a). Furthermore, the Bureau has 
certain authorities relating to the supervision of other depository 
institutions and credit unions. 12 U.S.C. 5516(c)(1), (e). One of 
the Bureau's mandates under the Dodd-Frank Act is to ensure that 
``Federal consumer financial law is enforced consistently without 
regard to the status of a person as a depository institution, in 
order to promote fair competition.'' 12 U.S.C. 5511(b)(4).
    \7\ 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)(B), (a)(2); see also 12 U.S.C. 5481(5) 
(defining ``consumer financial product or service''). The Bureau's 
supervisory authority also extends to service providers of those 
covered persons that are subject to supervision under 12 U.S.C. 
5514(a)(1). 12 U.S.C. 5514(e); see also 12 U.S.C. 5481(26) (defining 
``service provider'').
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    Subpart A of the Bureau's existing larger-participant rule, 12 CFR 
part 1090, prescribes various procedures, definitions, standards, and 
protocols that apply to all markets in which the Bureau defines larger 
participants.\8\ Those generally applicable provisions also apply to 
the automobile financing market described by this Final Rule.
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    \8\ 12 CFR 1090.100-.103.
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    As prescribed by existing Sec.  1090.102, any nonbank covered 
person that qualifies as a larger participant remains a larger 
participant until two years after the first day of the tax year in 
which the person last met the applicable test. Pursuant to existing 
Sec.  1090.103, a person will be able to dispute whether it qualifies 
as a larger participant in the automobile financing market. The Bureau 
will notify an entity when the Bureau intends to undertake supervisory 
activity; the entity will then have an opportunity to submit 
documentary evidence and written arguments in support of its claim that 
it is not a larger participant.\9\ Section 1090.103(d) provides that 
the Bureau may require submission of certain records, documents, and 
other information for purposes of assessing whether a person is a 
larger participant of a covered market; this authority will be 
available to the Bureau to facilitate its identification of larger 
participants of the automobile financing market, just as in other 
markets.
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    \9\ 12 CFR 1090.103(a).
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    The Bureau includes relevant market descriptions and larger-
participant tests, as it develops them, in subpart B. The Final Rule is 
the fifth in a series of rulemakings to define larger participants of 
markets for other consumer financial products or services within 
subpart B. The first four rules define larger participants of markets 
for consumer reporting, consumer debt collection, student loan 
servicing, and international money transfers.\10\
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    \10\ 77 FR 42874 (July 20, 2012) (Consumer Reporting Rule) 
(codified at 12 CFR 1090.104); 77 FR 65775 (Oct. 31, 2012) (Consumer 
Debt Collection Rule) (codified at 12 CFR 1090.105); 78 FR 73383 
(Dec. 6, 2013) (Student Loan Servicing Rule) (codified at 12 CFR 
1090.106); 79 FR 56631 (Sept. 23, 2014) (International Money 
Transfer Rule) (codified at 12 CFR 1090.107).
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    This Final Rule describes a market for consumer financial products 
or services, which the Final Rule labels ``automobile financing.'' The 
definition does not encompass all activities that could be considered 
auto financing. Any reference herein to the ``automobile financing 
market'' means only the particular market for automobile financing 
identified by the Final Rule.
    The Final Rule defining larger participants of a market for 
automobile financing does not impose new substantive consumer 
protection requirements. Nonbank covered persons generally are subject 
to the Bureau's regulatory and enforcement authority, and any 
applicable Federal consumer financial law, regardless of whether they 
are subject to the Bureau's supervisory authority.
    The Bureau is authorized to supervise nonbank covered persons 
subject to section 1024 of the Dodd-Frank Act for purposes of: (1) 
assessing compliance with Federal consumer financial law; (2) obtaining 
information about such persons' activities and compliance systems or 
procedures; and (3) detecting and assessing risks to consumers and 
consumer financial markets.\11\ The Bureau conducts examinations, of 
various scopes, of supervised entities. In addition, the Bureau may, as 
appropriate, request information from supervised entities without 
conducting examinations.\12\
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    \11\ 12 U.S.C. 5514(b)(1).
    \12\ See 12 U.S.C. 5514(b) (authorizing the Bureau both to 
conduct examinations and to require reports from entities subject to 
supervision).
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    The Bureau prioritizes supervisory activity among nonbank covered 
persons on the basis of risk, taking into account, among other factors, 
the size of each entity, the volume of its transactions involving 
consumer financial products or services, the size and risk presented by 
the market in which it is a participant, the extent of relevant State 
oversight, and any field and market information that the Bureau has on 
the entity. Such field and market information might include, for 
example, information from complaints and any other information the 
Bureau has about risks to consumers posed by a particular entity.
    The specifics of how an examination takes place vary by market and 
entity. However, the examination process generally proceeds as follows. 
Bureau examiners contact the entity for an initial conference with 
management and often request records and other information. Bureau 
examiners will ordinarily also review the components of the supervised 
entity's compliance management system. Based on these discussions and a 
preliminary review of the information received, examiners determine the 
scope of an on-site

[[Page 37498]]

examination and then coordinate with the entity to initiate the on-site 
portion of the examination. While on-site, examiners spend a period of 
time discussing with management the entity's policies, processes, and 
procedures; reviewing documents and records; testing transactions and 
accounts for compliance; and evaluating the entity's compliance 
management system. Examinations may involve issuing confidential 
examination reports, supervisory letters, and compliance ratings. In 
addition to the process described above, the Bureau may also conduct 
off-site examinations.
    The Bureau has published a general examination manual describing 
the Bureau's supervisory approach and procedures.\13\ As explained in 
the manual, the Bureau will structure examinations to address various 
factors related to a supervised entity's compliance with Federal 
consumer financial law and other relevant considerations. In connection 
with this Final Rule, the Bureau is releasing examination procedures 
related to automobile finance originations and servicing.\14\ These 
procedures are a component of the CFPB's general Supervision and 
Examination Manual and provide guidance on how the Bureau will be 
conducting its monitoring in the automobile financing market.
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    \13\ CFPB Supervision and Examination Manual (Oct. 1, 2012), 
available at http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201210_cfpb_supervision-and-examination-manual-v2.pdf.
    \14\ CFPB Automobile Finance Examination Procedures (June 10, 
2015), available at http://www.consumerfinance.gov/guidance/supervision/manual/.
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III. Summary of Rulemaking Process

    On September 17, 2014, the Bureau issued a notice of proposed 
rulemaking \15\ and requested public comment. The Bureau received 
approximately 30 comments from consumer advocates, civil rights groups, 
industry participants, trade associations, individual consumers, 
members of Congress, and others. The Bureau has considered these 
comments in adopting this Final Rule.
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    \15\ 79 FR 60762 (Oct. 8, 2014).
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IV. Legal Authority and Procedural Matters

A. Rulemaking Authority

    The Bureau is issuing this Final Rule pursuant to its authority 
under the following provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act: (1) Sections 
1024(a)(1)(B) and (a)(2), which authorize the Bureau to supervise 
nonbanks that are larger participants of markets for consumer financial 
products or services, as defined by rule; \16\ (2) section 1024(b)(7), 
which, among other things, authorizes the Bureau to prescribe rules to 
facilitate the supervision of covered persons under section 1024; \17\ 
(3) section 1022(b)(1), which grants the Bureau the authority to 
prescribe rules as may be necessary or appropriate to enable the Bureau 
to administer and carry out the purposes and objectives of Federal 
consumer financial law, and to prevent evasions of such law; \18\ and 
(4) section 1002(15)(A)(xi), which authorizes the Bureau to prescribe 
rules to define ``other financial product[s] or service[s],'' if the 
Bureau finds that such financial products or services are: (i) entered 
into or conducted as a subterfuge or with a purpose to evade any 
Federal consumer financial law; or (ii) permissible for a bank or a 
financial holding company to offer or provide under any applicable 
Federal law or regulation, and have, or likely will have, a material 
impact on consumers.\19\
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    \16\ 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)(B), (a)(2).
    \17\ 12 U.S.C. 5514(b)(7).
    \18\ 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(1).
    \19\ 12 U.S.C. 5481(15)(A)(xi).
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B. Effective Date of Final Rule

    The Administrative Procedure Act generally requires that rules be 
published not less than 30 days before their effective dates.\20\ The 
Bureau proposed that the Final Rule would be effective 60 days after 
publication and received no comments relating to the effective date. 
The Bureau has decided that the Final Rule will be effective 60 days 
after publication in the Federal Register.
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    \20\ 5 U.S.C. 553(d).
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V. Section-by-Section Analysis

A. 12 CFR Part 1001--Financial Product or Service

Section 1001.1 Authority and Purpose
    Proposed Sec.  1001.1 stated the authority and purpose for proposed 
new part 1001. It explained that under section 1002(15)(A)(xi) of the 
Dodd-Frank Act, the Bureau is authorized to define certain financial 
products or services for purposes of title X of the Dodd-Frank Act, in 
addition to those defined in section 1002(15)(A)(i)-(x). Proposed Sec.  
1001.1 explained that the purpose of proposed part 1001 was to 
implement that authority.
    The Bureau received no comments on proposed Sec.  1001.1. Section 
1001.1 is finalized as proposed.
Section 1001.2 Definitions
    Proposed Sec.  1001.2(a) defined the term ``financial product or 
service'' under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the Dodd-Frank Act to 
include extending or brokering certain leases of an automobile that (1) 
meet the requirements of leases authorized under section 108 of the 
Competitive Equality Banking Act of 1987 (CEBA),\21\ as implemented by 
12 CFR part 23, and are thus permissible for banks to offer or provide; 
and (2) are not currently defined as a financial product or service 
under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act. The proposal 
explained that under section 1002(15)(A)(xi), for purposes of title X 
of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Bureau may define as a financial product or 
service, by regulation:
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    \21\ Public Law 100-86, section 108, 101 Stat. 552, 579 (1987) 
(codified at 12 U.S.C. 24(Tenth)).

such other financial product or service . . . if the Bureau finds 
that such financial product or service is-- . . . (II) permissible 
for a bank or for a financial holding company to offer or to provide 
under any provision of a Federal law or regulation applicable to a 
bank or a financial holding company, and has, or likely will have, a 
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material impact on consumers.

The Bureau proposed Sec.  1001.2 pursuant to this authority. For the 
reasons discussed below, the Bureau adopts Sec.  1001.2 as proposed 
with one technical change that has no substantive effect.\22\
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    \22\ The Final Rule includes a minor clarifying change in the 
wording of Sec.  1001.2(a).
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    The Bureau proposed to include automobile leasing in the consumer 
financial product or service market for automobile financing for 
purposes of a rule defining larger participants in that market. Section 
1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act defines the term ``financial 
product or service'' to include certain leases that, among other 
things, are the functional equivalent of purchase finance arrangements.
    The proposal set forth the Bureau's belief that the phrase 
``functional equivalent of purchase finance arrangements''--which is 
not defined in the Dodd-Frank Act \23\--is reasonably interpreted to 
encompass most automobile leases. Specifically, the Bureau explained 
that in light of the Bureau's purpose and mandate, the phrase 
``functional equivalent of purchase finance arrangements'' is best 
interpreted from the perspective of the consumer.
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    \23\ The Bureau is not aware of any Federal or State statute or 
regulation that defines the term.
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    The proposal explained that, for consumers, the leasing process 
functions in ways that are equivalent to a financed purchase. For 
example, leasing a vehicle requires an application process and an 
ongoing contractual obligation that are both financial in

[[Page 37499]]

nature and similar to entering into a financial arrangement to purchase 
a vehicle. Like a consumer seeking to qualify for a loan to purchase a 
vehicle, a consumer seeking to lease a vehicle must provide basic 
financial information such as income and credit history.\24\ Though a 
consumer who leases an automobile need not finance the entire cost of 
the vehicle, the consumer still undertakes a major financial obligation 
in the form of a commitment to make a stream of payments over a 
significant period of time.\25\ The consumer must consider how much 
cash to use, if any, for a capitalized cost reduction (similar to a 
down payment),\26\ the preferred lease term, and the affordability of 
monthly payments and other costs including maintenance, insurance, and 
State registration fees.
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    \24\ See Fed. Trade Comm'n, Consumer Information: Understanding 
Vehicle Financing (Jan. 2014), available at http://www.consumer.ftc.gov/articles/0056-understanding-vehicle-financing.
    \25\ Like consumers who borrow money to purchase a vehicle, 
consumers who lease are contractually obligated to make monthly 
lease payments during the lease term. See Fed. Reserve Bd., Key to 
Vehicle Leasing Consumer Guide (Mar. 13, 2013), available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/leasing/.
    \26\ See id.
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    The proposal further noted that automobile leasing shares many 
other features with automobile lending. A consumer must demonstrate an 
ability to pay the monthly payments in order to qualify for a lease, 
and a consumer's creditworthiness impacts the terms of the lease. An 
automobile finance company may furnish information about a lessee, such 
as payment history, to credit bureaus in the same manner that the 
company does for a borrower. Also, similar to a consumer who finances 
an automobile with a loan, a consumer who leases an automobile bears 
the responsibility for the vehicle's upkeep and must maintain, repair, 
and service the vehicle during the lease term.\27\ The consumer must 
also insure the vehicle and bears the risk should the vehicle become 
damaged or totaled.\28\ Similarly, if a consumer fails to make loan or 
lease payments, the vehicle must be returned to the automobile finance 
company, and fees or penalties may apply.\29\ Also, regardless of 
whether consumers seek to purchase or lease a vehicle, they must 
negotiate the price and terms. For all the foregoing reasons, the 
Bureau reasoned in the proposal that automobile leases carry similar 
obligations and risks to consumers as automobile loans.
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    \27\ See id.
    \28\ See id.
    \29\ See id. Also, if a consumer terminates a lease early, early 
termination fees may apply. See id.
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    As the Bureau further observed in the proposal, in an automobile 
leasing arrangement, the consumer can typically purchase the vehicle at 
the end of the lease term for a pre-determined amount, which is 
generally based on the residual value of the vehicle.\30\ Accordingly, 
from the perspective of a consumer, leasing presents an alternative 
method to a loan for acquiring a vehicle through a series of 
installment payments.
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    \30\ CFPB, Ask CFPB: What Is Residual Value? (June 24, 2012), 
available at http://www.consumerfinance.gov/askcfpb/737/what-residual-value.html. The residual value is the projected market 
value of the vehicle at the end of the lease, which is used in 
calculating the amount the consumer would have to pay to purchase 
the vehicle at the end of the lease term. Additionally, the consumer 
may be responsible for any applicable taxes or fees.
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    Moreover, the proposal explained that automobiles are important to 
the financial well-being of consumers regardless of whether the 
consumer obtains the use of a vehicle through a lease or a loan. 
Consumers rely on automobiles for their transportation needs. From a 
consumer's standpoint, whether a vehicle is leased or financed through 
a loan, any act or practice that impedes access to a vehicle or 
otherwise creates problems related to the loan or leasing arrangement 
can have a critical impact on the consumer. Based on these factors, the 
Bureau reasoned in the proposal that, from the perspective of the 
consumer, most automobile leases are the functional equivalent of 
purchase finance arrangements.
    The Bureau also noted in the proposal that typical automobile 
leases meet the remaining two requirements of section 1002(15)(A)(ii) 
of the Dodd-Frank Act. First, automobile leases are generally ``non-
operating.'' Consistent with the definition in Regulation Y, which 
governs bank holding companies and changes in bank control, ``non-
operating,'' as interpreted by the Bureau in the proposal, means that 
the lease provider is not, directly or indirectly, engaged in 
operating, servicing, maintaining, or repairing the leased property 
during the lease term.\31\ Under most automobile leases, the consumer, 
rather than the lessor, is responsible for ensuring the care and 
maintenance of the vehicle.\32\ Second, most leases have terms well 
beyond 90 days. Lease terms for automobiles typically range from 12 to 
48 months, with the majority of leases ranging from 25 to 48 
months.\33\ Thus, the Bureau observed that the extending or brokering 
of most automobile leases readily falls under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) 
as a financial product or service.
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    \31\ 12 CFR 225.28(b)(3)(i) n.6 (``The requirement that the 
lease be on a non-operating basis means that the bank holding 
company may not, directly or indirectly, engage in operating, 
servicing, maintaining, or repairing leased property during the 
lease term. For purposes of the leasing of automobiles, the 
requirement that the lease be on a non-operating basis means that 
the bank holding company may not, directly or indirectly: (1) 
Provide servicing, repair, or maintenance of the leased vehicle 
during the lease term; (2) purchase parts and accessories in bulk or 
for an individual vehicle after the lessee has taken delivery of the 
vehicle; (3) provide the loan of an automobile during servicing of 
the leased vehicle; (4) purchase insurance for the lessee; or (5) 
provide for the renewal of the vehicle's license merely as a service 
to the lessee where the lessee could renew the license without 
authorization from the lessor.'').
    \32\ See Fed. Reserve Bd., Key to Vehicle Leasing Consumer Guide 
(Mar. 13, 2013), available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/leasing/.
    \33\ See Melinda Zabritski, Experian Automotive, State of the 
Automotive Finance Market Fourth Quarter 2014, at 20 (Feb. 19, 
2015), available at http://www.experian.com/assets/automotive/white-papers/experian-auto-2014-q4-presentation.pdf?WT.srch=Auto_Q42014FinanceTrends_PDF; see also Fed. Reserve Bd., supra note 32.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    However, as the Bureau explained in the proposal, the requirement 
that leases that fall under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) (``category (ii) 
leases'') be the functional equivalent of purchase finance arrangements 
means that coverage of leases under that section will necessarily 
depend on a number of factors and circumstances that may vary among 
particular leases and institutions. Given this potential variance, the 
Bureau expressed concern in the proposal that not all automobile leases 
that materially impact consumers will necessarily qualify for coverage 
under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) and that market participants may have a 
difficult time discerning which leases meet the definition and which do 
not. Such a result would make the automobile financing larger-
participant rule difficult to administer with respect to leasing and 
would not provide optimal protection to consumers. Accordingly, to 
further the mandate of protecting consumers and for ease of 
administering the automobile financing larger-participant rule, the 
Bureau proposed to exercise its authority under section 
1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the Dodd-Frank Act to define certain automobile 
leases not covered under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) as financial products 
or services within the meaning of section 1002(15)(A).
    As discussed above, under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II), for purposes 
of title X of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Bureau may define as a covered 
financial product or service other financial products or services that 
are permissible

[[Page 37500]]

for a bank or for a financial holding company to offer, and have, or 
likely will have, a material impact on consumers. To implement this 
provision, the Bureau proposed to define the term ``financial product 
or service'' under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) to include automobile 
leases that: (1) meet the requirements of leases authorized under 
section 108 of CEBA, as implemented by 12 CFR part 23, and therefore 
are permissible for national banks to offer or provide; and (2) are not 
the functional equivalent of purchase finance arrangements under 
section 1002(15)(A)(ii).
    As explained in the proposal, banks and financial holding companies 
are broadly authorized to engage in automobile leasing. With respect to 
national banks, CEBA amended the National Bank Act, to add, among other 
things, 12 U.S.C. 24(Tenth), which authorizes national banks to 
``invest in tangible personal property, including, without limitation, 
vehicles, manufactured homes, machinery, equipment, or furniture, for 
lease financing transactions on a net lease basis,'' as long as such 
investment does not exceed 10 percent of its assets.\34\ Neither CEBA 
nor its implementing regulations require that such leases be the 
functional equivalent of loans, credit, or purchase finance 
arrangements.\35\ Similarly, under Regulation Y, banks and financial 
holding companies may engage in leasing of personal property 
irrespective of whether the leases are the functional equivalent of 
loans, credit, or purchase finance arrangements.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \34\ Under the implementing regulations, net lease is defined 
as:
    a lease under which the national bank will not, directly or 
indirectly, provide or be obligated to provide for:
    (1) Servicing, repair, or maintenance of the leased property 
during the lease term;
    (2) Parts or accessories for the leased property;
    (3) Loan of replacement or substitute property while the leased 
property is being serviced;
    (4) Payment of insurance for the lessee, except where the lessee 
has failed in its contractual obligation to purchase or maintain 
required insurance; or
    (5) Renewal of any license or registration for the property 
unless renewal by the bank is necessary to protect its interest as 
owner or financier of the property.
    12 CFR 23.2(f).
    \35\ 12 U.S.C. 24(Tenth); 12 CFR 23.2, 23.3.
    \36\ 12 CFR 225.28(b)(3). Bank holding companies are limited to 
leases that are non-operating, as described above, and have an 
initial term of at least 90 days. Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Additionally, in the proposal, the Bureau expressed its belief 
that, whether or not a particular automobile lease qualifies as a 
category (ii) lease, all leasing covered by the proposed definition has 
a material impact on consumers. The Bureau noted that access to a 
vehicle is critical for consumers, automobile leasing is a significant 
financial obligation, and consumers are increasingly turning to leasing 
as a means to obtain a vehicle. The Bureau further stated in the 
proposal that the impact of automobile leasing on consumers and their 
financial well-being does not turn on whether a lease is the functional 
equivalent of a purchase finance arrangement.
    Accordingly, as authorized under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the 
Dodd-Frank Act, the Bureau proposed to define the term ``financial 
product or service'' to include extending or brokering leases for 
automobiles, where the lease: (1) qualifies as a full-payout lease \37\ 
and a net lease, as provided by 12 CFR 23.3(a), and has an initial term 
of not less than 90 days, as provided by 12 CFR 23.11; and (2) is not a 
financial product or service under section 1002(15)(A)(ii).\38\ The 
Bureau asserted that the proposed definition met the requirements of 
section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the Dodd-Frank Act because banks and 
financial holding companies are permitted to engage in automobile 
leasing described under this definition, and such automobile leasing 
has a material impact on consumers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \37\ Under the implementing regulations, ``full-payout lease'' 
is defined as:
    a lease in which the national bank reasonably expects to realize 
the return of its full investment in the leased property, plus the 
estimated cost of financing the property over the term of the lease, 
from:
    (1) Rentals;
    (2) Estimated tax benefits; and
    (3) The estimated residual value of the property at the 
expiration of the lease term.
    12 CFR 23.2(e).
    \38\ For purposes of this definition, ``automobile'' is defined 
as proposed in Sec.  1090.108(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Bureau explained that the proposed definition would also ensure 
that leases falling under the definition are subject to the range of 
protections applicable to ``financial product[s] or service[s]'' under 
the Dodd-Frank Act. For example, it would ensure that the offering or 
providing of the defined leases is subject to the prohibition against 
unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts or practices in section 1031 of the 
Dodd-Frank Act.\39\ The Bureau further expressed its belief that 
because leases that are not the functional equivalent of purchase 
finance arrangements can raise the same consumer protection concerns as 
category (ii) leases, it was appropriate to subject these additional 
leases to the Dodd-Frank Act provisions that apply to ``financial 
product[s] or service[s].'' The Bureau also noted that comprehensive 
coverage of automobile leasing would make the larger-participant rule 
easier to administer by eliminating uncertainty about which types of 
leasing activities are counted towards the larger-participant 
threshold.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \39\ 12 U.S.C. 5531. The proposed definition also would affect 
the scope of certain other Bureau authorities under title X of the 
Dodd-Frank Act. For example, the proposed definition would have an 
impact on: (1) the Bureau's rulemaking authority under section 1032 
of the Dodd-Frank Act, which authorizes the Bureau to prescribe 
rules to ensure that the features of any consumer financial product 
or service are fully, accurately, and effectively disclosed to 
consumers in a manner that permits consumers to understand the 
costs, benefits, and risks associated with the product or service; 
(2) the Bureau's authority under section 1022(c) of the Dodd-Frank 
Act to ``monitor for risks to consumers in the offering or provision 
of consumer financial products or services, including developments 
in markets for such products or services;'' and (3) the scope of the 
Bureau's authority under section 1033 of the Dodd-Frank Act to 
prescribe rules for covered persons with respect to consumer rights 
to access information concerning consumer financial products or 
services that the consumer received from such person.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Bureau received a number of comments relating to its 
interpretation of leases that fall within section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of 
the Dodd-Frank Act and to the proposed new definition under section 
1002(15)(A)(xi)(II). A consumer group agreed with the Bureau's 
interpretation that, from the perspective of the consumer, certain 
leases are the ``functional equivalent of purchase finance 
arrangements'' under section 1002(15)(A)(ii). The commenter reasoned 
that whether or not the transaction results in owning a car, consumers 
likely experience leases much in the same way as they do purchase 
loans. The commenter also noted that both are financial transactions 
paid by the consumer over a certain period of time, and both grant the 
consumer exclusive use and possession of an automobile. The commenter 
also supported the Bureau's inclusion under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) 
of certain other leases because those leases also have a material 
impact on consumers.
    Other commenters including several trade associations suggested 
that the Bureau erred in interpreting the phrase ``functional 
equivalent of purchase finance arrangements'' from the perspective of 
the consumer. These commenters argued that: (1) the Bureau's 
interpretation is inconsistent with prior judicial and prudential 
regulator interpretations that leases are only functionally equivalent 
to loans and/or credit where the residual value of the leased asset 
falls below a specified threshold; (2) contrary to the Bureau's 
interpretation, the term ``functional equivalent of purchase

[[Page 37501]]

finance arrangements'' requires that the lease result in the transfer 
of ownership; (3) the Bureau's interpretation is inconsistent with 
lease recharacterization provisions under the Truth in Lending Act 
(TILA), the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), and certain State laws; and 
(4) the Bureau's interpretation would confuse consumers. According to 
these commenters, under a correct interpretation of the term, most 
automobile leases would not qualify as functionally equivalent to 
purchase finance arrangements under section 1002(15)(A)(ii). The Bureau 
has considered each of these arguments and concludes that its 
interpretation of category (ii) leases, as laid out in the proposal, is 
reasonable and best fulfills the relevant purposes of the Dodd-Frank 
Act. The Bureau therefore adheres to that interpretation. Under that 
interpretation, most automobile leases qualify as section 
1002(15)(A)(ii) financial products or services.
    Commenters are correct in pointing out that the prudential 
regulators, as well as at least one court decision, have interpreted 
regulatory requirements that a lease offered by a financial institution 
be the ``functional equivalent'' of a loan and/or credit to impose 
limits on the residual value \40\ that the lessor may rely on for the 
return of its full investment.\41\ Notwithstanding this regulatory 
history, the Bureau does not believe that the phrase ``functional 
equivalent of purchase financing arrangements'' in section 
1002(15)(A)(ii) must be interpreted to impose a limit on the residual 
value of leased assets for category (ii) leases, and, thus (assuming 
most leases would exceed such limit), to exclude most automobile 
leases.\42\ It is not clear that Congress intended the interpretation 
of the phrase ``functional equivalent of purchase finance 
arrangements'' in section 1002(15)(A)(ii) to be controlled by the 
prudential regulators' and judicial interpretations raised by 
commenters and discussed above.\43\ Instead, the Bureau believes that 
the phrase ``functional equivalent of purchase finance arrangements'' 
is ambiguous and--in light of the Bureau's unique mission--is 
reasonably interpreted, from the perspective of the consumer, not to 
incorporate a limitation on the residual value of the leased item.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \40\ As noted above, the residual value is the projected market 
value of the vehicle at the end of the lease. See CFPB, Ask CFPB: 
What Is Residual Value? (June 24, 2012), available at http://www.consumerfinance.gov/askcfpb/737/what-residual-value.html.
    \41\ See M &M Leasing Corp. v. Seattle First Nat'l Bank, 563 
F.2d 1377, 1382 (9th Cir. 1977) (holding that, for a lease to be 
``functionally interchangeable'' with a loan, and thus permissible 
for a national bank to engage in as the ``business of banking'' 
under 12 U.S.C. 24(Seventh), the residual value of the item must 
``contribute[] insubstantially to the bank's recovery''); see also 
Fed. Reserve Bd., Revision of Regulation Y, 49 FR 794, 827 (Jan. 5, 
1984) (permitting bank holding companies to engage in leases that 
are the ``functional equivalent of an extension of credit'' and 
setting a residual value limit of 20 percent for those leases); 
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), Lease Financing 
Transactions, 56 FR 28314 (June 20, 1991) (adopting provision that 
permits national banks to engage in leasing with a residual value of 
25 percent or less as ``consistent with the parameters set forth in 
M & M Leasing''); 12 CFR 160.41 (OCC regulation for Federal savings 
associations setting a 25 percent residual value limit for leasing 
that is ``the functional equivalent of a loan''); Nat'l Credit Union 
Admin. Interpretive Rule and Policy Statement 83-3, 48 FR 52568 
(Nov. 21, 1983) (indicating that leases that, among other 
requirements, meet a 25 percent residual value limit are ``the 
functional equivalent of secured lending''); cf. Fed. Reserve Bd., 
Final Rule-Amendment to Regulation Y, 78 Fed. Reserve Bull. 548-49 
(July 1992) (permitting bank holding companies to invest up to 10 
percent of their assets in certain ``high residual value leasing,'' 
in which the residual value could be up to 100 percent and 
increasing the residual value limit for other leases to 25 percent); 
Fed. Reserve Bd., Amendment to Regulation Y, 62 FR 9290 (Feb. 28, 
1997) (eliminating functional equivalence and residual value 
requirements and noting that ``permissible high residual value 
leasing may not be the functional equivalent of an extension of 
credit'').
    \42\ Commenters assert that most auto leases would not be 
considered functionally equivalent to purchase finance arrangements 
if that term were interpreted to incorporate the residual value 
limits set by prudential regulators as discussed above. They also 
assert that vehicle residual values are typically in the range of 30 
to 50 percent of the Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price, which 
they describe as close to the adjusted capitalized cost in the 
lease.
    \43\ To support their argument that the Bureau should model its 
interpretation on that of the Federal banking regulators, commenters 
pointed to the Senate Report for the Senate bill that was the 
precursor to the Dodd-Frank Act. Commenters note that the report 
states that the definition of the phrase ``financial product or 
service'' in the Senate bill was ``modeled on the activities that 
are permissible for a bank or a bank holding company, such as under 
section 4(k) of the Bank Holding Company Act and implementing 
regulations.'' S. Rept. 111-176, at 159-60 (2010). Notably, the 
current regulation authorizing leasing activities for bank holding 
companies does not have a residual value requirement. See Fed. 
Reserve Bd., Amendment to Regulation Y, 62 FR 9290 (Feb. 28, 1997) 
(eliminating functional equivalence and residual value 
requirements).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    First, the phrase used in section 1002(15)(A)(ii)--``functional 
equivalent of purchase financing arrangements''--does not appear in any 
of the other statutes or regulations pertaining to the leasing 
activities of financial institutions. The prudential regulators and 
courts have consequently never addressed the meaning of that specific 
language. That Congress chose a phrase different from the language 
utilized by other regulators (e.g., the Office of the Comptroller of 
the Currency's ``functional equivalent of a loan'' \44\ or the Federal 
Reserve Board's ``functional equivalent of an extension of credit'' 
\45\) weighs against the contention that Congress intended for those 
specific interpretations to control the meaning of the term 
``functional equivalent of finance purchase arrangements'' in section 
1002(15)(A)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \44\ 12 CFR 160.41.
    \45\ As noted above, the Federal Reserve Board's leasing 
regulations included this language until 1997. See 62 FR 9290, 9306 
(1997).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Even if the ``functional equivalent'' language in section 
1002(15)(A)(ii) were identical to the language interpreted by the 
prudential regulators and judicial precedent to impose a residual value 
limit, the Bureau believes that the difference in the roles of the 
prudential regulators and the Bureau, and the different purposes of the 
provisions at issue, would make it reasonable for the Bureau to 
interpret the same language differently from those prior 
interpretations. In interpreting what leases might be the ``functional 
equivalent'' of a purchase finance arrangement, a key question is how 
the leases function and with respect to whom. The prudential 
regulators' primary role is to ensure safety and soundness of financial 
institutions by, among other things, serving as the gatekeepers of 
permissible banking activity. In light of this role, it made sense for 
prudential regulators to focus on how leases function vis-a-vis the 
financial institution and thus to consider primarily the risk posed to 
the financial stability of the institution when delineating permissible 
leasing activity. Accordingly, the prudential regulators deemed leases 
``functionally equivalent'' to credit transactions only when the lease 
and the loan created a similar level of risk to the institution, such 
as in the case of low residual value leasing.
    By contrast, Congress charged the Bureau with a different mission 
than the prudential regulators, and, accordingly, the Bureau believes 
that the ``functional equivalent'' language in section 1002(15)(A)(ii) 
of the Dodd-Frank Act should play a different role from the language 
governing the prudential regulators' leasing provisions. As set forth 
in the Dodd-Frank Act, the Bureau's purpose is to ``ensur[e] that all 
consumers have access to markets for consumer financial products and 
services and that markets for consumer financial products and services 
are fair, transparent, and competitive.'' \46\ The Bureau's objectives, 
moreover, include working to ensure that consumers are

[[Page 37502]]

provided with timely and understandable information to make responsible 
decisions about financial transactions and that they are protected from 
unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts and practices and from 
discrimination.\47\ Given the Bureau's responsibility to protect 
consumers in markets for financial products and services, the Bureau 
believes that its interpretation of section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the 
Dodd-Frank Act should focus on the similar ways in which leases and 
loans function for consumers. Placing limits on the interpretation of 
leasing activity that qualifies as a consumer financial product or 
service unrelated to the impact of that activity on consumers would 
create artificial barriers to consumer protection and would hinder the 
Bureau's ability to accomplish its purpose and objectives. The Bureau 
does not interpret the plain text of section 1002(15)(A)(ii) to impose 
such limits. For these reasons, the Bureau believes that analyzing 
whether leases are the ``functional equivalent of purchase finance 
arrangements'' from the perspective of the consumer, as set forth in 
the proposal, remains an appropriate inquiry and is a reasonable 
approach to interpreting an ambiguous statutory provision, as well as 
the approach best suited to the Bureau's purpose and objectives.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \46\ 12 U.S.C. 5511(a).
    \47\ 12 U.S.C. 5511(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Commenters also asserted that, even from the perspective of the 
consumer, a lease cannot be the ``functional equivalent of [a] purchase 
finance arrangement'' unless the lease agreement actually results in 
the acquisition or ownership of the leased item by the lessee at the 
end of the lease term. They argued that for a product to be 
functionally equivalent to a ``purchase finance arrangement'' it must 
necessarily result in a ``purchase.'' They further stated that the core 
function of a purchase finance arrangement is to finance the 
acquisition of ownership, and that any product or service that lacks 
this specific function, cannot be said to be functionally equivalent to 
such an arrangement. Along similar lines, commenters maintained that 
the Bureau's approach is in fundamental conflict with provisions under 
the UCC \48\ and TILA \49\ that respectively provide that a lease 
creates a security interest or is a credit sale where the lessee has 
the option to become the owner of the property for nominal or no 
consideration upon compliance with the contract.\50\ Commenters 
maintained that, for consistency with these analogous standards, most 
automobile leases should not be treated as the functional equivalent of 
purchase finance arrangements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \48\ See UCC Sec.  1-203 (stating that ``[a] transaction in the 
form of a lease creates a security interest'' if, among other 
things, ``the lessee has an option to become the owner of the goods 
for no additional consideration or for nominal additional 
consideration upon compliance with the lease agreement'').
    \49\ See 15 U.S.C. 1602(h) (defining ``credit sale'' to include 
a lease if, among other things, ``it is agreed that the bailee or 
lessee will become, or for no other or a nominal consideration has 
the option to become, the owner of the property upon full compliance 
with his obligations under the contract'').
    \50\ Commenters also invoked similar provisions under State 
laws. See California Automobile Sales Finance Act, Cal. Civ. Code 
Sec.  2981(a) (defining ``conditional sale'' to include ``[a] 
contract for the bailment of a motor vehicle between a buyer and a 
seller, with or without accessories, by which the bailee or lessee 
agrees to pay as compensation for use a sum substantially equivalent 
to or in excess of the aggregate value of the vehicle and its 
accessories, if any, at the time the contract is executed, and by 
which it is agreed that the bailee or lessee will become, or for no 
other or for a nominal consideration has the option of becoming, the 
owner of the vehicle upon full compliance with the terms of the 
contract''); New York Motor Vehicle Retail Instalment Sales Act, 
N.Y. Pers. Prop. Law Sec.  301(5); Texas Motor Vehicle Installment 
Sales Provisions, Tex. Fin. Code Sec.  348.002.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Bureau does not disagree with commenters that the phrase 
``purchase finance arrangement'' suggests financing used for a 
purchase. However, the touchstone of the relevant requirement of 
section 1002(15)(A)(ii) is not whether a lease is a ``purchase finance 
arrangement,'' but rather whether the two are functionally equivalent. 
The Bureau does not believe that transfer of ownership or the option to 
acquire a vehicle for nominal or no consideration is a necessary 
hallmark of functional equivalence under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) or 
that most automobile leases therefore do not qualify as functionally 
equivalent to purchase finance arrangements.\51\ With respect to real 
property leases, section 1002(15)(A)(ii)(III) imposes an additional 
condition necessary to qualify as a financial product or service on top 
of the functional equivalence test applicable to all leases: That such 
leases be intended to result in ownership of the leased property to be 
transferred to the lessee. If the functional equivalence standard were 
only met where a lease resulted in a transfer of ownership at the end 
of the lease term, there would have been no reason for Congress to 
impose this separate requirement with respect to real property leases. 
Likewise, that Congress chose to impose such a requirement only with 
respect to real property leases suggests that Congress did not intend 
to impose a similar ownership requirement on other leases.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \51\ Notably, none of the prudential regulators' provisions 
discussed above pertaining to leases that are the functional 
equivalent of credit require that the lease result in the transfer 
of ownership.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Nor are the UCC, TILA, and other similar provisions invoked by 
commenters instructive. These provisions seek to identify financial 
arrangements that are labeled as leases but are in fact disguised 
security interests or credit sales.\52\ Section 1002(15)(A)(ii) by 
contrast is appropriately understood to encompass leases that are 
``functional[ly] equivalent'' to, though in fact distinct from, 
purchase finance arrangements. As noted in the proposal, the Bureau 
believes that one feature of most leases that makes them functionally 
equivalent to purchase finance arrangements is that the consumer can 
typically purchase the vehicle at the end of the lease term for a pre-
determined amount, which is generally based on the residual value of 
the vehicle. This feature provides the opportunity for ownership, which 
from the consumer's perspective contributes to making a lease 
``functionally equivalent'' to a purchase finance arrangement even if 
the consumer chooses not to acquire the vehicle (and a transfer of 
ownership therefore does not result) and even though more than nominal 
consideration must be paid for the purchase.\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \52\ Commenters relying on these provisions pointed to 
legislative history characterizing the TILA provision as intended to 
``include leases, only if they are, in essence, disguised sale 
arrangements.'' See H. Rept. No. 90-1040, at 23 (1967).
    \53\ Commenters point out that, under the UCC provision, aspects 
of leases such as the option to purchase for market value or higher, 
the assumption of risk of loss, and the payment of maintenance and 
other costs, are not sufficient to create a security interest. See 
UCC Sec.  1-203(c). They therefore argue that the Bureau's reliance 
on such similarities for its functional equivalence analysis is 
flawed. For the reasons discussed above, the Bureau does not find 
the UCC provision to be instructive of the correct interpretation of 
section 1002(15)(A)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Commenters further suggested that interpreting an automobile lease 
to be functionally equivalent to a purchase finance arrangement may 
cause consumer confusion about the difference between an automobile 
lease and an automobile loan. The Bureau does not think that these 
concerns are warranted. Consumers are unlikely to rely on this rule as 
a source of information on automobile leases. However, even if 
consumers do so, the Bureau does not take the position here that 
automobile leases and purchase finance arrangements are identical. 
Rather, the discussion above specifically explains that the two are 
``functionally equivalent'' for the reasons identified, though they 
remain distinct products.\54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \54\ In the unlikely event that consumer confusion arises as a 
result of this rule, the Bureau believes that it can resolve this 
confusion through appropriate consumer-facing documents.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 37503]]

    Having considered the comments discussed above, the Bureau adheres 
to its position in the proposal that it is reasonable, and best suited 
to the Bureau's purpose and objectives, to assess the functional 
equivalence requirement from the perspective of the consumer. For the 
reasons set forth in the proposal and relayed above, the Bureau 
believes that, from the consumer's perspective, most automobile leases 
are therefore functionally equivalent to purchase finance 
arrangements.\55\ Accordingly, the Bureau believes that interpreting 
the phrase ``functional equivalent of purchase finance arrangements'' 
in section 1002(15)(A)(ii) from the perspective of the consumer to 
include most automobile leases is both a reasonable interpretation of 
the statutory language and the interpretation that best fulfills the 
relevant purposes of the Dodd-Frank Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \55\ The Federal Reserve Board noted similarities between auto 
leases and loans in its 1976 statement Automobile Leasing as an 
Activity for Bank Holding Companies, 62 Fed. Reserve Bull. 928 (Nov. 
1976). The Board discussed advocates' arguments about the 
similarities:
    Those parties to the proceeding in favor of the performance of 
the activity by bank holding companies (generally hereafter 
``proponents'') argued that leasing is essentially a financial 
transaction since it is an alternate method of financing the 
purchase of an automobile without the necessity of a large initial 
down payment. Thus, to the customer it is a means of obtaining the 
possession and use of an automobile through deferred payment. To the 
bank it is another in a spectrum of methods of new car financing 
that includes instalment credit transactions, floor planning and 
commercial lending to independent lessors.
    Id. at 931-32. The Board also separately recognized ``many'' 
other similarities between leases and loans: In each case there is a 
sum certain in amount. This sum includes the acquisition cost of the 
vehicle and the cost of financing and is recovered through a 
schedule of noncancellable deferred payments. The term of the 
payment period in both cases is 24 to 36, or recently to 48 months. 
The vehicle serves as a type of collateral to guarantee payment on 
both the instalment loan and the lease. Both forms of financing are 
applied to a specific automobile that is chosen prior to preparation 
of the document . . . All attributes of ownership pass to the lessee 
who is responsible for servicing, insurance, and depreciation.
    Id. at 932.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Bureau received no comments challenging its assertion that most 
automobile leases meet the other two requirements of section 
1002(15)(A)(ii) for personal property leases--that is, that they have 
terms longer than 90 days and are non-operating. The Bureau adheres to 
its position that most automobile leases meet these requirements. For 
the foregoing reasons, the Bureau continues to believe that most 
automobile leases qualify as financial products or services under 
section 1002(15)(A)(ii).
    The Bureau also received a number of comments regarding its 
decision to define certain leases as financial products or services 
under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the Dodd-Frank Act. Commenters did 
not dispute the Bureau's assertion that national banks may offer or 
provide such leases under CEBA. Commenters also did not dispute the 
Bureau's assertion that invoking authority under section 
1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) to define CEBA leases as financial products or 
services would make the larger-participant rule easier to administer.
    However, the Bureau received comments stating that the Bureau may 
not or should not rely on its authority under section 
1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) with respect to automobile leases that are not the 
functional equivalent of purchase finance arrangements. Those comments 
argued that: (1) The Bureau failed to provide a proper record for its 
definition of automobile leases as financial products or services under 
section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II); (2) the Bureau underestimated the number 
of leases that would be covered by that definition; (3) the Bureau has 
not demonstrated that leases covered by the definition will have a 
material impact on consumers as a whole; (4) because Congress already 
defined some leases as financial products or services under section 
1002(15)(A)(ii), the Bureau lacks authority under section 
1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) to define additional leases as financial products 
or services; and (5) expansion of the Bureau's authority over 
automobile leasing is unnecessary because automobile leases are 
sufficiently regulated.\56\ The Bureau has considered each of these 
arguments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \56\ One commenter also stated that the Bureau has not provided 
an accurate statement of its definition. As noted in the proposal 
and reiterated above, the Bureau is defining as financial products 
or services extending or brokering any automobile leases where the 
lease: (1) Qualifies as a full-payout lease and a net lease, as 
provided by 12 CFR 23.3(a), and has an initial term of not less than 
90 days, as provided by 12 CFR 23.11; and (2) is not a financial 
product or service under section 1002(15)(A)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    With regard to the comment that the Bureau has failed to provide a 
proper record to support its definition of certain automobile leases as 
financial products or services under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II), the 
Bureau believes that it has appropriately met the two-part showing 
required under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II): That the financial product 
or service may be offered by banks and has (or likely will have) a 
material impact on consumers.
    For the reasons set forth in the proposal, the Bureau finds that 
the leases falling within proposed and final Sec.  1001.2(a) may be 
offered by banks under Federal law. As noted above and in the proposal, 
CEBA allows banks to offer certain automobile leases even when they are 
not the functional equivalent of purchase finance arrangements.\57\ 
Section 1001.2(a) defines as a financial product or service extending 
or offering only those leases that banks may offer under CEBA and that 
are not financial products or services under section 1002(15)(A)(ii).
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    \57\ The purpose of section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) is to help 
ensure that the Bureau has jurisdiction over consumer financial 
products or services that banks may offer (if they have or likely 
will have a material impact on consumers). It thus bears noting that 
banks have long had authority to offer automobile leases regardless 
of whether they are the functional equivalent of purchase finance 
arrangements. As discussed in the proposal, in 1987, Congress passed 
CEBA, which allows national banks to invest up to 10 percent of 
their assets in personal property leases, including vehicle leases, 
without regard to the residual value of the leased asset and without 
a functional equivalence requirement. Public Law 100-86, 101 Stat. 
552 (1987); see also 12 CFR 23.2(c). For its part, the Federal 
Reserve Board (Board), in 1997, amended its leasing provisions under 
Regulation Y to eliminate the ``functional equivalent of an 
extension of credit'' requirement as well as any limitations on the 
residual value of the leased item for permissible leasing 
activities. 62 FR 9290 (Feb. 28, 1997). Even before this amendment, 
which eliminated the functional equivalence test, beginning in 1992, 
Board regulations permitted bank holding companies to invest up to 
10 percent of their assets in certain ``high residual value 
leasing,'' in which the residual value could be up to 100 percent. 
Final Rule-Amendment to Regulation Y, 78 Fed. Reserve Bull. 548-49 
(July 1992). Board regulations now allow bank holding companies to 
issue any non-operating leases of personal property with terms 
greater than 90 days. 12 CFR 225.28(b)(3). Accordingly, to the 
extent that certain automobile leases that may be offered by banks 
are not already covered by section 1002(15)(A)(ii), it nonetheless 
is appropriate for them to be covered by section 
1002(15)(A)(xi)(II).
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    The Bureau also finds that all CEBA automobile leases have a 
material impact on consumers even if they are not the functional 
equivalent of purchase finance arrangements. Access to a vehicle is 
critical for consumers, and consumers are increasingly turning to 
leasing as a means to obtain possession and use of a vehicle. For 
consumers who choose to lease an automobile, the lease is a significant 
financial obligation. The average monthly payment for new leases as of 
the fourth quarter of 2014 was $408, and the average lease term was 35 
months (with nearly two-thirds of lease terms between 25 and 36 
months).\58\ Furthermore, an automobile lease can have significant 
consequences for a consumer's financial well-being. Because consumers 
rely on automobiles for their transportation needs and because--as 
explained above--automobile leases carry significant risks

[[Page 37504]]

to and obligations of the consumer, any act or practice that impedes 
access to a vehicle or otherwise creates problems related to the 
leasing arrangement can have a critical impact on consumers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \58\ Zabritski, supra note 33, at 20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Indeed, Congress, in enacting the Consumer Leasing Act of 1976 
(CLA),\59\ recognized the impact that automobile leases have on 
consumers. In issuing the statute nearly 30 years ago, Congress noted 
that ``there has been a recent trend toward leasing automobiles and 
other durable goods for consumer use as an alternative to installment 
credit sales and that these leases have been offered without adequate 
cost disclosures.'' \60\ Given the recent growth of automobile leasing 
and the importance of automobile leases to a consumer's financial well-
being, Congress' finding in the CLA that automobile leases can pose 
risks to consumers is even truer today. The CLA establishes, among 
other things, disclosure requirements pertaining to lease costs and 
terms, limitations on the size of penalties for delinquency or default 
and on the size of lessee's residual liabilities, and disclosure 
requirements for lease advertising.\61\ These consumer protections 
further highlight Congress' recognition of the many ways in which 
leases can significantly impact consumers' financial well-being. For 
these reasons, the Bureau finds that all automobile leases under 
proposed and final Sec.  1001.2(a) have a material impact on consumers 
irrespective of whether they are the functional equivalent of purchase 
finance arrangements.\62\
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    \59\ Public Law 94-240, 90 Stat. 257 (codified as amended at 15 
U.S.C. 1667-1667f).
    \60\ 15 U.S.C. 1601(b).
    \61\ 15 U.S.C. 1667a-1667c.
    \62\ Section 1002(A)(xi)(II) requires the Bureau to find that a 
financial product or service ``has, or likely will have, a material 
impact on consumers.'' For the same reasons that support the 
Bureau's finding above that all automobile leases under Sec.  
1001.2(a) have a material impact on consumers, the Bureau also finds 
that all automobile leases under Sec.  1001.2(a) likely will have a 
material impact on consumers.
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    Commenters also suggested that the Bureau overestimated the number 
of leases that are financial products or services under section 
1002(15)(A)(ii) and that, as a result, section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) 
would have to be the primary basis for defining automobile leases as 
financial products or services. The Bureau does not agree with the 
premise of this comment. As explained above, the Bureau believes that 
section 1002(15)(A)(ii) should be interpreted from the perspective of 
the consumer and would thus cover most consumer automobile leases. 
However, even if the commenter were correct that section 
1002(15)(A)(ii) covered no or very few automobile leases, the Bureau 
believes that its definition under Sec.  1001.2(a) would nevertheless 
be authorized under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II). As noted above, the 
Bureau has found that banks may offer automobile leases under CEBA even 
if they are not the functional equivalent of purchase finance 
arrangements. This is true irrespective of the number of leases that 
fall under section 1002(15)(A)(ii). The Bureau has also found that all 
CEBA automobile leases--regardless of whether they are the functional 
equivalent of purchase finance arrangements--have a material impact on 
consumers. The need for the Bureau's definition under section 
1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) would only be magnified if the Bureau 
overestimated, as the commenter suggested, the number of leases that 
already qualify as financial products or services under section 
1002(15)(A)(ii). Therefore, even if the Bureau's interpretation that 
section 1002(15)(A)(ii) covers most automobile leases were erroneous, 
the Bureau's findings and exercise of its authority under section 
1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) in this rulemaking would be sufficient to define 
all automobile leases that banks may offer under CEBA, and that are not 
already covered under section 1002(15)(A)(ii), as financial products or 
services.
    A commenter also suggested that because the Bureau's proposed 
definition under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) would apply to a small 
number of automobile leases, the Bureau has not demonstrated that these 
leases will have a material impact on consumers as a whole. As the 
Bureau understands it, the premise of this comment is that section 
1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) requires the Bureau to find that a financial 
product or service has a ``material impact'' on consumers in the 
aggregate rather than on individual consumers. The Bureau believes that 
it appropriately demonstrated material impact as required under section 
1002(15)(A)(xi)(II). Nothing in section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) requires 
the Bureau, in defining a financial product or service, to find that it 
has a material impact on consumers in the aggregate.\63\ The provision 
does not define the term ``material impact on consumers,'' nor does it 
state how the Bureau must assess a financial product or service's 
``material impact on consumers.'' The ordinary meaning of the term 
``material impact'' is also vague.\64\ In light of these ambiguities, 
the Bureau believes that a product may have a ``material impact on 
consumers'' in the aggregate, individually, or both. In the Bureau's 
view, this interpretation of the applicable standard is essential to 
provide comprehensive coverage of financial products or services 
offered or provided by banks that could materially affect the financial 
well-being of consumers, either individually or in the aggregate.
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    \63\ At any rate, the Bureau notes that leasing is, as a general 
matter, an important and growing part of the automobile financing 
market for consumers. While the automobile financing market is 
largely comprised of purchase loans, in recent years consumers have 
begun to migrate more towards leasing agreements. As of the fourth 
quarter of 2014, leases comprised approximately 30 percent of new 
vehicle automotive financing transactions, which is up from about 20 
percent at the end of 2009. See Zabritski, supra note 33, at 16. 
Furthermore, of all new and used automobile financing transactions 
recorded in the fourth quarter of 2014, approximately 14 percent 
occurred through leasing arrangements, while the remainder used 
purchase financing. See id.
    \64\ For instance, the Oxford English Dictionary includes 
several definitions of the word ``material,'' including ``of serious 
or substantial import; significant, important, of consequence.'' 
Oxford University Press, OED Online (2015), available at http://www.oed.com. It also defines ``impact'' as ``the effective action of 
one thing or person upon another; the effect of such action; 
influence; impression.'' Id.
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    A commenter suggested that because Congress already defined some 
leases as financial products or services under section 1002(15)(A)(ii), 
the Bureau lacks authority under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) to define 
additional leases as financial products or services. However, there is 
no indication that Congress intended for the categories of financial 
products or services defined in section 1002(15)(A)(i)-(x) to serve as 
a limit on the types of other financial products or services that the 
Bureau may define under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II). Congress itself 
decided to define a number of specific financial products or services 
as areas of special interest to Congress for regulation and oversight 
by the Bureau, but it also vested the Bureau with broad discretionary 
rulemaking authority to define ``other'' financial products or services 
to fill any gaps left by Congress where the two conditions of section 
1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) are met. The Bureau believes that, in order to best 
fulfill the purposes of the Dodd-Frank Act and to provide comprehensive 
protections for consumers, its authority in section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) 
should allow it to define a new financial product or service even if it 
is within the same category as a product or service defined in section 
1002(15)(A)(i)-(x). In other words, although Congress defined certain 
leases as financial products or services in section 1002(15)(A)(ii), 
the Bureau is free to define ``other'' leases as financial products or 
services under

[[Page 37505]]

section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II), as long as it makes the requisite 
findings. The Bureau believes that a contrary interpretation would 
artificially limit the scope of section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) and would 
leave some financial activities that are important to consumers under-
regulated for purposes of the Dodd-Frank Act.
    As further discussed above, those conditions are met with respect 
to the automobile leasing activities described under Sec.  1001.2(a). 
And the Bureau is not seeking to define under section 
1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) activities that already qualify as financial 
products or services under section 1002(15)(A)(i)-(x) or to modify the 
definition of leasing activities described under section 
1002(15)(A)(ii). To the contrary, the Bureau is defining ``other'' 
financial products or services and has expressly carved out from its 
definition in Sec.  1001.2(a) financial products or services already 
covered under section 1002(15)(A)(ii).
    Finally, one commenter generally suggested that expansion of the 
Bureau's authority over automobile leasing is unnecessary because, in 
the commenter's view, automobile leases are sufficiently regulated. 
This commenter noted that the Bureau administers and enforces the CLA 
and its implementing Regulation M, which cover automobile leases. The 
commenter also noted that automobile leases are subject to section 5 of 
the Federal Trade Commission Act, which prohibits unfair or deceptive 
acts or practices. The commenter further highlighted that the Federal 
prudential regulators may supervise banks for compliance with section 5 
with respect to automobile leasing activities.
    The Bureau agrees that the existing regulatory framework governing 
automobile leasing is important, but the Bureau believes this framework 
would best protect consumers when applied in conjunction with the 
Bureau's particular authorities under title X. Those authorities 
include authority to supervise nonbank ``larger participant[s]'' in 
markets for consumer financial products or services, 12 U.S.C. 
5514(a)(1)(B); to prohibit unfair, deceptive, and abusive acts or 
practices; to monitor markets for a consumer financial product or 
service, 12 U.S.C. 5512(c)(1); to require disclosures regarding the 
features of a consumer financial product or service, 12 U.S.C. 5532(a); 
and to prescribe rules for consumers to seek information concerning a 
consumer financial product or service they have obtained, 12 U.S.C. 
5533(a). The Bureau believes that these title X-specific authorities 
are necessary to ensure a fair, transparent, and competitive market for 
consumer automobile leasing. The Bureau further notes that the 
existence of the complementary regulatory framework noted by the 
commenter is not unique to automobile leasing. Numerous products that 
qualify as financial products or services under title X and are thus 
subject to the Bureau's title X authorities also fall under one or more 
``enumerated consumer laws'' \65\ and are subject to section 5 of the 
Federal Trade Commission Act. Title X requires the Bureau to coordinate 
with other Federal regulators to ``promote consistent regulatory 
treatment,'' \66\ and sets forth specific procedures for coordination 
between the Bureau and the Federal Trade Commission.\67\ The Bureau 
takes these coordination obligations seriously and believes that they 
will ensure optimal synergies between the Bureau's authorities and the 
existing regulatory structure. For all these reasons, the Bureau adopts 
Sec.  1001.2(a) essentially as proposed with one minor clarificatory 
addition.\68\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \65\ 12 U.S.C. 5481(12).
    \66\ 12 U.S.C. 5495.
    \67\ See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. 5493(b)(3), 5512(c)(6)(C), 5514(a)(2), 
5514(c)(3).
    \68\ The Final Rule also includes a clarifying change in the 
wording of Sec.  1001.2(a). This change from the proposal does not 
have any substantive effect.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. 12 CFR Part 1090--Defining Larger Participants of Certain Consumer 
Financial Product and Service Markets

Section 1090.101--Definitions
    The Bureau proposed to make a technical correction to the 
definition of ``nonbank covered person'' in Sec.  1090.101 by 
substituting the term ``consumer financial product or service'' for 
``consumer product or service'' where it appears. The Bureau did not 
receive any comments on this change and is finalizing Sec.  1090.101 as 
proposed.
Section 1090.104 Consumer Reporting Market
104(a) Market-Related Definitions
104(a), Paragraph (iii)(D) of the Definition of ``Annual Receipts''--
``Annual Receipts of Affiliated Companies''
    The Bureau proposed to make a technical correction to paragraph 
(iii)(D) of the definition of ``annual receipts'' in Sec.  1090.104(a), 
which governs how the affiliate aggregation rules apply to formerly 
affiliated companies for purposes of the Consumer Reporting Rule. The 
correction clarifies that if a company is an affiliated company of the 
nonbank covered person during the relevant measurement period but 
ceases to be an affiliated company during the same period, the annual 
receipts of the nonbank covered person and the formerly affiliated 
company must be aggregated for the entire period of measurement. As 
noted below, the Bureau proposed to make the same change to paragraph 
(iii)(D) of the definition of ``annual receipts'' in Sec.  1090.105(a) 
in the Consumer Debt Collection Rule. For the reasons explained below, 
the Bureau is finalizing these changes as proposed.\69\
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    \69\ The Final Rule also includes a clarifying change in the 
wording of the first sentence of paragraph (iii)(D) of the 
definition of ``annual receipts'' in Sec.  1090.104(a). This change 
from the proposal does not have any substantive effect.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Under section 1024(a)(3)(B) of the Dodd-Frank Act, the activities 
of affiliated companies are to be aggregated for purposes of computing 
activity levels for the larger-participant rules. In the Consumer 
Reporting and Consumer Debt Collection Rules, the Bureau implemented 
the aggregation called for by section 1024(a)(3)(B) by prescribing the 
addition of all the receipts of a nonbank covered person and its 
affiliated companies to produce the nonbank covered person's annual 
receipts.\70\ The Bureau prescribed similar calculations for account 
volume in the Student Loan Servicing Rule and for aggregate annual 
international money transfers in the International Money Transfer 
Rule.\71\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \70\ 12 CFR 1090.104(a), .105(a).
    \71\ 12 CFR 1090.106(a), .107(a).
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    The affiliate aggregation provisions of each of the larger-
participant rules address circumstances where a company becomes 
affiliated with a nonbank covered person or ceases to be affiliated 
with the nonbank covered person during the relevant measurement 
period.\72\ The Bureau believes it is appropriate in both circumstances 
to aggregate the activity of the company with that of the nonbank 
covered person for the entire period of measurement, even though the 
company was an affiliated company of the nonbank covered person for 
only part of the measurement period.
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    \72\ This aspect is addressed in paragraphs (iii)(B) and 
(iii)(D) of the definition of ``annual receipts'' in Sec.  
1090.104(a), paragraphs (iii)(B) and (iii)(D) of the definition of 
``annual receipts'' in Sec.  1090.105(a), paragraphs (iii)(B) and 
(iii)(C) of the definition of ``account volume'' in Sec.  
1090.106(a), and paragraph (iii)(B) of the definition of ``aggregate 
annual international money transfers'' in Sec.  1090.107(a).
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    This is the approach used in the Student Loan Servicing Rule's 
definition of ``account volume'' and the International Money Transfer 
Rule's definition of ``aggregate annual

[[Page 37506]]

international money transfers.'' \73\ It is also the approach that the 
Bureau intended to adopt in the Consumer Reporting and Consumer Debt 
Collection Rules. However, the language addressing aggregation of 
formerly affiliated companies in the definition of ``annual receipts'' 
in those rules is unclear.\74\ To clarify the operation of those 
paragraphs, the Bureau proposed to replace the final sentence of 
paragraph (iii)(D) of the definition of ``annual receipts'' in Sec.  
1090.104(a) and Sec.  1090.105(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \73\ Paragraph (iii)(C) of the definition of ``account volume'' 
in Sec.  1090.106(a) provides: ``If two affiliated companies cease 
to be affiliated companies, the number of accounts of each continues 
to be included in the other's account volume until the succeeding 
December 31.'' Paragraph (iii)(B) of the definition of ``aggregate 
annual international money transfers'' in Sec.  1090.107(a) 
provides:
    The annual international money transfers of a nonbank covered 
person must be aggregated with the annual international money 
transfers of any person that was an affiliated company of the 
nonbank covered person at any time during the preceding calendar 
year. The annual international money transfers of the nonbank 
covered person and its affiliated companies are aggregated for the 
entire preceding calendar year, even if the affiliation did not 
exist for the entire calendar year.
    \74\ Paragraph (iii)(D) of the definition of ``annual receipts'' 
in both Sec.  1090.104(a) and Sec.  1090.105(a) provides:
    The annual receipts of a formerly affiliated company are not 
included if affiliation ceased before the applicable period of 
measurement as set forth in paragraph (ii) of this definition. This 
exclusion of annual receipts of formerly affiliated companies 
applies during the entire period of measurement, rather than only 
for the period after which affiliation ceased.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Only one commenter addressed this proposed technical correction. An 
industry trade association urged the Bureau not to use this rulemaking 
to make changes to the larger-participant rules for the consumer 
reporting and consumer debt collection markets. It stated that doing so 
would undermine transparency and public participation in the rulemaking 
process. This commenter acknowledged that the proposed change may be 
simpler for the Bureau but suggested that it may be difficult for 
companies to secure necessary financial records from entities with 
which they are no longer affiliated.
    The Bureau believes that when companies have been affiliated at any 
time during the measurement period it is simplest and most appropriate 
to aggregate annual receipts corresponding to the entire measurement 
period. As explained above, doing so will promote consistency across 
the larger-participant rules and will make the handling of formerly 
affiliated companies more consistent with the approach taken for newly 
affiliated companies in the Consumer Reporting and Consumer Debt 
Collection Rules. It may also avoid administrative difficulties 
associated with part-year calculations of annual receipts in some 
instances.
    The Bureau provided the public with notice of these proposed 
changes and an opportunity to comment in the proposal that was 
published in the Federal Register on October 8, 2014. The proposal 
described the changes in the summary and discussed them in full in the 
section-by-section analysis. In addition, the amended regulation was 
provided for commenters to review. In suggesting that this change will 
burden companies by requiring them to obtain information from their 
former affiliates, the commenter may have been assuming that companies 
will need to calculate whether they are larger participants. However, 
as the Bureau has explained in prior larger-participant rulemakings, 
the larger-participant rules do not require such a calculation. 
Generally, an entity will need to calculate its annual receipts only if 
it decides to dispute that it is a larger participant when the Bureau 
initiates supervision activity, such as an examination or a requirement 
that the company provide reports to the Bureau. Under rare 
circumstances such as this, the Bureau does not believe it would be 
difficult for a nonbank covered person to obtain information regarding 
the annual receipts of companies with which it was recently 
affiliated.\75\
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    \75\ Participants seeking to self-assess could also arrange to 
obtain information relevant to the threshold in advance of ending 
such an affiliation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Section 1090.105 Consumer Debt Collection Market
105(a) Market-Related Definitions
105(a), Paragraph (iii)(D) of the Definition of ``Annual Receipts''--
``Annual Receipts of Affiliated Companies''
    The Bureau proposed to amend the final sentence of paragraph 
(iii)(D) of Sec.  1090.105(a)'s definition of ``annual receipts'' to 
clarify that if a company is an affiliated company of the nonbank 
covered person during the relevant measurement period but ceases to be 
an affiliated company during the same period, the annual receipts of 
the nonbank covered person and the formerly affiliated company must be 
aggregated for the entire period of measurement. For the same reasons 
described above with respect to Sec.  1090.104(a), the Bureau is 
finalizing the changes to Sec.  1090.105(a) as proposed.\76\
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    \76\ The Final Rule also includes a clarifying change in the 
wording of the first sentence of paragraph (iii)(D) of the 
definition of ``annual receipts'' in Sec.  1090.105(a). This change 
from the proposal does not have any substantive effect.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Section 1090.108 Automobile Financing Market
    Section 1090.108 relates to automobile financing. Autos have become 
indispensable for most working individuals, with nearly 90 percent of 
the workforce commuting to work by car, truck, or van, and most driving 
alone.\77\ Autos are also commonly used for other purposes that are 
important to consumers, such as transportation to school or healthcare 
providers, travel, and recreation. Consumers' reliance on vehicles is 
underscored by recent studies on repayment patterns, which show that 
consumers pay their auto loans before other secured and unsecured 
debt.\78\ Auto loans are the third largest category of outstanding 
household debt, behind mortgage and student loans. In the fourth 
quarter of 2014, Experian Automotive estimated that consumers in the 
United States had auto loans valued at roughly $886 billion.\79\
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    \77\ See Brian McKenzie & Melanie Rapino, U.S. Census Bureau, 
Commuting in the United States: 2009, at 2 (2011), http://www.census.gov/prod/2011pubs/acs-15.pdf.
    \78\ See TransUnion, 2014 Payment Hierarchy Study (2014), 
available at http://media.marketwire.com/attachments/201403/233081_PaymentHierarchyInfographic2014FINAL.jpg & http://www.transunioninsights.com/studies/behaviorstudy.
    \79\ Zabritski, supra note 33, at 6. An Equifax report estimated 
that the total number of outstanding loans exceeded 65 million in 
2014 and that the total balance of outstanding auto loans was $924.2 
billion in August 2014. See Equifax, Auto Market Revels in Record 
Vehicle Loan Totals: A Breakdown of the Recent National Consumer 
Credit Trends Report (Nov. 10, 2014), available at http://insight.equifax.com/auto-market-revels-in-record-vehicle-loan-totals-a-breakdown-of-the-recent-national-consumer-credit-trends-report/. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York estimated that 
consumers in the United States had 87.4 million outstanding auto 
loans valued at nearly $900 billion as of the first quarter of 2014. 
Fed. Reserve Bank of N.Y., Quarterly Report on Household Debt and 
Credit (May 2014), available at http://www.newyorkfed.org/householdcredit/2014-q1/data/pdf/HHDC_2014Q1.pdf & http://www.ny.frb.org/householdcredit/2014-q4/data/xls/HHD_C_Report_2014Q4.xlsx. For purposes of these statistics, the 
Federal Reserve Bank of New York defines ``auto loans'' as ``loans 
taken out to purchase a car, including Auto Bank loans provided by 
banking institutions (banks, credit unions, savings and loan 
associations), and Auto Finance loans, provided by automobile 
dealers and automobile financing companies.'' In a technical 
comment, one industry trade association noted that the proposal's 
Supplementary Information refers to dealers giving ``loans'' and 
asserted that dealers in fact sell a vehicle through an installment 
contract rather than giving loans. Unless otherwise indicated, the 
term ``auto loan'' is used throughout this preamble to include 
credit extended through installment sales contracts as well as other 
types of financing.
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    While a significant number of consumers obtain credit to purchase

[[Page 37507]]

their autos,\80\ in recent years, consumers have begun to migrate more 
toward leasing agreements. Leasing is growing quickly as a proportion 
of new vehicle financing.\81\
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    \80\ In addition to financing the initial acquisition of an 
auto, some consumers refinance their existing auto loans. Consumers 
typically refinance their auto loans to lower their interest rates 
in order to achieve lower monthly payments. The level of refinancing 
depends on trends in interest rate levels over the term for most 
auto loans, which ranges from three to seven years.
    \81\ As stated above, at the end of the fourth quarter of 2014, 
leases comprised approximately 30 percent of new vehicle automotive 
financing transactions, which is up from about 21 percent five years 
earlier. See Zabritski, supra note 33, at 16.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Recognizing the significant impact that automobile financing has on 
consumers' lives, the Bureau proposed to identify a market for 
automobile financing. Commenters generally supported the Bureau's 
identification of an automobile financing market, although some raised 
specific concerns regarding the scope of the market that are discussed 
in the section-by-section analysis of Sec.  1090.108(a) and (b) below. 
Because automobile financing is an important activity that affects 
millions of consumers, the Bureau believes that supervision will be 
beneficial to both consumers and the market as a whole. Supervision of 
larger participants in the automobile financing market will help the 
Bureau ensure that these market participants are complying with 
applicable Federal consumer financial law and thereby will further the 
Bureau's mission to ensure consumers' access to fair, transparent, and 
competitive markets for consumer financial products and services.
    The automobile financing market identified by the Final Rule 
includes: (1) Specialty finance companies; (2) ``captive'' nonbanks 
(commonly referred to as ``captives''); and (3) Buy Here Pay Here 
(BHPH) finance companies.\82\ Specialty financing companies serve 
consumers in specialized markets. Many of these companies focus on 
providing financing to subprime borrowers who tend to have past credit 
problems, lower income, or limited credit histories, which prevent them 
from being able to obtain financing elsewhere.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \82\ Although dealers may also engage in some automobile 
financing activities, they are not included for purposes of this 
discussion of market participants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Generally, captives are subsidiary finance companies owned by auto 
manufacturers. They provide consumers with financing for the primary 
purpose of facilitating their parent companies' and associated 
franchised dealers' auto sales.
    Some BHPH finance companies are similar to captives in that they 
are associated with certain dealers. BHPH dealers traditionally focus 
on subprime and deep subprime borrowers. While BHPH dealers are mostly 
independently-owned entities that serve as the primary lender and 
receive payments directly from consumers, some larger BHPH dealers will 
sell or assign their contracts to specific BHPH finance companies once 
the contract has been consummated with the consumer. Unlike captives, 
these BHPH finance companies do not focus on a particular auto 
manufacturer.\83\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \83\ Typically, only after the BHPH dealer assesses a consumer's 
creditworthiness and determines the maximum monthly payment based on 
that creditworthiness does the dealer present auto options.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    According to the Bureau's estimates based on 2013 data from 
Experian Automotive's AutoCount[supreg] database,\84\ the automobile 
financing market defined in this Final Rule includes over 500 nonbank 
automobile lenders.\85\ The Bureau estimates that fewer than 40 
entities comprise over 90 percent of the auto loan and lease 
transactions in the nonbank market, as measured by the number of 
transactions identified in the AutoCount Lender Report\SM\.\86\ Large 
captives dominate the top tier of this market. The other large 
companies in the nonbank automobile financing market are either 
specialty finance companies or BHPH finance companies. The lower tiers 
of the nonbank market are comprised generally of smaller regional 
specialty finance companies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \84\ Experian Automotive's AutoCount database is a vehicle 
database that collects monthly transaction data from State 
Departments of Motor Vehicles. See also infra notes 116-117 and 
accompanying text.
    \85\ To reach this estimate, the Bureau considered data on 
nonbanks from Experian Automotive's AutoCount database for calendar 
year 2013, with several adjustments. First, transactions with no 
lender listed were excluded from the sample. Second, entities with 
fewer than 360 loans and leases on an annual basis were excluded 
from the sample. Third, entities that were identified by Experian 
Automotive as ``Other'' in the lender type category were excluded 
from the sample. Fourth, the Bureau excluded entities that already 
fall within the Bureau's supervisory authority or that it identified 
as BHPH dealers and title lenders. In some cases, entities were also 
consolidated due to known affiliations.
    \86\ These estimates were derived using the same methodology 
described in note 85 above.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Auto credit is provided both through direct and indirect channels 
creating different dynamics for consumers and industry participants. In 
the direct lending channel, a consumer seeks credit directly from the 
financing source, whereas in the indirect lending channel, the dealer 
typically enters into a retail installment sales contract that it then 
sells to a third-party finance company.\87\ Depository institutions and 
credit unions have an advantage in the direct lending space because 
these entities often have a pre-existing relationship with consumers. 
Captives and other specialty finance companies are more active in the 
indirect channel. Most consumers who finance the purchase of an auto 
use the indirect channel.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \87\ Such sources include depository institutions, nonbank 
affiliates of a depository institution, independent nonbanks, and 
captives.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    With indirect lending, dealers rather than consumers typically 
select the lender that will provide the financing. Upon completion of 
the vehicle selection process, the dealer usually collects basic 
information regarding the applicant and uses an automated system to 
forward that information to prospective indirect auto lenders. After 
evaluating the applicant, indirect auto lenders may provide the dealer 
with purchase eligibility criteria or stipulations including, but not 
limited to, a risk-based ``buy rate'' that establishes a minimum 
interest rate at which the lender is willing to purchase a retail 
installment sales contract executed between the consumer and the dealer 
for the purchase of the vehicle.\88\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \88\ An indirect auto lender may also have a policy that allows 
the dealer to mark up the interest rate above the indirect auto 
lender's buy rate. In the event that the dealer charges the consumer 
an interest rate that is higher than the lender's buy rate, the 
lender may pay the dealer what is typically referred to as 
``reserve'' (or ``participation''), compensation based upon the 
difference in interest revenues between the buy rate and the actual 
note rate charged to the consumer in the retail installment sales 
contract executed with the dealer. Dealer reserve is one method 
lenders use to compensate dealers for the value they add by 
originating retail installment sales contracts and finding financing 
sources. The exact computation of compensation based on dealer 
markup varies across lenders and may vary between programs at the 
same lender.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    A franchised dealer often can choose from a selection of funding 
sources in arranging credit for a consumer. However, a franchised 
dealer that is affiliated with a manufacturer can be incentivized to 
use a captive through mechanisms such as promotional discounts or 
limited-time financing offers that can be used to attract consumers. An 
independent auto dealer, which is not associated with a specific 
manufacturer or brand, typically does not have access to captive 
finance sources but will have access to other indirect sources, 
including depository institutions engaged in indirect lending as well 
as specialty finance companies.
    With the relevant eligibility criteria and stipulations, the dealer 
then selects the indirect lender that will provide the financing and 
extends the credit through a retail installment sales

[[Page 37508]]

contract that the indirect lender purchases or acquires. The dealer is 
typically compensated for arranging indirect financing. In the indirect 
model, the indirect auto lender typically becomes responsible for 
servicing the retail installment sales contract, and consumers will 
then make payments to the lender.
    Leases can also be obtained through direct or indirect channels. To 
purchase an auto lease from a dealer, finance sources express their 
interest by providing the dealer with the relevant terms of a lease 
similar to those considered for a loan. These terms can include a 
``money factor,'' which can be used to determine the rent charge 
portion of the monthly payment, and the length or term of the 
lease.\89\ However, in a lease, a finance source will also quote a 
residual value, which is the projected market value of the vehicle at 
the end of the lease. As a practical matter, few auto dealers enter 
into a financing or leasing arrangement with a consumer unless there is 
an indirect lender or lessor that will purchase the retail installment 
sales contract or leasing contract.\90\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \89\ Fed. Reserve Bd., Glossary, Keys to Vehicle Leasing (Mar. 
13, 2013), available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/leasing/glossary.htm.
    \90\ This does not apply to those auto dealers, such as BHPH 
dealers, that serve as the primary lender.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Refinancing of an existing credit obligation can enable a consumer 
to reduce his or her monthly auto payment. The refinancing market is 
highly dependent on interest rates and, thus, activity typically 
increases as rates decrease relative to the initial rate at 
origination. According to Experian Automotive, the average auto loan 
term as of the fourth quarter of 2014 was around 66 months for new 
vehicles and around 62 months for used vehicles.\91\ Market rates 
during the loan repayment period typically do not differ much from the 
rates at origination. These dynamics explain why the Bureau believes 
that overall refinancing volumes comprise only a small niche of the 
broader auto financing market. Unfortunately, only limited data on 
refinancing volume are available because, among other things, publicly 
traded market participants generally tend to consolidate refinancing 
activity within origination activity for financial reporting purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \91\ Zabritski, supra note 33, at 34.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

108(a) Market-Related Definitions
    Unless otherwise specified, the definitions in Sec.  1090.101 
should be used when interpreting terms in this Final Rule.\92\ The 
Proposed Rule defined additional terms relevant to the proposed 
automobile financing market. These terms include ``aggregate annual 
originations,'' which the Proposed Rule used as the criterion for 
assessing larger-participant status; ``annual originations''; 
``automobile''; ``automobile financing''; ``automobile lease''; and 
``refinancing.'' The Bureau is adopting the Proposed Rule's definitions 
largely as proposed, with certain modifications that are discussed 
below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \92\ Some commenters suggested that the Bureau should provide a 
definition of ``affiliate.'' However, Sec.  1090.101 already 
provides a definition of ``affiliated company,'' which should be 
used when interpreting terms in this Final Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Aggregate Annual Originations
    The Bureau proposed to use aggregate annual originations as the 
criterion to assess whether a nonbank covered person is a larger 
participant of the automobile financing market. Proposed Sec.  
1090.108(a) defined the term ``aggregate annual originations'' as the 
sum of the number of annual originations of a nonbank covered person 
and the number of annual originations of each of the nonbank covered 
person's affiliated companies, calculated according to instructions set 
forth in the Proposed Rule. The Bureau is finalizing this definition as 
proposed, except that the Final Rule: (1) Counts refinancings as 
``annual originations'' only if they meet the requirements set forth in 
the Proposed Rule and are also secured by an automobile, and (2) 
excludes certain purchases or acquisitions by special purpose entities 
that are made for the purpose of facilitating asset-backed 
securitizations. The Bureau has also made some technical changes to 
proposed Sec.  1090.108(a) for clarity.
    Annual originations. Proposed Sec.  1090.108(a) defined the term 
``annual originations'' to mean the sum of the following transactions 
for the preceding calendar year: Credit granted for the purchase of an 
automobile, refinancings of such obligations and any subsequent 
refinancings thereof, automobile leases, and purchases or acquisitions 
of any of the foregoing obligations. The Bureau proposed to exclude 
from annual originations any investments in asset-backed securities. 
The Bureau received a number of comments relating to this proposed 
definition of ``annual originations,'' which are discussed below. For 
the reasons that follow, the Bureau is finalizing the definition of 
``annual originations'' largely as proposed, with modifications related 
to refinancings and asset-backed securities and technical changes for 
clarity.\93\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \93\ The Bureau has adjusted the wording of paragraph (i)(A)(4) 
of the definition of ``aggregate annual originations'' for clarity. 
This change from the proposal does not have any substantive effect.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Purchases of retail installment contracts. Two trade association 
commenters expressed concern that the proposed definition of ``annual 
originations'' may fail to adequately capture purchases of retail 
installment sales contracts by indirect automobile lenders from 
dealers. These commenters indicated that while the proposed definition 
includes, among other things, ``[c]redit granted for the purpose of 
purchasing an automobile,'' the indirect automobile lender is not 
itself granting credit. One of the commenters explained that it is the 
dealer that offers credit to consumers in this scenario rather than the 
indirect lender.
    Purchases of retail installment contracts are included in paragraph 
(i)(A)(4) of the proposed definition of ``aggregate annual 
originations,'' which includes ``purchases or acquisitions'' of 
``[c]redit granted for the purpose of purchasing an automobile.'' 
Therefore, originations that are made indirectly are captured by the 
proposed definition, and the Final Rule does not modify this aspect of 
the proposed definition.
    Inclusion of refinancings. The Bureau proposed to include 
refinancings of credit granted for the purpose of purchasing an 
automobile and any subsequent refinancings thereof in the term ``annual 
originations.'' A number of consumer advocacy and civil rights 
organizations supported the Bureau's inclusion of refinancings in 
``annual originations.'' However, two trade associations and an 
industry commenter suggested that covered persons would not have the 
information necessary to determine whether they are refinancing credit 
granted for the purpose of purchasing an automobile.\94\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \94\ These commenters also argued that the proposed definition 
of ``refinancing'' is too broad and suggested that the Bureau should 
not include refinancing activity conducted by third parties in the 
definition. Their comments relating to the definition of 
``refinancing'' are discussed in the section-by-section analysis of 
that definition below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Bureau continues to believe that it is appropriate to include 
refinancing activity in the automobile financing market defined in this 
rule, and is therefore finalizing this element of the proposed 
definition of ``annual originations'' as proposed. Like purchase-money 
loans, the refinancings that are included in the proposed definition 
involve debt arising from the purchase of an automobile. The creditors 
that offer such refinancings are in competition with other creditors in 
the automobile financing market for the right to hold and service such 
debt. Although refinancing activity is limited

[[Page 37509]]

at present, it could become more prevalent in the future should 
conditions change (for example, in a rapidly declining interest rate 
environment).
    The Bureau considered the concern raised by some commenters that 
covered persons may not have the information necessary to determine 
whether they are refinancing an obligation subject to the proposed 
definition. As explained above, the Final Rule does not require 
automobile finance companies to calculate whether they are larger 
participants. In any event, most auto loans are purchase-money loans, 
and the Bureau believes that covered persons that refinance vehicle-
secured loans generally know whether the debt they are refinancing was 
originally incurred for the purpose of purchasing the vehicle.\95\
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    \95\ The Bureau recognizes that some loans secured by a vehicle 
such as title loans are not purchase-money loans or refinancings of 
purchase-money debt. However, such loans typically have very 
different terms, interest rates, and loan amounts than the 
automobile lending covered in this rule, making it unlikely that a 
company would be in the business of refinancing covered loans 
without knowing that it was doing so.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Bureau recognizes, however, that in rare cases a purchase-money 
loan could be refinanced without the refinancing creditor taking a 
security interest in the automobile, making the original purpose of the 
debt less obvious. To address such circumstances and for ease of 
administration, the Bureau has included language in paragraph (i)(A)(3) 
of the definition of ``aggregate annual originations'' to clarify that 
a refinancing must be secured by an automobile to be included in the 
definition. The Bureau is otherwise finalizing paragraph (i)(A)(3) of 
the definition of ``aggregate annual originations'' as proposed.
    Exclusion related to asset-backed securities. Proposed paragraph 
(i)(B) of the definition of ``aggregate annual originations'' excluded 
investments in asset-backed securities. As the Bureau explained in the 
proposal, automobile asset-backed securities are investment vehicles in 
which the principal and interest payments from automobile loans serve 
as collateral for bonds sold to investors and do not generally alter 
the contractual obligation between the consumer and the entity that 
granted the credit or services the loan. The Bureau sought comment on 
whether the proposed exclusion for asset-backed securities was 
appropriate and whether the Bureau should define the term ``asset-
backed securities'' in proposed Sec.  1090.108(a).
    The Bureau received comments from industry trade associations and 
an industry participant in support of the proposed exclusion and no 
comments opposing it. However, several of these commenters stated that 
the final rule should also exclude purchases or acquisitions of 
obligations by securitization trusts and other special purpose entities 
that are created to facilitate securitization transactions. They 
indicated that without this change, many securitization entities would 
be considered larger participants, which would negatively impact the 
securitization process. Some of these commenters stated that if the 
Bureau did not exclude these transactions, the rule would lead to 
double or triple counting of the same automobile loan or lease 
contract.
    Raising similar concerns, an industry trade association requested 
that the Bureau clarify the exclusion to expressly exclude all 
securitization activities from the definition of annual originations. 
It stated that securitization activities are not a consumer financial 
product or service and have no impact on consumers.
    Another trade association commented that the language does not 
clearly exclude the various transactions creating those securities, and 
requested that the Bureau clarify that any purchases or acquisitions of 
credit obligations for securitization purposes and transfers of credit 
obligations among affiliated entities do not fall within the scope of 
the rule. This commenter also requested that the Bureau not define the 
term ``asset-backed securities.'' No commenter urged the Bureau to 
define the term ``asset-backed securities.''
    For the same reasons expressed in the proposal, the Bureau believes 
that it is appropriate to exclude investments in asset-backed 
securities from ``annual originations'' and is therefore finalizing 
that element of the proposal in paragraph (i)(B)(1) of the definition 
of ``aggregate annual originations.'' In addition, the Final Rule 
excludes certain purchases or acquisitions of obligations by special 
purpose entities established for the purpose of facilitating asset-
backed securities in paragraph (i)(B)(2) of the definition of 
``aggregate annual originations.'' In light of the limited role that 
these special purpose entities play, the Bureau does not believe that 
their purchases or acquisitions should be included in the definition of 
``annual originations'' if they are made for the purpose of 
facilitating an asset-backed securities transaction.\96\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \96\ The Final Rule does not, however, exclude all transfers 
among affiliated entities, as one commenter suggested. The Bureau 
believes that the types of purchases or acquisitions included in the 
definition of ``aggregate annual originations'' reflect 
participation in the automobile finance market, even if they are 
made or received from an affiliated entity, and has therefore 
limited the exclusion in paragraph (i)(B) of the definition to 
transactions relating to asset-backed securitizations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Title loans. The Bureau proposed to define a market for automobile 
financing that would not include title loans, in which a lender extends 
credit to a consumer that is secured by the title to an automobile that 
the consumer owns free and clear prior to the loan. The Bureau 
explained that title loans may be better analyzed separately from the 
automobile financing market as a part of a future larger-participant 
rulemaking because the Bureau believes that title loans are 
substantially different from the automobile financing activities 
included in the Proposed Rule. However, the Bureau solicited feedback 
on whether it should define the market for automobile financing and 
annual originations to include title loans and other types of loans 
secured by automobiles, and if so, whether it would be appropriate to 
use the same criterion and threshold as in the proposal. For the 
reasons stated below, the Bureau has decided not to include title 
lending in this larger-participant rulemaking.
    Most commenters supported the Bureau's proposal to exclude title 
loans from the automobile financing market. Several trade associations 
and an industry commenter urged the Bureau not to expand the scope to 
include loans that are not made for the purpose of purchasing or 
refinancing an automobile.\97\ One of these trade associations stated 
that title loans are a separate consumer financial product or service, 
and that the nature, purpose, and timing of title loans distinguish 
them from financing for the acquisition of an automobile. This 
commenter noted that title loans are given to consumers who already 
have an ownership interest in their car and wish to obtain money for a 
purpose other than acquiring the vehicle. By contrast, it noted that 
automobile financing occurs for the purpose of obtaining a vehicle, and 
refinancing occurs generally to secure better terms related to the 
acquisition of that vehicle.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \97\ Some of these commenters also suggested that the Bureau use 
Delaware's definition of ``title loan'' as a basis for defining 
title lending. The Bureau has not, however, attempted to define 
title lending in this rulemaking and does not need to do so for 
purposes of the Final Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    A number of individuals and consumer advocacy groups also

[[Page 37510]]

supported the Bureau's decision to exclude title loans from the scope 
of this automobile financing market. Many of these commenters 
encouraged the Bureau to cover title lending as soon as possible in a 
future rulemaking.
    On the other hand, a few commenters recommended that the Bureau 
include title loans in the market defined in this rulemaking. Citing 
the potential consumer harms stemming from title lending, one consumer 
group encouraged the Bureau to include title lenders that made more 
than 25 extensions of credit during the preceding calendar year.
    A trade association representing title lenders also encouraged the 
Bureau to include title loans.\98\ The commenter stated that title 
loans are more similar to automobile financing than they are to payday 
loans and asserted that the Proposed Rule presents a more appropriate 
framework of regulation than any rulemaking that the Bureau may issue 
for the payday lending industry. The commenter also noted that the 
proposed rule amending Regulation C, which implements the Home Mortgage 
Disclosure Act,\99\ would impose reporting requirements on both closed-
end mortgage loans and home equity lines of credit. The commenter 
suggested that it would be consistent with the proposed revisions to 
Regulation C for the Bureau to include both automobile purchase-money 
loans and title loans within the scope of this rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \98\ While encouraging the Bureau to include title loans in this 
larger-participant rule, this commenter also challenged the Bureau's 
authority to regulate the title lending industry. The Bureau does 
not agree with the commenter's assertions regarding the scope of the 
Bureau's rulemaking authority but does not need to address them in 
this rulemaking because it has chosen, for the reasons stated below, 
to exclude title lending from the scope of the market defined in 
this larger-participant rule.
    \99\ 12 U.S.C. 2801-10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    After considering all of these comments, the Bureau has decided to 
exclude title loans from the Final Rule. Loans provided by title 
lenders are not used for the same purposes as the types of financing 
included within the proposed market (i.e., to purchase or lease an 
automobile or to adjust the terms of debt incurred to purchase an 
automobile). As the Bureau noted in the proposal, title loans are 
generally provided by companies that do not compete with lenders that 
finance the acquisition of a vehicle. Further, title loans are 
generally significantly shorter in term and smaller in size than loans 
used to purchase an automobile or to refinance an existing automobile 
loan.\100\ These differences may warrant a different criterion and 
threshold than is appropriate for the automobile financing market 
defined in this rule. In light of all of these factors, the Bureau 
believes that title loans are best addressed through a future larger-
participant rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \100\ Title loans are also generally significantly shorter in 
term than leases used to finance an automobile.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    There is no need for the Bureau to address in this rulemaking the 
assertion by one commenter that title loans are more similar to 
automobile financing transactions than to payday loans because payday 
lending is not a part of this larger-participant rulemaking.\101\ 
Regulation C's handling of dwelling-secured loans is also not relevant 
here because Regulation C and this larger-participant rule serve 
different purposes and involve different financial products or 
services.\102\ For the reasons set forth above, the Bureau believes 
that title loans are sufficiently different from the automobile 
financing transactions covered by this rule that they should not be 
included in the market defined in this larger-participant rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \101\ No larger-participant rulemaking is required to establish 
supervisory authority over payday lenders because the Bureau already 
has supervisory authority over the offering or providing of payday 
loans pursuant to section 1024(a)(1)(E) of the Dodd-Frank Act, 12 
U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)(E).
    \102\ The purpose of Regulation C is to implement the Home 
Mortgage Disclosure Act, which provides the public with loan data 
that can be used for the purposes set forth in 12 CFR 1003.1(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Aggregating the annual originations of affiliated companies. Under 
the Dodd-Frank Act, the activities of affiliated companies are to be 
aggregated for purposes of computing activity levels for rules--like 
this Final Rule--to determine larger participants in particular markets 
for consumer products or services under section 1024(a)(1).\103\ The 
Proposed Rule therefore defined ``aggregate annual originations'' for 
each nonbank covered person as the sum of the number of annual 
originations of the covered entity and the number of annual 
originations of all its affiliated companies, and laid out specifics on 
how this aggregation should be done. For the reasons set forth below, 
the Bureau is finalizing this aggregation method as proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \103\ 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(3)(B) (``For purposes of computing 
activity levels under [12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)] or rules issued 
thereunder, activities of affiliated companies (other than insured 
depository institutions or insured credit unions) shall be 
aggregated.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    For purposes of computing the covered person's aggregate annual 
originations, the Proposed Rule provided that the annual originations 
of each affiliated company were first to be calculated separately and 
then aggregated with the originations of the covered entity. Paragraph 
(ii) of the proposed definition of ``aggregate annual originations'' 
set forth the method of aggregating the annual originations of a 
nonbank covered person and its affiliated companies when affiliation 
has started or ended within the preceding calendar year. It provided 
that the annual originations of a nonbank covered person must be 
aggregated with the annual originations of any person that was an 
affiliated company of the nonbank covered person at any time during the 
preceding calendar year. The annual originations of a nonbank covered 
person and its affiliated companies were to be aggregated for the 
entire preceding calendar year, even if the affiliation did not exist 
for the entire calendar year. The aggregation provision would not 
apply, however, if the affiliated company was a dealer excluded by 
proposed Sec.  1090.108(c), which is discussed below.
    Several commenters supported the Bureau's proposal to aggregate 
annual originations of all affiliated companies in the previous 
calendar year for the purpose of calculating aggregate annual 
originations. One trade association objected to the Bureau's proposal 
to count ``annual originations'' in a manner that includes an 
affiliate's annual originations during a calendar year, regardless of 
whether an affiliation existed during the entire calendar year. This 
commenter suggested that it may be difficult for a company to secure 
necessary financial records from an unaffiliated company.
    Because the criterion for the rule is aggregate annual 
originations, the Bureau believes that it is simplest and most 
appropriate to aggregate originations for the entire calendar year when 
companies have been affiliated at any time during that calendar year. 
This approach is similar to the approach taken with respect to other 
larger-participant rules, including in Sec. Sec.  1090.104(a) and 
1090.105(a) as described above, and will avoid the administrative 
difficulties associated with part-year calculations of annual 
originations. As noted above, the larger-participant rules do not 
impose a record-keeping requirement and do not require nonbank covered 
persons to keep track of their annual originations. Moreover, the 
Bureau does not believe it would be difficult to gather this type of 
information from current or former affiliates should a nonbank have

[[Page 37511]]

occasion to do so.\104\ For the reasons described above and in the 
Proposed Rule, the Bureau adopts the aggregation method as proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \104\ Participants seeking to self-assess could also arrange to 
obtain information relevant to the threshold in advance of ending 
the affiliation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Automobile
    The Bureau proposed to define ``automobile'' to mean any self-
propelled vehicle primarily used for personal, family, or household 
purposes for on-road transportation.\105\ The proposed definition of 
``automobile'' expressly excluded motor homes, RVs, golf carts, and 
motor scooters. The Bureau has considered the comments on the 
definition of ``automobile'' and, for the reasons set forth below, is 
finalizing the definition as proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \105\ The proposed definition applies to both new and used 
vehicles.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The proposed definition of ``automobile'' was informed by the 
definition of ``motor vehicle'' in section 1029(f) of the Dodd-Frank 
Act,\106\ but included modifications to limit its application to 
vehicles primarily used for personal, family, or household purposes for 
on-road transportation. In the proposal, the Bureau explained that the 
``motor vehicle'' definition in the Dodd-Frank Act encompasses a wide 
range of vehicles, and that the use of such a broad definition in a 
larger-participant rulemaking would make the rule difficult to 
administer. Consistent with the definition of ``motor vehicle,'' the 
proposed definition of ``automobile'' covered vehicles such as cars, 
sports utility vehicles, light-duty trucks, and motorcycles. However, 
other vehicles such as heavy-duty trucks, buses, and ambulances were 
not included because the proposed definition was limited to vehicles 
primarily used for personal, family, or household purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \106\ Under section 1029(f)(1) of the Dodd-Frank Act, the term 
``motor vehicle'' means:
    (A) Any self-propelled vehicle designed for transporting persons 
or property on a street, highway, or other road;
    (B) recreational boats and marine equipment;
    (C) motorcycles;
    (D) motor homes, recreational vehicle trailers, and slide-in 
campers, as those terms are defined in sections 571.3 and 575.103(d) 
of title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, or any successor thereto; 
and
    (E) other vehicles that are titled and sold through dealers.
    12 U.S.C. 5519(f)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Bureau also proposed expressly to exclude certain types of 
motor vehicles, such as motor homes, RVs, golf carts, and motor 
scooters, from the definition of ``automobile.'' The Bureau did not 
have extensive data on the financing activity associated with these 
types of vehicles, and indicated that the vehicles excluded from the 
definition might warrant different larger-participant criteria and 
thresholds if they were included in the market defined for the Proposed 
Rule. The Bureau sought comment and additional market data related to 
its assumptions. The Bureau also sought comment on its proposed 
definition of ``automobile,'' including whether the proposed definition 
should address other vehicles or types of vehicles and whether 
motorcycles should be a separately defined term.
    Industry participants, two trade associations, and several members 
of Congress urged the Bureau to exclude motorcycles from the definition 
of ``automobile,'' maintaining that motorcycles are more akin to the 
types of recreational vehicles excluded from the proposed definition 
than to cars and light trucks. These commenters stated that motorcycles 
are largely discretionary purchases and are not commonly used for 
commuting. They also stated that motorcycles are significantly less 
expensive than cars and that the overall volume of motorcycle sales is 
equal to only a small fraction of car sales.
    These commenters urged the Bureau to follow the approach taken by 
six other Federal regulators (the Agencies) that recently excluded 
motorcycle loans from the definition of ``automobile loan'' in the 
Credit Risk Retention Rule.\107\ That rule implements the credit risk 
retention requirements for asset-backed securities under section 941 of 
the Dodd-Frank Act.\108\ Pursuant to section 941, securitizers of 
asset-backed securities are generally required to retain not less than 
5 percent of the credit risk of the assets collateralizing the asset-
backed securities. In the Credit Risk Retention Rule, the Agencies 
exempted, among other things, securitizations consisting solely of 
``automobile loans'' that meet specific underwriting standards, but did 
not include motorcycle loans in the definition of ``automobile loan.'' 
\109\ The Agencies reasoned that motorcycle loans should not be exempt 
because the ``overall risk profile of motorcycles as a class remains 
distinct from that of automobiles and, like other recreational 
vehicles, [motorcycles] exhibit overall a higher risk profile.'' \110\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \107\ Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Fed. Reserve 
Bd., Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp., U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm'n, Fed. Hous. 
Fin. Agency, & Dep't of Hous. & Urban Dev., Credit Risk Retention, 
79 FR 77602 (Dec. 24, 2014).
    \108\ Section 941 of the Dodd-Frank Act amends the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934 (the Exchange Act) and adds a new section 15G 
to the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. 78o-11. Specifically, section 941 of 
the Dodd-Frank Act requires the Securities Exchange Commission, the 
Federal banking agencies, and, with respect to residential 
mortgages, the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and the 
Federal Housing Finance Agency to prescribe rules to require that a 
securitizer retain an economic interest in a portion of the credit 
risk for any asset that it transfers, sells, or conveys to a third 
party through the issuance of an asset-backed security.
    \109\ 79 FR 77602, 77683 (Dec. 24, 2014).
    \110\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Bureau has considered these comments but believes that 
similarities in the financing process, relevant compliance 
requirements, pricing, and how the vehicles may be used support 
inclusion in the same market for supervisory purposes. Similar to cars 
and light-duty trucks, motorcycles are often purchased at a dealership 
where the price is negotiated, add-ons may be sold, and financing is 
arranged through an application and credit check.\111\ Compliance 
issues also appear to be very similar and would likely involve the same 
requirements of Federal consumer financial law, the same examination 
procedures, and the same potential consumer harms. While motorcycles 
are generally less expensive than cars, average prices of cars and 
motorcycles are not that far apart.\112\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \111\ Indeed, some companies that offer motorcycle financing 
operate as captives for affiliated manufacturers in the same manner 
as described above.
    \112\ One industry commenter reported that the average 
Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price of a new on-road motorcycle in 
2013 was $15,366, according to data compiled by the Motorcycle 
Industry Council. This is similar to the average price of a used car 
in 2013, which was $15,900 according to one report. See Greg 
Gardner, Average Used Car Price Hits Record High in 2014, USA Today, 
Feb. 18, 2015, available at http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/cars/2015/02/18/record-used-car-prices-in-2014/23637775/. According 
to Kelley Blue Book, the average transaction price of a light 
vehicle as of December 2013 was roughly double that, $33,525. Kelley 
Blue Book, New-Car Transaction Prices Reach New Record, Up Nearly 3 
Percent in December 2014, According to Kelley Blue Book (Jan. 5, 
2015), available at http://mediaroom.kbb.com/2015-01-05-New-Car-Transaction-Prices-Reach-New-Record-Up-Nearly-3-Percent-In-December-2014-According-To-Kelley-Blue-Book.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Unlike many of the vehicles excluded from the proposal, motorcycles 
are commonly used for on-road transportation and can be used for many 
of the same purposes as automobiles, such as daily errands and long-
distance trips. They can also be used for transportation to work, even 
if that is uncommon. Although the proposal noted that automobiles are 
important to many consumers as a means of transportation to work, the 
Bureau did not intend to suggest that the rule would only cover 
vehicles that are used for that purpose or that the financing of 
vehicles used for recreational purposes is unimportant. The proposed 
definition includes, for example, cars or light-duty trucks that are 
not used for commuting.

[[Page 37512]]

    Although some commenters suggested that the Bureau should follow 
the approach taken in the Credit Risk Retention Rule, the Agencies' 
exclusion of motorcycles from the exemption provided in that rule was 
based on their assessment that motorcycles--like other vehicles that 
are used for recreational purposes--as a class have a riskier profile 
than the vehicles that are included in the Agencies' definition of 
``automobile loans.'' \113\ The Agencies' decision to exclude 
motorcycle loans from ``automobile loans'' was for the purpose of 
determining whether a securitizer should be exempt from retaining any 
risk on vehicle loans. In this rule, the Bureau is defining larger 
participants of a market in order to carry out the Bureau's consumer 
protection mission through its supervisory function. In light of the 
different purposes of the two rulemakings, the Bureau continues to 
believe that including motorcycle loans in ``annual originations'' is 
appropriate.
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    \113\ See 79 FR 77602, 77683 (Dec. 24, 2014).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    One industry trade association expressed support for the Bureau's 
decision to exclude RVs from the definition of ``automobile'' in this 
rule, while emphasizing that RVs should still be considered motor 
vehicles as defined in the Dodd-Frank Act. This commenter believed that 
using the broad definition of ``motor vehicle'' found in the Dodd-Frank 
Act would make this rule difficult to administer. It also stated that 
there are no significant nonbank financial institutions in the RV 
industry and that including motor homes and RVs in the Final Rule would 
thus have little if any impact. No other commenters addressed the 
Proposed Rule's exclusions for specific categories of motor vehicles.
    The Bureau is finalizing the specific exclusions to the definition 
of ``automobile'' as proposed. These exclusions will promote clarity 
and ease of administration by providing bright lines regarding which 
vehicles are covered. The Bureau also recognizes that the uses of the 
excluded vehicles are either different or more limited than those of 
the vehicles that are included in the definition. For example, motor 
scooters generally are not suitable for long-distance trips or highway 
driving, while RVs and motor homes generally cannot be used for 
commuting or daily errands due to parking limitations. On average, the 
categories of vehicles excluded in the Proposed Rule are also either 
substantially more or less expensive than the vehicles that qualify as 
automobiles under the proposed definition.\114\ As noted in the 
proposal, including the financing of these vehicles in this market 
could warrant a different criterion or threshold given the differences 
in scale and nature of financing, and the Bureau has limited data about 
the financing of the excluded vehicles. As the Bureau gathers more 
information about financing for the types of vehicles that it is 
excluding from this Final Rule, it can evaluate whether it is 
appropriate to cover them in a future larger-participant rulemaking. 
Accordingly, the Bureau is finalizing the definition of ``automobile'' 
as proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \114\ For example, the Recreation Vehicle Industry Association 
indicates that type A, B, and C new motorhomes typically cost 
between $43,000 and $500,000. Recreation Vehicle Indus. Ass'n, RV 
Types, Terms & Prices (Aug. 28, 2013), available at http://www.rvia.org/UniPop.cfm?v=2&OID=1004&CC=1120. According to Consumer 
Reports, small motor scooters begin at about $1,000, while large 
scooters range up to about $10,000. Consumer Reports, Motorcycle & 
Scooter Buying Guide 2 (Apr. 2015), available at http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/motorcycles-scooters/buying-guide.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Automobile Financing
    Proposed Sec.  1090.108(a) defined the term ``automobile 
financing'' to mean providing the transactions identified under the 
term ``annual originations'' as defined in proposed Sec.  1090.108(a). 
The Bureau intended this proposed definition to reflect the number of 
consumer loans and leases made or facilitated (through purchases of the 
loans and leases) regarding one of the most important assets of 
American households. The comments that the Bureau received relating to 
the definition of ``automobile financing'' were similar to those 
relating to the definition of ``annual originations.'' For the same 
reasons discussed above in the section-by-section analysis of the 
definition of ``aggregate annual originations,'' the Bureau is 
finalizing the definition of ``automobile financing'' as proposed, with 
one minor clarifying change that does not have any substantive effect.
Automobile Lease
    Proposed Sec.  1090.108(a) defined the term ``automobile lease'' to 
mean a lease for the use of an automobile, as defined in the Proposed 
Rule, that is a financial product or service under either section 
1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act or proposed Sec.  1001.2(a). A 
number of consumer groups, civil rights groups, and individual 
commenters supported the proposal to include automobile leasing in the 
market for automobile financing. However, as discussed above, two 
industry trade associations and an industry commenter suggested that 
the Bureau should include only a narrower category of leases that meet 
certain residual value limits and, in their view, are the functional 
equivalent of a purchase finance arrangement. Because of the 
similarities between automobile leases and automobile loans described 
above and the importance of leases to consumers, the Bureau believes 
that it is important to maintain broad coverage of automobile leases in 
this larger-participant rule. The Bureau therefore is not narrowing the 
scope of leases included in the manner suggested by some commenters and 
is finalizing the definition of ``automobile lease'' as proposed.
Refinancing
    The Proposed Rule defined ``refinancing'' by reference to the 
definition contained in Regulation Z Sec.  1026.20(a), except that the 
Proposed Rule indicated that a refinancing need not be by the original 
creditor, holder, or servicer of the original obligation. Section 
1026.20(a) provides that ``[a] refinancing occurs when an existing 
obligation that was subject to this subpart is satisfied and replaced 
by a new obligation undertaken by the same consumer'' and identifies 
certain transactions that are not treated as a refinancing. The Bureau 
sought comment on whether the Regulation Z definition of refinancing as 
modified is appropriate, and whether the Bureau should consider a new 
definition of refinancing for purposes of this larger-participant 
rulemaking. The Bureau also sought data on refinancing activity in the 
market and its participants.
    Two trade associations and an industry commenter suggested that the 
Bureau should adopt a narrower definition of ``refinancing'' that is 
fully consistent with the definition in Regulation Z. These commenters 
stated that the proposed definition should be modified so as not to 
include refinancing activity conducted by third parties.
    The definition of ``refinancing'' in Regulation Z Sec.  1026.20(a) 
serves a different purpose than the concept of refinancing in this 
larger-participant rule. Section 1026.20(a) addresses when the original 
creditor, holder, or servicer of an existing consumer credit obligation 
must provide new cost disclosures and other protections that that same 
creditor already provided to the consumer before initial credit was 
extended. As comment 20(a)-5 to Sec.  1026.20(a) explains, a third 
party that refinances an existing obligation must generally provide 
disclosures and protections to the consumer, and such

[[Page 37513]]

transactions are thus excluded from the definition of a ``refinancing'' 
under section 1026.20(a).\115\ In contrast, the term ``refinancing'' is 
used in this rulemaking to identify transactions that should be counted 
as ``annual originations,'' which in turn are used to determine whether 
a covered person is a larger participant in the automobile financing 
market.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \115\ 12 CFR 1026.20, comment 20(a)-5 (``Section 1026.20(a) 
applies only to refinancings undertaken by the original creditor or 
a holder or servicer of the original obligation. A `refinancing' by 
any other person is a new transaction under the regulation, not a 
refinancing under this section.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Given the purpose of this rulemaking, it would not be appropriate 
to exclude third-party refinancings from the term ``refinancing.'' 
Refinancings by the original creditor and a third party are 
sufficiently similar so as to be considered part of the same market for 
automobile financing. Therefore, consistent with the proposal, the 
Bureau is finalizing the rule to include refinancings by nonbank 
covered persons that were not the original creditor, holder, or 
servicer of the obligation. In addition, as explained in the discussion 
of the definition of ``aggregate annual originations'' above, the 
Bureau has added a requirement in paragraph (i)(A)(3) of the definition 
of ``aggregate annual originations'' that a refinancing must be secured 
by a vehicle to be counted as an ``annual origination'' in order to 
facilitate application of the criterion.
108(b) Test To Define Larger Participants
Criterion
    The Bureau proposed to use aggregate annual originations as the 
criterion that establishes which entities are larger participants of 
the automobile financing market. A discussion of the comments received 
relating to the definition of ``aggregate annual originations'' and the 
adjustments the Bureau has made to that proposed definition is set 
forth above. For the reasons stated there and below, the Bureau is 
finalizing ``aggregate annual originations'' as the criterion as 
proposed.
    The Final Rule uses aggregate annual originations because, among 
other things, it is a meaningful measure of a nonbank covered person's 
level of participation in the automobile financing market and of its 
impact on consumers. A particular nonbank entity's annual number of 
originations reflects the number of loans and leases it makes or 
facilitates (through purchases of the loans and leases) regarding one 
of the most important assets of American households. Further, because 
the Final Rule defines the term ``aggregate annual originations,'' in 
part, in terms of how many loans or leases an entity granted or 
purchased, the Bureau expects that aggregate annual originations 
criterion will generally correlate to the size of the entity's loan and 
lease portfolios.
    The Bureau anticipates that nonbank covered persons will be able to 
calculate aggregate annual originations without difficulty, should the 
occasion arise to do so. As a general matter, most market participants 
generally know the number of loans and leases they extend because they 
handle the servicing for these accounts and are presumably expecting a 
payment for each loan and lease. Further, they generally know the 
number of loans they make or purchase because they execute liens 
against the automobile titles.
    In the proposal, the Bureau relied on Experian Automotive's 
AutoCount database for data on a significant portion of annual 
originations. AutoCount is a vehicle database that collects monthly 
transaction data from State Departments of Motor Vehicles (DMVs). In 46 
States, DMV title and registration information includes the finance 
source on record.\116\ These finance sources are listed either 
individually or categorized into lender type. The proposal invited 
comments on this data source as well as suggestions for other data 
sources that commenters believed might augment the Bureau's 
understanding and analysis of the market.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \116\ The AutoCount data cover transactions in every State, 
excluding Oklahoma, Wyoming, Rhode Island, and Delaware.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Two industry trade associations and an industry commenter urged the 
Bureau to provide more detail on why the Experian AutoCount database 
was chosen and how the data in the database was gathered. These 
commenters asked if the Bureau would be using the same definitions as 
Experian, and expressed concern that the use of the database could 
misidentify larger participants due to differences in the Experian 
dataset and the Bureau's criterion. No commenter suggested an 
alternative national source of data.
    The Bureau recognizes that estimates of ``annual originations'' 
based on the AutoCount data may be either over- or under-inclusive due 
to differences between what is included in the AutoCount data and in 
the Bureau's definitions. For example, the term ``annual 
originations,'' as defined in this Final Rule, includes transactions 
not tracked in the AutoCount data. Specifically, the Final Rule defines 
``annual originations'' to include the sum of a nonbank covered 
person's credit granted for the purchase of an automobile, refinancings 
of such obligations (and any subsequent refinancings thereof) that are 
secured by an automobile, automobile leases, and purchases or 
acquisitions of any of the foregoing obligations. In contrast, the 
AutoCount data track only loans and leases for which a title and 
registration is filed with the State DMV and are less inclusive than 
the Final Rule in a number of respects. For example, the AutoCount data 
may not include certain refinancings and purchases and acquisitions of 
credit obligations and leases that are included in the Final Rule 
definition of ``annual originations.'' \117\ Similar to the Final Rule, 
AutoCount excludes vehicles that are designed for and used primarily 
for commercial purposes. However, the exact scope of which commercial 
transactions are excluded in AutoCount may be different than in the 
Final Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \117\ The AutoCount data analyzed by the Bureau also do not 
include motorcycle transactions. However, given the relative size of 
the motorcycle segment as compared to the car and light-duty truck 
segments of the market, the Bureau does not believe that this 
limitation will substantially undermine the accuracy of its estimate 
of the number of larger participants. According to the U.S. 
Department of Transportation, there were approximately 234 million 
light-duty vehicles registered in the United States in 2012, as 
compared to only 8.45 million motorcycles. U.S. Department of 
Transportation Bureau of Transportation Statistics, National 
Transportation Statistics tbl. 1-11 (2015), available at http://www.rita.dot.gov/bts/sites/rita.dot.gov.bts/files/publications/national_transportation_statistics/html/table_01_11.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Notwithstanding the differences between AutoCount and the Final 
Rule definitions, AutoCount data provide a reasonable proxy for the 
Bureau's definition of ``annual originations'' for rulemaking purposes. 
The dataset covers almost the entire United States and is relatively 
reliable because it is based on title and registration information 
filed with State DMVs. AutoCount is therefore the most comprehensive 
database that the Bureau could identify for this rulemaking, and 
commenters did not identify any other database that the Bureau should 
use. In light of these factors, the Bureau believes that the AutoCount 
data can adequately inform the decision of setting a threshold using 
the criterion of aggregate annual originations.
    The Bureau's use of the AutoCount database in this rulemaking will 
not result in covered persons being misidentified as larger 
participants, as some commenters asserted. To the extent that the Final 
Rule's definitions differ from the types of transactions that

[[Page 37514]]

are included in AutoCount, the Final Rule's definitions control for 
purposes of determining whether an entity is in fact a larger 
participant of the automobile financing market. The Bureau will 
consider a variety of data sources in determining whether a nonbank 
covered person qualifies as a larger participant before initiating any 
supervisory activity. In addition to AutoCount data, these sources may 
include, for example, filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange 
Commission, public shareholder information, and industry surveys. In 
some instances, if sufficient information is not available to the 
Bureau to assess a person's larger-participant status, the Bureau may 
require submission of certain records, documents, and other information 
pursuant to existing Sec.  1090.103. The Bureau will notify an entity 
if the Bureau decides to undertake supervisory activity.\118\ Pursuant 
to Sec.  1090.103, a person will then be able to dispute whether it 
qualifies as a larger participant in the automobile financing market, 
should it choose to do so.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \118\ As noted above, the Bureau prioritizes supervisory 
activity among entities subject to its supervisory authority on the 
basis of risk, taking into account a variety of factors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    While generally agreeing with the Bureau's proposal to consider 
aggregate annual originations, a number of consumer advocates and civil 
rights groups suggested that the Bureau include servicing activity 
within the criterion or otherwise ensure that the Final Rule will cover 
large servicers as well. These commenters noted that servicing may be 
done by entities that do not own the obligations that are being 
serviced and that it is important to ensure that consumer protection 
laws and regulations are being followed in servicing.
    The Bureau agrees that oversight of servicing in the automobile 
financing market is important, but believes it can accomplish that goal 
without including servicing activity within the Final Rule's criterion. 
As the commenters recognize, the use of non-holder servicers is not as 
prevalent in the auto market as in the housing market. Instead, most of 
the entities that will be larger participants under this Final Rule 
service their own loans and leases, and the Bureau will be able to 
examine their servicing activity as part of its larger-participant 
examinations even if servicing activity is not part of the criterion 
used in this Final Rule.\119\ Additionally, the Bureau has the 
authority to supervise service providers to larger participants.\120\ 
Accordingly, where a third-party servicer acts as a service provider to 
a larger participant, the Bureau will have the authority to supervise 
the servicer's performance of services for the larger participant. In 
light of these considerations, the Bureau has decided not to include 
servicing activity within the criterion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \119\ See 77 FR 42874, 42880 (July 20, 2012).
    \120\ 12 U.S.C. 5514(e); see also 12 U.S.C. 5481(26)(A) 
(defining service provider).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Two industry trade associations and an industry commenter also 
suggested that the Bureau should exclude all direct lending from the 
scope of the market defined in this rule. These commenters suggested 
that the Bureau's primary concerns are with practices that only occur 
in the purchase of motor vehicle sales finance contracts, such as 
pricing disparities that result when dealers are given pricing 
authority. The Bureau has considered these comments but believes that 
direct lending is an integral and important part of the automobile 
financing market defined in this rule. Like indirect lending and 
leasing, direct lending can affect a consumer's access to 
transportation. Supervision will allow the Bureau to ensure that market 
participants engaging in these activities are complying with applicable 
Federal consumer financial law. The Bureau therefore declines to carve 
direct lending out of the scope of this rule and is finalizing the 
criterion as proposed.
Threshold
    The Proposed Rule defined a nonbank covered person as a larger 
participant of the automobile financing market if the person has at 
least 10,000 aggregate annual originations. The Bureau received 
comments supporting the Bureau's proposed approach, as well as comments 
advocating a higher or lower threshold. For the reasons that follow, 
the Bureau is finalizing the rule with a threshold of 10,000 aggregate 
annual originations as proposed.
    Based on the Bureau's estimates, a threshold of 10,000 aggregate 
annual originations will bring within the Bureau's supervisory 
authority about 34 entities and their affiliated companies that engage 
in automobile financing.\121\ The Bureau estimates that these entities 
account for roughly 7 percent of all nonbank covered persons in the 
automobile financing market and are responsible for approximately 91 
percent of the activity in the nonbank automobile financing market.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \121\ The Bureau originally estimated that the proposed 
threshold would bring within the Bureau's supervisory authority 
about 38 entities. In the proposal, the Bureau noted that it had 
consolidated entities in some cases based on known affiliations and 
excluded other entities listed in the AutoCount data on the ground 
that they do not engage in automobile financing activity as defined 
in the Proposed Rule. The Bureau's estimates of coverage at the 
different thresholds considered have changed slightly since the 
proposal stage due to the identification of some additional 
affiliations and additional entities that should be excluded from 
the market definition such as title lenders. However, these changes 
do not affect in any significant way the Bureau's analysis or its 
estimates of aggregate market activity covered at each threshold.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As the Bureau explained in its proposal, the aggregate annual 
originations threshold of 10,000 will allow the Bureau to supervise 
market participants that represent a substantial portion of the 
automobile financing market and that have a significant impact on 
consumers. The Bureau estimates that in 2013 the entities that would 
qualify as larger participants under the proposed threshold provided 
loans and leases to approximately 6.8 million consumers.\122\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \122\ The Bureau assumes that an average consumer only enters 
into one auto loan or lease in a given year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    A number of consumer groups, civil rights groups, and consumer 
attorneys supported the proposed threshold and encouraged the Bureau to 
ensure that a threshold of 10,000 aggregate annual originations covers 
finance companies that target subprime consumers, regional finance 
companies, and finance companies related to Buy Here Pay Here (BHPH) 
dealers. One consumer advocacy group urged the Bureau to decrease the 
threshold to 5,000, asserting that the Bureau should protect as many 
consumers as feasible. A consumer banking trade association urged the 
Bureau not to raise the threshold above 10,000 because the proposed 
threshold would allow the Bureau to supervise a more varied mix of 
entities and would help to level the playing field between banks and 
nonbanks.
    Two trade associations and an industry participant encouraged the 
Bureau to raise the threshold to 50,000. They believe that a lower 
threshold might prompt some covered persons to limit their originations 
to larger loans and to avoid making smaller loans, in order to avoid 
the rule's coverage. Three trade associations and an industry 
participant noted that many of the entities that would be larger 
participants at the proposed threshold have well below 1 percent market 
share and that small businesses could qualify as larger participants 
under the proposed threshold. A law firm representing small businesses 
urged the Bureau either to increase the threshold or to explicitly 
carve out small businesses as defined by the Small Business 
Administration (SBA). The commenter indicated that

[[Page 37515]]

one of its clients is a small business that would meet the threshold.
    The Bureau is finalizing the threshold as proposed because it 
believes that 10,000 aggregate annual originations is a reasonable and 
appropriate threshold for defining larger participants of the 
automobile financing market. A threshold of 10,000 aggregate annual 
originations will bring within the Bureau's authority roughly 34 
entities together with their affiliated companies that engage in 
automobile financing. Each of these entities provides or engages in 
hundreds of automobile originations each week and falls in the top 10 
percent of nonbank entities in the market according to the Bureau's 
estimates. They can reasonably be considered larger participants of the 
market. Some entities that meet this threshold will have considerably 
less than 1 percent market share, but that is due in large part to the 
fragmentation of the market and does not change the fact they are 
``larger'' than the vast majority of market participants.
    The Bureau does not believe that the proposed threshold is likely 
to have any appreciable effect on the availability of credit. As 
discussed in part VI.B.2.b below, the Bureau estimates that the cost of 
supervision for an entity that provides 10,000 aggregate annual 
originations would be a small fraction of 1 percent of its total 
revenue from one year's originations. Given the nominal cost of 
supervision, the Bureau does not believe that entities will change the 
types of loans and leases they offer merely to avoid the Bureau's 
supervisory authority. Furthermore, should an entity that would 
otherwise meet the larger-participant test adjust its offerings in 
response to the rule, any effect on consumers would be mitigated by the 
large number of remaining nonbank entities in the market as well as 
depository institutions that provide auto financing.
    The Bureau also considered a lower or higher threshold. For 
example, a threshold of 5,000 aggregate annual originations would allow 
the Bureau to supervise approximately 50 entities and their affiliated 
companies that engage in automobile financing. While lowering the 
threshold would substantially increase the number of entities subject 
to supervision, it would only result in a marginal increase in the 
percentage of overall market activity covered due to the relatively 
small market share of entities at the lower threshold.
    The Bureau has a variety of other tools that it can use to protect 
consumers should concerns emerge regarding nonbank market participants 
that have less than 10,000 aggregate annual originations. The Bureau 
could, for example, establish supervisory authority over a particular 
company that the Bureau has reasonable cause to determine poses risks 
to consumers pursuant to the Bureau's risk determination rule.\123\ The 
Bureau could also use non-supervisory tools if appropriate, such as 
initiating enforcement investigations; coordinating with State 
regulators, State attorneys general, and the Federal Trade Commission; 
and engaging in research and monitoring. In light of all these 
considerations, the Final Rule does not include a lower threshold.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \123\ 12 CFR part 1091.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Bureau estimates that a higher alternative threshold of 50,000 
aggregate annual originations would allow the Bureau to supervise only 
the 15 very largest participants in the market and their affiliated 
companies, representing approximately 86 percent of market activity. At 
this higher threshold the Bureau would not be able to supervise as 
varied a mix of nonbank larger participants because some firms 
impacting a large portion of consumers in important market segments, 
such as captive, subprime, and BHPH lending, would be omitted.
    The Bureau does not believe it is necessary to raise the threshold 
in order to avoid capturing small businesses as defined by the SBA or 
to add an express exclusion for such entities. According to the 
Bureau's estimates, few if any entities that meet the proposed 
threshold have annual receipts at or below the relevant SBA size 
standard, which in recent years has increased from $7 million to $38.5 
million.\124\ In setting its size standards, the SBA considers a 
variety of factors, such as eligibility for Federal small-business 
assistance and Federal contracting programs; startup costs, entry 
barriers, and industry competition; and technological change. In 
contrast, the Bureau has established its larger-participant thresholds 
by reference to relative participation in the market, with a view to 
ensuring sufficient coverage of the market to allow it to assess 
compliance with Federal consumer financial law and detect and assess 
risks to consumers effectively. Because the SBA's size standards and 
the Bureau's threshold are used for different purposes and targeted to 
different statutory objectives, the Bureau does not need to conform its 
threshold for a particular market to the most applicable SBA size 
standard even if some small businesses will be larger participants. In 
light of all of the considerations discussed above, the Bureau is 
finalizing the threshold of 10,000 aggregate annual originations as 
proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \124\ See infra note 168. As explained below, the Bureau used 
AutoCount data for 2013 combined with public financial statements, 
securitization filings, and additional market research to estimate 
annual receipts for each of the entities that it identified as 
potential larger participants meeting the 10,000 threshold. Based on 
this review, the Bureau believes that few if any of these entities 
would be small businesses under the current small business size 
standard. One law firm indicated in a comment that one of their 
clients is a small business that would meet the proposed threshold, 
but did not identify the client. Assuming this is accurate, the 
Bureau's estimates suggest that this is very much the exception to 
the general rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

108(c) Exclusion for Dealers
    The Bureau proposed to exclude from the rule those motor vehicle 
dealers that are excluded from the Bureau's authority by section 1029 
of the Dodd-Frank Act.\125\ The Bureau also proposed to exclude 
additional motor vehicle dealers that are not subject to the statutory 
exclusion and over which the Bureau has rulemaking and other authority. 
Specifically, the proposal excluded those motor vehicle dealers that 
are identified in section 1029(b)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act and are 
predominantly engaged in the sale and servicing of motor vehicles, the 
leasing and servicing of motor vehicles, or both.\126\ For the reasons 
that follow, the Bureau is finalizing the exclusion for dealers with no 
substantive changes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \125\ 12 U.S.C. 5519.
    \126\ As the Bureau explained in the proposal, this exclusion 
applied to certain dealers that extend retail credit or leases to 
consumers without routinely assigning them to unaffiliated third 
parties. However, the proposed rule included those nonbank covered 
persons that meet the definition of ``motor vehicle dealer'' under 
section 1029(f)(2) but are not predominantly engaged in the sale and 
servicing of motor vehicles, the leasing and servicing of motor 
vehicles, or both. Thus, for example, a captive lender that meets 
the definition of ``motor vehicle dealer'' under section 1029(f)(2) 
but is predominantly engaged in the financing of motor vehicles 
could qualify as a larger participant.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Bureau explained in its proposal that the dealers that were 
excluded by proposed Sec.  1090.108(c)(2), typically BHPH dealers, can 
reasonably be considered part of a separate and distinct market. A 
trade association representing the used motor vehicle industry objected 
to the exclusion of BHPH dealers from this rule and stated that BHPH 
dealers provide the same financial product or service as those entities 
that the Bureau proposed to include. No other comments related to the 
exclusion under proposed Sec.  1090.108(c) were received.
    The Bureau continues to believe that it is appropriate to exclude 
dealers that are identified in proposed Sec.  1090.108(c)(2) from the 
market defined in this Final Rule and is therefore

[[Page 37516]]

finalizing Sec.  1090.108(c) as proposed with minor changes for 
clarity.\127\ As the Bureau explained in the proposal, the Bureau 
specifically has rulemaking and other authority over motor vehicle 
dealers that are identified in section 1029(b)(2) of the Dodd-Frank 
Act. Because such dealers engage in both selling and financing 
automobiles, they set the price of the automobile and other sale terms 
in addition to establishing the terms of the financing. Such dealers 
use a different business model and are typically much smaller in asset 
size and activity level than the entities included in this rule. 
Therefore, it is appropriate and consistent with the Bureau's authority 
to consider dealers that are identified in Sec.  1090.108(c)(2) in a 
separate larger-participant rulemaking, should the Bureau determine it 
is appropriate to do so.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \127\ The Final Rule clarifies that the term ``motor vehicle'' 
is used in Sec.  1090.108(c) as that term is defined in section 
1029(f)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

VI. Section 1022(b)(2)(A) of the Dodd-Frank Act

A. Overview

    The Bureau has considered potential benefits, costs, and impacts of 
the Final Rule.\128\ The Bureau set forth a preliminary analysis of 
these effects, and the Bureau requested and received comments on the 
topic. In developing the Final Rule, the Bureau has consulted with or 
offered to consult with the Federal Trade Commission, the Board of 
Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Deposit Insurance 
Corporation, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and the 
National Credit Union Administration regarding, among other things, 
consistency with any prudential, market, or systemic objectives 
administered by such agencies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \128\ Specifically, 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(2)(A) 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 12 U.S.C. 5516, and the 
impact on consumers in rural areas. In addition, 12 U.S.C. 
5512(b)(2)(B) directs the Bureau to consult, before and during the 
rulemaking, with appropriate prudential regulators or other Federal 
agencies, regarding consistency with objectives those agencies 
administer. The manner and extent to which the provisions of 12 
U.S.C. 5512(b)(2) apply to a rulemaking of this kind that does not 
establish standards of conduct are unclear. Nevertheless, to inform 
this rulemaking more fully, the Bureau performed the analysis and 
consultations described in those provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Final Rule defines a category of nonbanks that would be subject 
to the Bureau's nonbank supervision program pursuant to section 
1024(a)(1)(B) of the Dodd-Frank Act. The category includes ``larger 
participant[s]'' of a market for ``automobile financing'' described in 
the Final Rule. Participation in this market is measured on the basis 
of aggregate annual originations. A nonbank covered person engaged in 
automobile financing is a larger participant of the market for 
automobile financing if, together with its affiliated companies, it has 
aggregate annual originations (measured for the preceding calendar 
year) of at least 10,000. As prescribed by existing Sec.  1090.102, any 
nonbank covered person that qualifies as a larger participant will 
remain a larger participant until two years after the first day of the 
tax year in which the person last met the larger-participant test.\129\ 
The Final Rule also includes in the definition of ``financial 
product[s] or service[s]'' a new category of automobile leases, as 
defined by the Final Rule, under authority granted to the Bureau by 
section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the Dodd-Frank Act.\130\
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    \129\ 12 CFR 1090.102.
    \130\ The Final Rule also clarifies how to address aggregation 
of formerly affiliated companies for purposes of assessing larger-
participant status under the existing Consumer Reporting and 
Consumer Debt Collection Rules, by making changes to the definition 
of ``annual receipts'' in those rules. As explained above, the 
changes to the affiliate aggregation provisions clarify the Bureau's 
methodology for affiliate aggregation. The changes will provide 
marginal benefits for market participants in the consumer reporting 
and consumer debt collection markets by making those rules clearer 
and easier to understand. They may, however, result in an additional 
cost to market participants that are seeking to assess whether they 
are larger participants, but only if they would not have collected 
information relevant to thresholds from formerly affiliated 
companies for the entire preceding calendar year when the 
affiliation ended during the preceding calendar year. The Bureau 
does not know the extent to which participants seeking to self-
assess currently collect information relevant to thresholds from 
formerly affiliated companies. However participants seeking to self-
assess could arrange to obtain information relevant to the threshold 
in advance of ending the affiliation, and such arrangements would 
tend to mitigate the costs of obtaining this information. Further, 
as noted above, participants in these markets are not required to 
engage in such self-assessments. Thus, both the benefits and costs 
of these amendments will not be significant.
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B. Potential Benefits and Costs to Consumers and Covered Persons

    This analysis considers the benefits, costs, and impacts of the key 
provisions of the Final Rule against a baseline that includes the 
Bureau's existing rules defining larger participants in certain 
markets.\131\ At present, there is no Federal program for supervision 
of nonbank covered persons in the automobile financing market for 
compliance with Federal consumer financial law. The Final Rule extends 
the Bureau's supervisory authority over larger participants of the 
defined automobile financing market. This includes the authority to 
supervise for compliance with the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA), 
the Truth in Lending Act (TILA), the Consumer Leasing Act (CLA), and 
the prohibition on unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts or practices 
(UDAAP) under section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act, as well as other 
Federal consumer financial laws, to the extent applicable.
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    \131\ The Bureau has discretion in any rulemaking to choose an 
appropriate scope of analysis with respect to potential benefits and 
costs and an appropriate baseline. The Bureau, as a matter of 
discretion, has chosen to describe a broader range of potential 
effects to inform the rulemaking more fully.
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    The Bureau notes at the outset that limited data are available with 
which to quantify the potential benefits, costs, and impacts of the 
Final Rule. As described above, the Bureau has utilized the Experian 
AutoCount database for quantitative information on the number of market 
participants and their number and dollar volume of originations. 
However, the Bureau lacks detailed information about their rate of 
compliance with Federal consumer financial law and about the range of, 
and costs of, compliance mechanisms used by market participants.
    In light of these data limitations, this analysis generally 
provides a qualitative discussion of the benefits, costs, and impacts 
of the Final Rule.\132\ General economic principles, together with the 
AutoCount data, provide insight into these benefits, costs, and 
impacts. Where possible, the Bureau has made quantitative estimates 
based on these principles and data as well as its experience of 
undertaking similar supervisory activities with respect to depository 
institutions and credit unions.
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    \132\ While the Final Rule differs slightly from the Proposed 
Rule in the types of refinancings that are included as ``annual 
originations'' and the types of asset-backed securitization 
transactions that are excluded, the changes are intended to 
effectuate what the Bureau intended in its proposal, and so should 
not result in any additional costs or benefits beyond those 
discussed in the proposal. Accordingly, the impacts of these changes 
are not discussed here.
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    The discussion below describes four categories of potential 
benefits and costs. First, the Final Rule authorizes the Bureau to 
supervise certain nonbank entities in the automobile financing market. 
These larger participants in the market might respond to the 
possibility of supervision by changing their systems and conduct, and 
those changes might result in costs, benefits, or other impacts. 
Second, if the Bureau undertakes supervisory activity at specific 
larger participants, those companies would incur costs from responding 
to supervisory activity, and

[[Page 37517]]

the results of the individual supervisory activities might also produce 
benefits and costs.\133\ Third, entities might incur certain costs as a 
result of their efforts to assess whether they qualify as larger 
participants under the Final Rule. Fourth, including certain automobile 
leases in the Dodd-Frank Act definition of ``financial product or 
service'' subjects those leases to the UDAAP prohibition under section 
1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act and to Bureau authority to prescribe certain 
rules applicable to a covered person or service provider under section 
1031(b). The definition also expands the Bureau's supervisory 
authority, as described below, and these changes might also produce 
benefits and costs, although the Bureau does not expect these effects 
to be significant.
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    \133\ Pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 5514(e), the Bureau also has 
supervisory authority over service providers to nonbank covered 
persons encompassed by 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(1), which includes larger 
participants. The Bureau does not have data on the number or 
characteristics of service providers to the larger participants of 
the automobile financing market. The discussion herein of potential 
costs, benefits, and impacts that may result from the Final Rule 
generally applies to service providers to larger participants.
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    In considering the costs and benefits of the Final Rule, it is 
important to note that various products or services are included in the 
defined automobile financing market. Direct lending, where the consumer 
applies for credit directly to the financial institution, makes up a 
relatively small portion of the total automobile loan and sales volume. 
Direct lending is currently dominated by traditional depository 
institutions and credit unions already regulated by the Bureau and 
other Federal agencies. Indirect lending, where a dealer--rather than 
the consumer--finds a lender willing to provide credit to the consumer, 
comprises a significant portion of the automobile financing market. In 
addition, some consumers refinance the credit obligation for their 
automobile after taking out the initial loan. Finally, leasing is the 
other primary way in which consumers can finance the use of a vehicle; 
under this arrangement a financial institution holds the title to the 
vehicle that the consumer leases under a payment plan that typically 
ends with an option to purchase the vehicle.\134\
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    \134\ According to Experian Automotive, of all new and used auto 
financing transactions recorded in the fourth quarter of 2014, 
approximately 14 percent occurred through leasing arrangements, 
while the remainder used loans. See Zabritski, supra note 33, at 16.
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1. Benefits and Costs of Responses to the Possibility of Supervision
    The Final Rule will subject larger participants of the automobile 
financing market to the possibility of Bureau supervision. That the 
Bureau will be authorized to undertake supervisory activities with 
respect to a nonbank covered person that qualifies as a larger 
participant does not necessarily mean the Bureau will in fact undertake 
such activities with respect to that covered entity in the near future. 
Rather, supervision of any particular larger participant as a result of 
this rulemaking is probabilistic in nature. For example, the Bureau 
will examine certain larger participants on a periodic or occasional 
basis. The Bureau's decisions about supervision will be informed, as 
applicable, by the factors set forth in section 1024(b)(2), relating to 
the size and volume of individual participants, the risks their 
consumer financial products and services pose to consumers, the extent 
of State consumer protection oversight, and other factors that the 
Bureau may determine are relevant. Each entity that believes it 
qualifies as a larger participant will know that it might be supervised 
and might gauge, given its circumstances, the likelihood that the 
Bureau will initiate an examination or other supervisory activity.
    The prospect of potential supervisory activity could create an 
incentive for larger participants to allocate additional resources and 
attention to compliance with Federal consumer financial law, 
potentially leading to an increase in the level of compliance. These 
entities might anticipate that by doing so (and thereby decreasing 
risks to consumers) they could decrease the likelihood of their 
actually being subjected to supervision. In addition, an actual 
examination will likely reveal any past or present noncompliance, which 
the Bureau can seek to correct through supervisory activity or, in some 
cases, enforcement actions. Larger participants might therefore judge 
that the prospect of supervision increases the potential consequences 
of noncompliance with Federal consumer financial law, and they might 
seek to decrease that risk by curing or mitigating any noncompliance. 
Larger participants might thus be able to catch and address compliance 
problems at an earlier point when the costs of correcting them would be 
lower.
    The Bureau believes it is likely that many market participants will 
increase compliance in response to the Bureau's supervisory activities 
authorized by the Final Rule. However, because the Final Rule itself 
does not require any nonbank covered person in the automobile financing 
market to alter its conduct, any estimate of the amount of increased 
compliance would require both an estimate of current compliance levels 
and a prediction of market participants' behavior in response to the 
Final Rule. The data the Bureau currently has do not support a specific 
quantitative estimate or prediction. But, to the extent that nonbank 
entities allocate resources to increase their compliance in response to 
the Final Rule, that response would result in both benefits and costs 
to consumers and covered persons.\135\
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    \135\ Another approach to considering the benefits, costs, and 
impacts of Sec.  1090.108 would be to focus almost entirely on the 
supervision-related costs for larger participants and omit a broader 
consideration of the benefits and costs of increased compliance. As 
noted above, the Bureau has, as a matter of discretion, chosen to 
describe a broader range of potential effects to inform the 
rulemaking more fully.
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a. Benefits From Increased Compliance
    Increased compliance with Federal consumer financial law by larger 
participants in the market for automobile financing will be beneficial 
to consumers who either finance the purchase of or lease automobiles, 
or refinance their credit obligations related to the purchase of their 
automobiles. The number of individuals potentially affected is 
significant. As noted above, data from Experian Automotive for the 
fourth quarter of 2014 show auto lenders holding outstanding auto loans 
totaling almost $900 billion.\136\ The market is even larger when 
taking into account the auto leasing market, which comprised an 
additional 14 percent of the auto financing market in the fourth 
quarter of 2014.\137\ Increasing the rate of compliance with Federal 
consumer financial law will benefit consumers and the consumer 
financial market by providing more of the protections mandated by law.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \136\ See supra note 79.
    \137\ See Zabritski, supra note 33, at 16.
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    Several Federal consumer financial laws offer protections to 
consumers who seek automobile financing as defined in the Final Rule, 
including, to the extent applicable, TILA and Regulation Z, the Fair 
Credit Reporting Act and Regulation V, the CLA and Regulation M, ECOA 
and Regulation B, and the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act and Regulation P.\138\ 
More broadly, the Bureau will examine whether larger participants of 
the automobile financing market engage

[[Page 37518]]

in UDAAPs.\139\ Conduct that does not violate an express prohibition of 
another Federal consumer financial law may nonetheless constitute a 
UDAAP.\140\ To the extent that any larger participant or service 
provider is currently engaged in any UDAAP in connection with any 
transaction for or the offering of a consumer financial product or 
service, the cessation of the unlawful act or practice will benefit 
consumers. As the Bureau may review a larger participant's conduct in 
relation to any consumer financial product or service during an 
examination, larger participants might improve policies and procedures 
globally in response to possible supervision in order to avoid engaging 
in UDAAPs.
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    \138\ The Bureau recognizes that the nature of a larger 
participant's responsibility for compliance with these laws may vary 
depending on the activity the larger participant engages in. For 
example, under TILA, a larger participant that purchases a credit 
obligation for the purchase of an automobile is likely an assignee, 
not a ``creditor'' under TILA, and as such is generally liable only 
for a violation of TILA that is ``apparent on the face of the 
disclosure statement.'' 15 U.S.C. 1641(a).
    \139\ 12 U.S.C. 5531.
    \140\ The CFPB Supervision and Examination Manual provides 
further guidance on how the UDAAP prohibition applies to supervised 
entities. CFPB Supervision and Examination Manual (Oct. 1, 2012), 
available at http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201210_cfpb_supervision-and-examination-manual-v2.pdf.
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    The possibility of supervision also may help make incentives to 
comply with Federal consumer financial law more consistent between the 
likely larger participants and depository institutions and credit 
unions, which are already subject to Federal supervision with respect 
to Federal consumer financial law. Introducing the possibility of 
Federal supervision could encourage entities that likely qualify as 
larger participants to devote additional resources to compliance. It 
could also help ensure that the benefits of Federal oversight reach 
consumers who do not have ready access to automobile financing through 
depository institutions and credit unions.
b. Costs of Increased Compliance
    The Bureau recognizes that increasing compliance involves costs. 
These costs may be fixed or ongoing. Nonbank entities in the automobile 
financing market might need to hire or train additional personnel to 
effectuate any changes in their practices that would be necessary to 
produce the increased compliance. They might need to invest in changes 
to their systems to carry out their revised procedures. In addition, 
they might need to develop or enhance compliance management systems, to 
ensure awareness of any gaps in compliance. Such changes will also 
require investment and might entail increased operating costs.
    In the proposal, the Bureau stated that economic theory predicts 
that fixed costs will be absorbed by providers, here the entities that 
may qualify as larger participants. One commenter stated that this 
prediction does not constitute broadly accepted economic theory. The 
Bureau disagrees and believes that fixed costs will not be directly 
passed through by providers. Canonical economic theory states that 
sellers will set a price along the demand curve based on the level of 
output where marginal cost equals marginal revenue. Since fixed costs 
do not impact demand, marginal cost, or marginal revenue, economic 
theory states that changes in these costs should not impact the pricing 
decisions of existing producers.\141\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \141\ See, e.g., N. Gregory Mankiw, Principles of Microeconomics 
284, 286-87 (7th ed. 2015).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Although these fixed costs are not expected to pass through to 
consumers via changes in price by current providers of automobile 
financing that become larger participants, consumers may be adversely 
affected by increases in costs associated with the introduction of this 
larger-participant rule to the extent these cost increases cause 
current providers to decrease volume below the larger-participant 
threshold (or to exit), deter current providers from increasing volume, 
or deter entry by new providers in the future.\142\ This could result 
in consumers having more restricted choices than they would otherwise. 
In certain situations a decrease in the number of market participants 
could better enable those remaining providers to exercise market power, 
resulting in higher prices for consumers or decreased product or 
service quality, or both. One commenter expressed this concern as well, 
suggesting that smaller businesses may decrease origination volume in 
favor of issuing larger loans, thus restricting consumer choice. The 
extent to which this concern could come to fruition depends on the 
total number of participants in the market, as well as the existing 
number of covered entities. As stated earlier, the Bureau believes that 
the low relative costs of additional supervision, along with the large 
number of market participants in the market for automobile financing, 
should minimize these concerns.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \142\ Alexei Alexandrov & Xiaoling Ang, Identifying a Suitable 
Control Group Based on Microeconomic Theory: The Case of Escrows in 
the Subprime Market (Dec. 30, 2014) (finding consumers not adversely 
affected by policy changes that implement a fixed cost), available 
at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2462128.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    An entity that incurs ongoing costs in support of increasing 
compliance might try to recoup these costs by attempting to pass those 
costs directly through to consumers; for example, in the case of the 
indirect channel, this could occur through lowering fees or other forms 
of compensation paid to dealers and other entities. Whether and to what 
extent either change would occur depends on the relative elasticities 
of supply and demand in the automobile financing market. These 
elasticities can vary across products or services covered by the Final 
Rule and may be influenced by the presence of substitute products or 
services as well as the availability of information, which would 
influence the perceived availability of substitute products or 
services. For example, larger participants of the automobile financing 
market may be in competition with depository institutions or credit 
unions (or affiliates thereof) that are already subject to supervision 
by the Bureau and/or Federal prudential regulators with respect to 
Federal consumer financial law. To the extent the Final Rule will 
result in an increase in the costs faced by larger participants, that 
increase will be a competitive benefit to banks and credit unions with 
sufficient liquidity to expand their financing operations. Competition 
from banks and credit unions might reduce the ability of larger 
participants to pass through cost increases to consumers, dealers, or 
other entities as they may instead seek alternate sources of financing. 
Moreover, consumers might respond to such a cost increase by reducing 
the amounts they are willing to pay in other aspects of the automobile 
purchase transaction. Dealers could respond to decreased levels of 
financing revenues shared with them by larger participants by either 
attempting to increase revenues derived from other areas of the 
automobile purchase transaction, such as the stated price of the 
vehicle or costs of accessories, or bearing the loss of revenue.
    In considering the Final Rule's potential price effect, it is 
important to take into account the fact that nonbank covered persons 
below the larger-participant threshold will not be subject to 
supervision. The costs of these nonbank covered persons will therefore 
be unaffected by the definition of larger participants in the Final 
Rule and so their pricing should also not be affected. To the extent 
that nonbank larger participants consider raising their prices in 
response to this rule, nonbank entities that are not larger 
participants, along with banks and credit unions that already compete 
in the market while bearing the cost of supervision, could potentially 
offer more attractive transaction terms relative to larger participants 
and thus deter larger participants from actually increasing prices. 
While a shift in transactions from larger participants toward nonbank

[[Page 37519]]

entities that are not larger participants would mitigate some of the 
benefits to consumers of supervision of larger participants, the 
prospect of this shift might also reduce the likelihood that larger 
participants will choose to increase their prices in response to the 
Final Rule.
2. Benefits and Costs of Individual Supervisory Activities
    In addition to the responses of market participants anticipating 
supervision, the possible consequences of the Final Rule include the 
responses to and effects of individual examinations or other 
supervisory activities that the Bureau might conduct in the automobile 
financing market.
a. Benefits of Supervisory Activities
    Supervisory activity could provide several types of benefits. For 
example, as a result of supervisory activity, the Bureau and an entity 
might uncover deficiencies in the entity's policies and procedures. The 
Bureau's examination manual calls for the Bureau generally to prepare a 
report of each examination, to assess the strength of the entity's 
compliance mechanisms, and to assess the risks the entity poses to 
consumers, among other things. The Bureau will share examination 
findings with the examined entity because one purpose of supervision is 
to inform the entity of problems detected by examiners. Thus, for 
example, an examination might find evidence of widespread noncompliance 
with Federal consumer financial law, or it might identify specific 
areas where an entity has inadvertently failed to comply. These 
examples are only illustrative of the kinds of information an 
examination might uncover.
    Detecting and informing entities about such problems should be 
beneficial to consumers. When the Bureau notifies an entity about risks 
associated with an aspect of its activities, the entity is expected to 
adjust its practices to reduce those risks. That response may result in 
increased compliance with Federal consumer financial law, with benefits 
like those described above. Or it may avert a violation that would have 
occurred had Bureau supervision not detected the risk promptly. The 
Bureau may also inform entities about risks posed to consumers that 
fall short of violating the law. Action to reduce those risks would 
also be a benefit to consumers.
    Given the obligations nonbank covered persons in the automobile 
financing market have under Federal consumer financial law and the 
existence of efforts to enforce such law, the results of supervision 
also may benefit entities under supervision by detecting compliance 
problems early. When an entity's noncompliance results in litigation or 
an enforcement action, the entity must face both the costs of defending 
its conduct and the penalties for noncompliance, including potential 
liability for damages to private plaintiffs. The entity must also 
adjust its systems to ensure future compliance. Changing practices that 
have been in place for long periods of time can be expected to be 
relatively difficult because the practices may be severe enough to 
represent a serious failing of an entity's systems. Supervision may 
detect flaws at a point when correcting them would be relatively 
inexpensive. Catching problems early can, in some situations, forestall 
costly litigation. To the extent early correction limits the amount of 
consumer harm caused by a violation, it can help limit the cost of 
redress. In short, supervision might benefit larger participants by, in 
the aggregate, reducing the need for other more expensive activities to 
achieve compliance.\143\
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    \143\ Further potential benefits to consumers, covered persons, 
or both might arise from the Bureau's gathering of information 
during supervisory activities. The goals of supervision include 
informing the Bureau about activities of market participants and 
assessing risks to consumers and to markets for consumer financial 
products and services. The Bureau may use this information to 
improve regulation of consumer financial products and services and 
to improve enforcement of Federal consumer financial law, in order 
to better serve its mission of ensuring consumers' access to fair, 
transparent, and competitive markets for such products and services. 
Benefits of this type would depend on what the Bureau learns during 
supervision and how it uses that knowledge. For example, because the 
Bureau will examine a number of covered persons in the automobile 
financing market, the Bureau will build an understanding of how 
effective compliance systems and processes function in that market.
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b. Costs of Supervisory Activities
    The potential costs of actual supervisory activities arise in two 
categories. The first involves any costs to larger participants of 
increasing compliance in response to the Bureau's findings during 
supervisory activity and to supervisory actions. These costs are 
similar in nature to the possible compliance costs, described above, 
that larger participants in general might incur in anticipation of 
possible supervisory actions. This analysis will not repeat that 
discussion. The second category is the cost of supporting supervisory 
activity.
    Supervisory activity may involve requests for information or 
records, on-site or off-site examinations, or some combination of these 
activities. For example, in an on-site examination, Bureau examiners 
generally contact the entity for an initial conference with management. 
That initial contact is often accompanied by a request for information 
or records. Based on the discussion with management and an initial 
review of the information received, examiners determine the scope of 
the on-site exam. While on-site, examiners spend some time in further 
conversation with management about the entity's policies, procedures, 
and processes. The examiners also review documents, records, and 
accounts to assess the entity's compliance and evaluate the entity's 
compliance management system. As with the Bureau's other examinations, 
examinations of nonbank larger participants of the automobile financing 
market could involve issuing confidential examination reports and 
compliance ratings. The Bureau's examination manual describes the 
supervision process and indicates what materials and information an 
entity could expect examiners to request and review, both before they 
arrive and during their time on-site.
    The primary cost an entity will face in connection with an 
examination is the cost of employees' time to collect and provide the 
necessary information.\144\ The frequency and duration of examinations 
of any particular entity will depend on a number of factors, including 
the size of the entity, the compliance or other risks identified, 
whether the entity has been examined previously, and the demands on the 
Bureau's supervisory resources imposed by other entities and markets. 
Nevertheless, some rough estimates may be useful to provide a sense of 
the magnitude of potential staff costs that entities might incur.
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    \144\ Some commenters suggested that the Bureau's estimate 
overlooks non-labor costs that supervised entities may incur in 
responding to examinations and other supervisory requests. The 
Bureau recognizes that responding to examinations and other 
supervisory requests will entail certain other costs, such as costs 
of producing information electronically or in hard copy. However, 
such expenses are generally minimal in comparison to labor costs, 
and accordingly, the Bureau has focused on staff time in collecting 
and providing information in order to provide an approximate sense 
of the magnitude of the key cost involved.
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    The cost of supporting supervisory activity may be calibrated using 
prior Bureau experience in supervision. The Bureau considers its auto 
financing examinations at depository institutions and credit unions as 
a reasonable proxy for the duration and labor intensity of potential 
nonbank larger participant examinations. This belief arises from the 
similar role these institutions play in the market for automobile 
financing,

[[Page 37520]]

where they frequently coexist as direct competitors to one another.
    The average duration of the on-site portion of Bureau bank auto 
financing examinations is approximately nine weeks.\145\ Assuming that 
each exam requires two weeks of preparation time by a larger 
participant's staff prior to the exam as well as on-site assistance by 
staff throughout the duration of the exam, the Bureau assumes that the 
typical examination in this nonbank market would require 11 weeks of 
staff time. The Bureau has not suggested that counsel or any particular 
staffing level is required during an examination. However, for purposes 
of this analysis, the Bureau assumes, conservatively, that an entity 
might dedicate the equivalent of one full-time compliance officer and 
one-tenth of a full-time attorney to the exam. The mean hourly wage of 
a compliance officer in a nonbank entity that operates in activities 
related to installment lending is $33.97, and the mean hourly wage of a 
lawyer in the same industry is $83.88.\146\ Assuming that wages account 
for 67.5 percent of total compensation, the total labor cost of an 
examination would be about $27,611.\147\ The Bureau estimates that the 
cost for an entity with 10,000 aggregate annual originations per year, 
with an average amount financed of approximately $22,000 per loan 
origination,\148\ would be less than one-tenth of 1 percent of total 
revenue from originations for that year.\149\ This is a conservative 
estimate in several respects because it reflects revenue only from this 
line of business and uses an average amount financed in combination 
with the minimum number of transactions that a larger participant could 
provide.
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    \145\ This estimate was derived at the proposal stage using 
confidential supervisory Bureau data on the duration of on-site auto 
financing examinations at depository institutions and credit unions. 
For purposes of this calculation, the Bureau counted its auto 
financing examinations for which the on-site portion had been 
completed, while excluding the shortest and longest examinations to 
minimize the influence of outliers. Additionally, the Bureau counted 
only the on-site portion of an examination, which included time 
during the on-site period of the examination that examiners spent 
off-site for holiday or other travel considerations. However, the 
Bureau did not count time spent scoping an examination before the 
on-site portion of the examination or summarizing findings or 
preparing reports of examination afterwards.
    \146\ Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), Occupational Employment 
Statistics, available at http://data.bls.gov/oes/ (May 2013 release 
for North American Industry Classification System code 522200 
``Nondepository Credit Intermediation'').
    \147\ BLS, Employer Costs for Employee Compensation Database, 
Series ID CMU2025220000000D, available at http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CMU2025220000000D?data_tool=XGtable (providing wage and 
salary percent of total compensation in the credit intermediation 
and related activities private industry for the second quarter of 
2013). Dividing the mean hourly wages by 67.5 percent yields a total 
mean hourly cost (including total costs, such as salary, benefits, 
and taxes). Assuming that individuals are compensated for 40 hour 
work weeks, the total labor cost of an examination is calculated as 
follows: [(0.1*83.88+33.97)/0.675]*40*11.
    \148\ In the proposal, the Bureau used an estimated average 
amount financed of $21,750 based on 2013 origination data from 
AutoCount for all entities with 360 or greater loans and leases on 
an annual basis. As noted below, one commenter raised a question 
about the Bureau's estimated average amount financed. To ensure that 
the estimate accurately reflects the nonbank market defined in this 
Final Rule, the Bureau has applied the same methodology as in the 
proposal but has excluded entities that are not participants in the 
nonbank market defined in this rule, such as depository 
institutions, which resulted in a very similar average amount 
financed of $22,299. These estimates of average amount financed per 
origination are based solely on loans in AutoCount for which data 
are available on amount financed. The Bureau was unable to obtain 
data on the average amount financed in lease transactions, but 
believes it is unlikely that the estimated revenue from leasing 
transactions, including both the stream of payments over the course 
of the lease as well as the option value of the purchase or resale 
price of the vehicle at the end of the lease, would differ in a way 
that materially impacts the relationship between the cost of 
supervision and revenues.
    \149\ In the proposal, the Bureau estimated revenue as the sum 
total of payments received for loans originated that year, assuming 
zero interest rates and no defaults. The proportion of revenue was 
thus $27,611/($21,750*10,000). A similar, more conservative 
calculation can also be done that considers only revenue generated 
from interest for an entity with 10,000 originations. Using 2013 
origination data from AutoCount for which rate and term data are 
available, the Bureau estimates that the average interest rate per 
vehicle originated in the nonbank market defined in the Final Rule 
is 6.54 percent, and the average term length per vehicle originated 
in the nonbank market defined in the Final Rule is 60.42 months. 
Assuming zero default and zero prepayment, the Bureau estimates that 
an entity making 10,000 originations a year would receive 
approximately $39 million in total revenue from interest from a 
single year's originations. This is likely a low estimate because 
the interest rate of 6.54 percent reflects the frequently-subsidized 
low interest rates offered by the largest captive participants that 
typically originate much more than 10,000 loans per year. Under 
either approach to estimating revenue, the cost of an examination is 
less than one-tenth of 1 percent of revenue from a year's 
originations according to the Bureau's estimates.
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    Some industry commenters challenged this estimate, drawing on 
experiences by other companies in other industries to suggest that exam 
costs for larger participants would, in fact, range from $750,000 to 
$1,000,000.\150\ While the Bureau acknowledges that larger and 
lengthier exams may prove costlier than the amount estimated in the 
Proposed Rule, it also believes that the experience-based analogue it 
uses provides a better analogue than the commenter's general cross-
industry comparison because the exams considered by the Bureau more 
accurately reflect the sort of examination to which automobile 
financing entities will be subject.
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    \150\ These commenters suggested that an examination might 
require the participation of a compliance officer with a higher 
salary than the mean hourly wage used in the Bureau's analysis. In 
estimating that an examination might require a full-time compliance 
officer for 11 weeks and using the mean hourly wage for compliance 
officers, the Bureau did not mean to suggest that only one mid-level 
person would be involved in an examination. Instead, the Bureau 
recognizes that both junior and high-level staff may participate on 
a part-time basis and that these staff may be drawn from different 
offices within the entity. The Bureau intended its original estimate 
to represent the aggregate amount of labor resources a company might 
dedicate to responding to supervisory activity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    A law firm that represents financial services entities indicated 
that one of its clients finances an average of $3,800 per transaction, 
an amount approximately 83 percent lower than the Bureau's estimate, 
and stated as a result that the cost of an examination relative to 
total revenue would be much higher than the Bureau's estimate. The 
Bureau acknowledges some entities may participate in certain segments 
of the market in a way that results in a lower amount financed; 
however, of the over 500 institutions in AutoCount that the Bureau 
considered as participants in the nonbank market in 2013, the amount 
cited by the commenter ($3,800) falls within the lowest percentile of 
amount financed. Even if this remarkably low amount financed were 
considered in evaluating relative costs, for an entity with the larger-
participant minimum of 10,000 aggregate annual originations the costs 
would still be less than one-half of 1 percent of total revenue from 
the 10,000 aggregate annual originations according to the Bureau's 
estimates.
    The Bureau declines to predict, at this point, precisely how many 
examinations in the automobile financing market it will undertake in a 
given year, as neither the Dodd-Frank Act nor the Final Rule specifies 
a particular level or frequency of examinations. Given the Bureau's 
finite supervisory resources, and the range of industries over which it 
has supervisory responsibility for consumer financial protection, when 
and how often a given larger participant will be supervised is 
uncertain. The frequency of examinations will depend on a number of 
factors, including the Bureau's understanding of the conduct of market 
participants and the specific risks they pose to consumers; the 
responses of larger participants to prior examinations; and the demands 
that other markets make on the Bureau's supervisory resources. These 
factors can be expected to change over time, and the Bureau's 
understanding of these factors may change as it gathers more 
information about the market through its supervision and by other 
means.

[[Page 37521]]

3. Costs of Assessing Larger-Participant Status
    The larger-participant rule does not require nonbank entities to 
assess whether they are larger participants. However, the Bureau 
acknowledges that in some cases they might decide to incur costs in 
assessing whether they qualify as larger participants and potentially 
disputing their status.
    Larger-participant status depends on a nonbank's aggregate annual 
originations as defined in the Final Rule. An estimate of this number 
should be readily extractible from company records, as market 
participants likely evaluate the components of aggregate annual 
originations as part of their regular business practices. In addition, 
information on originations can be derived from title records that 
market participants maintain and publicly record.
    To the extent that some nonbank covered persons in the automobile 
financing market do not already know whether their aggregate annual 
originations exceed the threshold, such entities might, in response to 
the Final Rule, develop new systems to count their aggregate annual 
originations in accordance with the definition in the Final Rule. The 
data the Bureau currently has do not support a detailed estimate of how 
many nonbank entities will engage in such development or how much they 
might spend. Regardless, nonbank entities will be unlikely to spend 
significantly more on specialized systems to count aggregate annual 
originations than it would cost them to be supervised by the Bureau as 
larger participants. It bears emphasizing that even if expenditures on 
an accounting system successfully proved that a nonbank covered person 
in the automobile financing market was not a larger participant, it 
does not necessarily follow that this entity could not be supervised. 
The Bureau can supervise a nonbank entity whose conduct the Bureau 
determines, pursuant to section 1024(a)(1)(C), poses risks to 
consumers. Thus, a nonbank entity choosing to spend significant amounts 
on an accounting system directed toward the larger-participant test 
could not be sure it will not be subject to Bureau supervision 
notwithstanding those expenses. The Bureau therefore believes it is 
unlikely that any but a very few nonbank entities will undertake such 
expenditures.
4. Benefits and Costs of Adding Certain Automobile Leases to the 
Definition of ``Financial Product or Service''
    Finally, in Sec.  1001.2, the Bureau is defining the term 
``financial product or service'' to include automobile leases that (1) 
meet the requirements of leases authorized under section 108 of CEBA, 
as implemented by 12 CFR part 23, and are thus permissible for national 
banks to offer or provide; and (2) are not currently defined as a 
financial product or service under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-
Frank Act. As explained below, the Bureau believes that the benefits, 
costs, and impacts to consumers and covered persons of Sec.  1001.2 
will likely be small. First, Sec.  1001.2 will not extensively alter 
the substantive obligations of covered persons. Second, Sec.  1001.2 
will not substantially expand the number of market participants brought 
under supervision as a result of the Final Rule, or for entities 
already subject to supervision, the scope of supervisory examinations. 
The Bureau lacks data about the range of, and costs of, compliance 
mechanisms used by banks or nonbank entities in the automobile 
financing market. In light of these data limitations, the Bureau's 
analysis generally provides a qualitative discussion of the benefits, 
costs, and impacts of Sec.  1001.2.
a. Benefits of Sec.  1001.2
    Benefits of Sec.  1001.2 will stem from enhanced consumer 
protections relating to automobile leases that will fall under the 
definition. As financial products or services under title X of the 
Dodd-Frank Act, such leases will become subject to the UDAAP 
prohibition under section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act. These leases are 
already subject to a similar prohibition against unfair or deceptive 
acts or practices (UDAP) in or affecting commerce under section 5 of 
the Federal Trade Commission Act (FTC Act). \151\ The prohibitions set 
forth in section 5 of the FTC Act and section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank 
Act, however, are not precisely co-extensive. Most notably, section 5 
of the FTC Act does not include a prohibition on abusive acts or 
practices similar to that under section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act. 
Accordingly, consumers will benefit from the expanded scope of consumer 
protection under section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act in connection with 
transactions involving these leases.
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    \151\ 15 U.S.C. 45. This prohibition is enforced by the Federal 
Trade Commission with respect to nonbanks under section 5 and by the 
prudential regulators with respect to banks under section 8 of the 
Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C. 1818.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Section 1001.2 also has the potential to expand supervisory 
activities in two distinct ways. First, Sec.  1001.2, as incorporated 
into the final larger-participant rule, could bring certain nonbank 
entities under Bureau supervision by expanding the activities counted 
in determining whether participants of the automobile financing market 
qualify as larger participants and are thus subject to supervision 
under the Final Rule. To the extent that nonbank entities in the 
automobile financing market are brought under supervision as a result 
of Sec.  1001.2, both consumers and covered persons will benefit. The 
nature of these benefits, including from both the possibility of 
supervision and actual individual supervisory activities, are discussed 
above.
    Second, Sec.  1001.2 could affect the scope of supervision for 
other nonbank entities and certain banks and credit unions and their 
affiliates.\152\ For nonbank entities in the automobile financing 
market that will be subject to supervision as a larger participant even 
absent Sec.  1001.2, Sec.  1001.2 will not expand the leasing 
activities of such entities that will be subject to supervision. 
However, Sec.  1001.2 will expand the scope of supervision for leasing 
covered by Sec.  1001.2 to include compliance with section 1031 of the 
Dodd-Frank Act.
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    \152\ With respect to nonbanks, the Bureau currently supervises 
mortgage companies, payday lenders, and private student lenders, as 
well as larger participants of the consumer reporting, consumer debt 
collection, student loan servicing, and international money transfer 
markets. The Bureau is not aware of any significant automobile 
leasing activity by these entities. Thus, the Bureau believes that 
Sec.  1001.2 in itself will have at most a marginal impact on the 
scope of examinations for these entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    With respect to banks and credit unions, the Bureau has supervisory 
authority over insured depository institutions and credit unions with 
total assets of more than $10 billion (and their affiliates) for 
compliance with Federal consumer financial laws, and the prudential 
regulators exercise primary supervisory authority over other insured 
depository institutions and credit unions with total assets of $10 
billion or less for compliance with Federal consumer financial laws. As 
noted above, although Sec.  1001.2 will not expand the scope of leasing 
activities of depository institutions and credit unions that are 
subject to supervision, for leasing covered under Sec.  1001.2, it will 
expand the scope of that supervision to include compliance with section 
1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act.

[[Page 37522]]

Again, the benefits to consumers of that expanded supervision authority 
will be similar to the general benefits of supervision discussed above.
    Although the Bureau has identified the above potential consumer 
benefits from the expanded supervision authority that could result from 
Sec.  1001.2, the Bureau believes such benefits will be limited in 
extent. Most significantly, as discussed above, the Bureau believes 
that most automobile leases currently qualify as a financial product or 
service under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act. Thus, the 
Bureau believes that few, if any, nonbank participants in the 
automobile financing market will be subject to the Bureau's supervision 
under the Final Rule as a result of Sec.  1001.2.\153\ Further, for 
bank and nonbank entities that will be subject to supervision even 
absent Sec.  1001.2, the Bureau believes that Sec.  1001.2 will expand 
only the scope of supervision of the leasing activities of such 
entities. Notably, even absent Sec.  1001.2, all leasing activities of 
such entities will be subject to supervision by the Bureau or the 
prudential regulators for compliance with the ``enumerated consumer 
laws'' as defined in section 1002(12) of the Dodd-Frank Act, including 
the CLA.\154\ And under the existing regulatory framework, the 
prudential regulators are authorized to supervise banks for compliance 
with section 5 of the FTC Act. Thus, for entities that will be subject 
to supervision even absent Sec.  1001.2, the expanded supervision 
resulting from Sec.  1001.2 will be focused on the entity's compliance 
with section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act in connection with the 
activities covered by Sec.  1001.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \153\ As discussed above, some commenters have argued that Sec.  
1001.2 will actually cover most, if not all, automobile leases. Even 
assuming this were the case, the Bureau estimates that very few 
entities will exceed the larger-participant aggregate annual 
origination threshold solely as a result of their total leasing 
volume. Thus, even if Sec.  1001.2 were to cover all leasing, it 
would not have a significant effect on which entities are considered 
larger participants.
    \154\ With respect to the enumerated consumer laws, the scope of 
the Bureau's authority is defined by the scope of those laws, not by 
the activities listed under section 1002(15)(A) of the Dodd-Frank 
Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finally, under section 1031(b), the Bureau has authority to 
prescribe rules applicable to a covered person or service provider 
identifying as unlawful UDAAPs in connection with any transaction with 
a consumer for a consumer financial product or service, or the offering 
of a consumer financial product or service. Thus, the Bureau could 
promulgate such rules in connection with transactions for the leases 
that would fall under Sec.  1001.2. The Bureau would consider the 
benefits, costs, and impacts of any such rulemaking as part of its 
analysis under section 1022(b)(2) for that rulemaking. The Bureau notes 
that any such rulemaking would likely aim to provide consumers and 
covered persons with additional clarity in regard to identifying 
UDAAPs. It is not possible, however, to identify with any greater 
specificity here the potential benefits to consumers or covered persons 
from Sec.  1001.2 as a result of an unspecified future rulemaking.\155\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \155\ Section 1001.2 will also benefit consumers by expanding 
the scope of certain other Bureau authorities under title X of the 
Dodd-Frank Act. Perhaps most significantly, Sec.  1001.2 will expand 
the Bureau's rulemaking authority under section 1032 of the Dodd-
Frank Act, which authorizes the Bureau to prescribe rules to ensure 
that the features of any consumer financial product or service are 
fully, accurately, and effectively disclosed to consumers in a 
manner that permits consumers to understand the costs, benefits, and 
risks associated with the product or service. In addition, Sec.  
1001.2 will expand the scope of the Bureau's authority under section 
1022(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act to ``monitor for risks to consumers in 
the offering or provision of consumer financial products or 
services, including developments in markets for such products or 
services,'' and the scope of the Bureau's authority under section 
1033 of the Dodd-Frank Act to prescribe rules for covered persons 
with respect to consumer rights to access information concerning 
consumer financial products or services that the consumer receives 
from such persons. As with respect to section 1031(b) of the Dodd-
Frank Act, it is not possible for the Bureau to identify with 
specificity here the benefits to consumers that might result from 
the Bureau's potential future exercise of these authorities. The 
Bureau, however, notes that it would consider the benefits, costs, 
and impacts of any rulemakings under sections 1032 or 1033 of the 
Dodd-Frank Act as part of the section 1022(b)(2) analysis for such 
rulemakings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

b. Costs of Sec.  1001.2
    Section 1001.2 will impose compliance costs on covered persons by 
subjecting leasing activities that fall under Sec.  1001.2 to the UDAAP 
prohibition in section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act. Those entities will 
incur some cost of compliance because, as laid out above, the 
prohibitions under section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act and section 5 of 
the FTC Act are not co-extensive: in particular, section 5 of the FTC 
Act does not include a prohibition on abusive acts or practices similar 
to that under section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act. However, given the 
fact that, as interpreted by the Bureau, section 1002(15)(A)(ii) covers 
most automobile leases and the substantial overlap of the prohibited 
conduct under section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act and section 5 of the 
FTC Act, in the Bureau's judgment, the compliance costs to covered 
persons of this new prohibition will be limited in extent.
    Regarding supervision, Sec.  1001.2, as incorporated into the final 
larger-participant rule, could also bring certain nonbank entities 
under Bureau supervision and will affect the scope of supervision for 
other nonbank entities, banks, and credit unions. With respect to 
nonbanks, Sec.  1001.2 will, as discussed above, expand the activities 
counted in determining whether participants of the automobile financing 
market qualify as larger participants and are thus subject to 
supervision under the Final Rule. To the extent that larger 
participants in the automobile financing market are brought under 
supervision as a result of Sec.  1001.2, such entities will incur 
costs. The nature of these costs, including from the possibility of 
supervision as well as from actual individual supervisory activities, 
are discussed above. For participants of the automobile financing 
market that would be subject to supervision under the larger-
participant rule even absent Sec.  1001.2, Sec.  1001.2 will impose 
costs by expanding the leasing activities of such entities subject to 
supervision for compliance with section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act. 
With respect to banks and credit unions, by expanding the leasing 
activities subject to the section 1031 UDAAP prohibition, as discussed 
above, Sec.  1001.2 will correspondingly expand the activities subject 
to supervision by either the Bureau or the prudential regulators, as 
applicable, for compliance with that prohibition.
    For both banks and nonbanks, the Bureau believes that the increased 
costs of supervision identified above will be small. As discussed 
above, the Bureau believes that most auto leases currently qualify as a 
financial product or service under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-
Frank Act, and, as discussed above, the Bureau believes that few, if 
any, nonbank participants in the automobile financing market will be 
brought under Bureau supervision under the Final Rule as a result of 
Sec.  1001.2.\156\ Similarly, for banks and nonbank entities that will 
be subject to supervision even absent Sec.  1001.2, the Bureau believes 
that Sec.  1001.2 will only subject the leasing activities of such 
entities to slightly expanded supervision. Notably, even absent Sec.  
1001.2, all leasing activities of such entities would be subject to 
supervision by the Bureau or the prudential regulators for compliance 
with the enumerated consumer laws, including the CLA.\157\ And under 
the existing

[[Page 37523]]

regulatory framework, the prudential regulators are authorized to 
supervise banks for compliance with section 5 of the FTC Act. Thus, for 
entities that would be subject to supervision even absent the Final 
Rule, the scope of expanded supervision for the limited activities that 
will fall under Sec.  1001.2 will be further limited to compliance with 
section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The Bureau believes that the 
additional cost to entities already subject to supervision of being 
supervised for compliance with section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act will 
be minimal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \156\ See supra note 153.
    \157\ With respect to the enumerated consumer laws, the scope of 
the Bureau's authority is defined by the scope of those laws, not by 
the activities listed under section 1002(15)(A) of the Dodd-Frank 
Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finally, under section 1031(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Bureau 
has authority to prescribe rules applicable to a covered person or 
service provider identifying as unlawful UDAAPs in connection with any 
transaction with a consumer for a consumer financial product or 
service, or the offering of a consumer financial product or service. 
Thus, under Sec.  1001.2, the Bureau may promulgate such rules in 
connection with transactions for the leases that fall under Sec.  
1001.2. Such a rule may impose costs on covered persons or service 
providers. It is not possible to identify with any greater specificity 
here the potential costs to covered persons or service providers of any 
such hypothetical future rulemaking. The Bureau notes, however, that it 
would consider the benefits, costs, and impacts of any such rulemaking 
as part of its analysis under section 1022(b)(2) for that 
rulemaking.\158\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \158\ Section 1001.2 would also impose costs on covered persons 
by expanding the scope of certain other Bureau authorities under 
title X of the Dodd-Frank Act. Specifically, Sec.  1001.2 will 
expand the Bureau's rulemaking authority under section 1032 of the 
Dodd-Frank Act, which authorizes the Bureau to prescribe rules to 
ensure that the features of any consumer financial product or 
service are fully, accurately, and effectively disclosed to 
consumers in a manner that permits consumers to understand the 
costs, benefits, and risks associated with the product or service. 
In addition, Sec.  1001.2 will expand the scope of the Bureau's 
authority under section 1022(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act to ``monitor 
for risks to consumers in the offering or provision of consumer 
financial products or services, including developments in markets 
for such products or services,'' and the scope of the Bureau's 
authority under section 1033 of the Dodd-Frank Act, to prescribe 
rules for covered persons with respect to consumer rights to access 
information concerning consumer financial products or services that 
the consumer receives from such persons. As with respect to section 
1031(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act, it is not possible for the Bureau to 
identify with specificity here the costs to covered persons that may 
result from the Bureau's potential future exercise of these 
authorities. The Bureau, however, notes that it would consider the 
benefits, costs, and impacts of any rulemakings under sections 1032 
or 1033 of the Dodd-Frank Act as part of the section 1022(b)(2) 
analysis for such rulemakings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

5. Consideration of Alternatives
    The Bureau considered different thresholds for larger-participant 
status in the market for automobile financing. One alternative the 
Bureau considered is a larger threshold of, for example, 50,000 
aggregate annual originations. Under such an alternative, the benefits 
of supervision to both consumers and covered persons would likely be 
substantially reduced because some firms impacting a large portion of 
consumers in important market segments, such as captive, subprime, and 
BHPH lending, would be omitted. On the other hand, the overall 
potential costs across all nonbank covered persons would be reduced if 
fewer firms were defined as larger participants and thus fewer were 
subject to the Bureau's supervision authority on that basis. Similarly, 
the Bureau also considered lower thresholds, such as 5,000 aggregate 
annual originations, but believes these would only marginally increase 
the proportion of market activity that the Bureau could supervise while 
potentially exposing a greater number of nonbank covered persons to the 
costs listed above. However, the total direct costs for actual 
supervisory activity might not change substantially because the Bureau 
conducts exams based on risk and would not necessarily examine more or 
fewer entities if the rule's coverage were broader or narrower.\159\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \159\ Further discussion of comments on the threshold level is 
provided in the section-by-section analysis of Sec.  1090.108(b) 
above.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Bureau also considered various other criteria for assessing 
larger-participant status, including dollar volume of originations and 
total unpaid principal balances. Calculating either of these metrics 
might be more involved than calculating the number of originations for 
a given nonbank entity. If so, then a given entity might face greater 
costs for evaluating or disputing whether it qualified as a larger 
participant should the occasion to do so arise. Additionally, as some 
nonbank entities might, for example, specialize in sectors featuring 
higher average loan amounts or different prepayment and default rates 
than others, using aggregate annual originations more directly captures 
the number of consumers impacted by the Final Rule. For each criterion, 
the Bureau expects that it could choose a suitable threshold for which 
the set of larger participants, among those entities participating in 
the market today, would be similar to those expected to qualify under 
the Final Rule. Consequently, the costs, benefits, and impacts of this 
Final Rule should not depend on which criterion the Bureau uses.

C. Potential Specific Impacts of the Final Rule

1. Depository Institutions and Credit Unions With $10 Billion or Less 
in Total Assets, as Described in Section 1026 of the Dodd-Frank Act
    No depository institutions or credit unions of any size will become 
larger participants in the market for automobile financing under the 
Final Rule. Further, as explained above, the Final Rule's definition of 
certain leasing activity as a financial product or service will not in 
itself have any significant effect on depository institutions and 
credit unions with $10 billion or less in total assets. Nevertheless, 
the Final Rule might, as discussed above, have some impact on 
depository institutions or credit unions that provide financing for 
automobile transactions. The Final Rule might therefore alter market 
dynamics in a market in which some depository institutions and credit 
unions with less than $10 billion in assets may be active. For example, 
if nonbanks' price of credit for loan acquisitions or leases were to 
increase, or similarly were the compensation for selling those same 
products to decrease due to increased costs related to supervision, 
then depository institutions or credit unions of any size might benefit 
by the relative change in competitors' costs.
2. Impact of the Provisions on Consumer Access to Credit and on 
Consumers in Rural Areas
    Because the rule applies uniformly to automobile financing 
transactions of both rural and non-rural consumers, the rule should not 
have a unique impact on rural consumers. The Bureau is not aware of any 
evidence suggesting that rural consumers have been disproportionately 
harmed by nonbank entities' failure to comply with Federal consumer 
financial law. The Bureau requested comments that provide information 
related to how automobile financing transactions affect rural 
consumers, but did not receive any.

VII. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA),\160\ as amended by the Small 
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996,\161\ requires 
each agency to consider the potential impact of its regulations on 
small entities, including small businesses, small governmental units, 
and small not-for-

[[Page 37524]]

profit organizations.\162\ The RFA defines a ``small business'' as a 
business that meets the size standard developed by the Small Business 
Administration (SBA) pursuant to the Small Business Act.\163\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \160\ Public Law 96-354, 94 Stat. 1164 (1980).
    \161\ Public Law 104-121, section 241, 110 Stat. 847, 864-65 
(1996).
    \162\ 5 U.S.C. 601-12. The term ```small organization' means any 
not-for-profit enterprise which is independently owned and operated 
and is not dominant in its field, unless an agency establishes [an 
alternative definition after notice and comment].'' 5 U.S.C. 601(4). 
The term `` `small governmental jurisdiction' means governments of 
cities, counties, towns, townships, villages, school districts, or 
special districts, with a population of less than fifty thousand, 
unless an agency establishes [an alternative definition after notice 
and comment].'' Id. at 601(5). The Bureau is not currently aware of 
any small governmental units or small not-for-profit organizations 
to which the Final Rule would apply.
    \163\ 5 U.S.C. 601(3). The Bureau may establish an alternative 
definition after consultation with SBA and an opportunity for public 
comment. Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The RFA generally requires an agency to conduct an initial 
regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) of any proposed rule subject to 
notice-and-comment rulemaking requirements, unless the agency certifies 
that the proposed 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 entity representatives prior to 
proposing a rule for which an IRFA is required.\165\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \164\ 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
    \165\ 5 U.S.C. 609.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The undersigned certified that the Proposed Rule, if adopted, would 
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities and that an IRFA was therefore not required. The Final Rule 
adopts the Proposed Rule with some modifications that do not lead to a 
different conclusion. Therefore, a final regulatory flexibility 
analysis is not required.
    The Final Rule defines a class of nonbank covered persons as larger 
participants of the automobile financing market and thereby authorizes 
the Bureau to undertake supervisory activities with respect to those 
nonbank covered persons. The Final Rule also defines the term 
``financial product[s] or service[s]'' to include automobile leases 
that (1) meet the requirements of leases authorized under section 108 
of CEBA, as implemented by 12 CFR part 23, and are thus permissible for 
national banks to offer or provide; and (2) are not currently defined 
as a financial product or service under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the 
Dodd-Frank Act. The Final Rule will not affect a substantial number of 
small businesses.
    Regarding insured depositories and credit unions, these entities 
are small businesses only if their assets are below $550 million.\166\ 
The final definition of larger participants of the automobile financing 
market applies only to nonbank entities, so it will have no significant 
impact on depository institutions or credit unions of any size. The 
final definition of the term financial product or service to include 
certain automobile leases will have little impact on compliance and 
supervision costs for insured depositories and credit unions. The 
leasing activities covered under Sec.  1001.2 will become subject to 
the UDAAP prohibition under section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act. 
Although the two are not co-extensive, as discussed above, a similar 
prohibition on UDAP in or affecting commerce under section 5 of the FTC 
Act already applies to these activities. Similarly, small banks are 
already subject to supervision for compliance with section 5 of the FTC 
Act, as well as with the enumerated consumer laws. In addition, most 
small banks have a very low share of leases relative to loans, and most 
of this leasing activity already qualifies as a financial product or 
service under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act. 
Accordingly, the Bureau estimates that very few, if any, small banks 
will experience a significant impact due to the Final Rule's change to 
the definition of a financial product or service.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \166\ 13 CFR 121.201.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Regarding nonbank entities, the Final Rule adopts a threshold for 
larger-participant status of at least 10,000 aggregate annual 
originations.\167\ Under the size standard for the most relevant SBA 
classification, i.e., North American Industry Classification System 
(NAICS) code 522220, an entity engaged in automobile financing is a 
small business if its annual receipts are at or below $38.5 
million.\168\ The Bureau solicited comments on whether NAICS code 
522220 or any other NAICS code is more appropriate for this market, but 
did not receive any. The Bureau used AutoCount data for 2013 combined 
with public financial statements, securitization filings, and 
additional market research to estimate annual receipts for each of the 
potential larger participants.\169\ Based on this review, it appears 
that few, if any, of the potential larger participants identified by 
the Bureau's analysis meet the small business threshold 
classification.\170\
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    \167\ As noted above, if a nonbank covered person meets the 
larger-participant test, it would remain a larger participant until 
two years from the first day of the tax year in which it last met 
the larger-participant test. 12 CFR 1090.102.
    \168\ 13 CFR 121.201 (NAICS code 522220) (as amended by 79 FR 
33647, 33655 (June 12, 2014)). The Bureau believes that larger 
participants in the nonbank automobile financing market are likely 
to be classified under NAICS code 522220, sales financing. NAICS 
lists ``automobile financing'' and ``automobile finance leasing 
companies'' as index entries corresponding to this code. See U.S. 
Census Bureau, North American Industry Classification System, 2012 
NAICS Definition 522220 Sales Financing, available at http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/naics/naicsrch.
    \169\ To generate these estimates, the Bureau first calculated 
an estimate of the average stream of interest income the 34 
potential larger participants identified by the Bureau would receive 
over a 12-month period for all loans originated in 2013, as well as 
the income each entity would receive during the same period for 
loans made in previous years if the number of originations were 
identical to 2013 levels. This initial calculation excludes leases 
that also generate income. It also assumes no prepayment, which 
would increase receipts; no defaults, which would decrease receipts; 
and no other income generated from any other sources. The Bureau 
then analyzed public financial statements to verify any potential 
outliers. Using this methodology, the Bureau found five potential 
larger participants with receipts from loans in 2013 that it 
estimated would fall below the current $38.5 million SBA size 
standard. Further market research indicated that four of these five 
remaining entities likely had sufficient additional revenue from 
leases, affiliate activity, or other sources such that their 2013 
annual receipts also exceed the relevant size standard. Upon further 
review of information considered at the proposal stage and 
additional market research, the Bureau was not able to determine 
whether the final remaining entity would have met the relevant size 
standard in 2013.
    \170\ The Bureau's analysis concluding that few, if any, 
potential larger participants meet the relevant size standard is 
described in note 169 above. The Bureau also believes that it is 
unlikely that any small entities would be rendered larger 
participants of the consumer reporting or consumer debt collection 
markets by the Final Rule's technical amendments to Sec. Sec.  
1090.104(a) and 1090.105(a), since very few entities in those 
markets are likely to have annual receipts that are so close to the 
larger-participant threshold that inclusion of additional receipts 
from a formerly affiliated company would affect their larger-
participant status.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Considering the limited public information available for several of 
the smallest potential larger participants, the Bureau requested 
comment on the impact of the Proposed Rule on small nonbank entities 
and solicited data that may be relevant to this analysis. A law firm 
that represents financial services entities stated that one of its 
clients, which the law firm did not name, had approximately $30 million 
in total receipts during fiscal year 2014, while generating sufficient 
origination volume to constitute a larger participant under the 
Proposed Rule. The Bureau acknowledges that it is possible that a few 
firms that qualify as a small business could also meet the threshold as 
a larger participant due to small loan amounts, short term lengths, or 
other factors. However, the Bureau's analysis indicates that this will 
not be the case for a substantial number of small entities. In order to 
qualify as a small business and a larger participant according to the 
Bureau's estimates, an

[[Page 37525]]

entity would need to maintain a portfolio featuring a total number of 
originations at or close to the threshold, with the typical loan 
featuring some combination of below average rate, term length, and 
amount financed.\171\ The Bureau therefore maintains its estimate that 
very few, if any, small businesses will be classified as larger 
participants of the automobile financing market under the Final 
Rule.\172\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \171\ For example, an institution with exactly 10,000 aggregate 
annual originations at an interest rate and amount financed at the 
median among nonbank participants in 2013, along with a loan term in 
the fifteenth percentile, would still be estimated to generate 
receipts above the current $38.5 million SBA size standard.
    \172\ According to the 2007 Economic Census, more than 2,000 
small firms are encompassed under the most applicable NAICS code 
(522220). U.S. Census Bureau, American FactFinder Database, Estab 
and Firm Size: Summary Statistics by Revenue Size of Establishments 
for the United States: 2007, available at http://factfinder2.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=ECN_2007_US_52SSSZ4&prodType=table. Thus, even 
if a few small firms were classified as larger participants, they 
would constitute less than 1 percent of the small firms in the 
industry under that NAICS code.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Section 1001.2(a) will have little impact on small nonbank entities 
engaged in automobile leasing. As mentioned above, the vast majority of 
automobile leases likely already qualify as a financial product or 
service under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act, and so the 
change in definition is unlikely to affect the larger-participant 
status of any small business. With respect to costs related to 
compliance, under Sec.  1001.2 small nonbanks will have to comply with 
the UDAAP prohibition under section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act when 
providing automobile leases covered under Sec.  1001.2. However, as 
with small banks, small nonbanks that provide automobile leases must 
already comply with similar UDAP prohibitions under section 5 of the 
FTC Act as well as the applicable enumerated consumer laws, such as the 
CLA. Additionally, as explained above, there are likely to be few, if 
any, small nonbank businesses in the automobile financing market that 
will be subject to supervision irrespective of Sec.  1001.2. To the 
extent that any small nonbanks are larger participants under the Final 
Rule, the Bureau believes that Sec.  1001.2 will expand the scope of 
leasing activities of such entities subject to supervision for 
compliance with section 1031. The economic impact of this expansion in 
scope will not be significant. Notably, even absent Sec.  1001.2, all 
leasing activities of such entities would be subject to supervision by 
the Bureau for compliance with the enumerated consumer laws, including 
the CLA.\173\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \173\ As noted above, with respect to the enumerated consumer 
laws, the scope of the Bureau's authority is defined by the scope of 
those laws, not by the activities listed under section 1002(15)(A) 
of the Dodd-Frank Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Additionally, if a larger participant qualifies as a small business 
under the $38.5 million SBA size standard, the Final Rule will not 
result in a ``significant impact'' on the entity. The Final Rule will 
not itself impose any business conduct obligations beyond those 
described above regarding the automobile leases defined under the Final 
Rule as financial products or services. Furthermore, the Bureau's 
supervisory activity will have very little economic impact on a 
supervised entity. When and how often the Bureau will in fact engage in 
supervisory activity, such as an examination, with respect to a larger 
participant (and, if so, the extent of such activity) will depend on a 
number of considerations, including the Bureau's allocation of 
resources and the application of the statutory factors set forth in 
section 1024(b)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act. Given the Bureau's finite 
supervisory resources, and the range of industries over which it has 
supervisory responsibility for consumer financial protection, when and 
how often a given a larger participant will be supervised is uncertain. 
Moreover, if supervisory activity occurs, the costs that will result 
from such activity are expected to be minimal in relation to the 
overall activities of a larger participant.\174\ Hence, the Final Rule 
will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of 
small entities because the Final Rule will not impose any significant 
business conduct obligations on the defined class of larger 
participants and the cost of supervisory activities will be nominal in 
relation to the revenue of a larger participant whose annual revenue 
fell at or below the $38.5 million SBA size standard.\175\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \174\ As noted in part VI.B.2.b above, the Bureau estimates that 
the cost of participation in an examination would be less than one-
tenth of 1 percent of the total revenue generated from one year's 
originations for an entity at the threshold of 10,000 aggregate 
annual originations. Even if the unusually low amount financed 
suggested by a commenter is used in the analysis, the Bureau's 
estimates suggest that an examination would still require less than 
one-half of 1 percent of total revenue from one year's originations 
for an entity at the threshold of 10,000 aggregate annual 
originations.
    \175\ Because the Final Rule aggregates the activities of 
affiliated companies in part by adding together annual originations, 
two companies that are small businesses might, together, have 
aggregate annual originations of 10,000 or more. The Bureau 
anticipates no more than a very few such cases, if any, in the 
automobile financing market.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finally, section 1024(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act authorizes the 
Bureau to supervise service providers to nonbank covered persons 
encompassed by section 1024(a)(1), which includes larger participants. 
Because the Final Rule does not specifically address service providers, 
effects on service providers need not be discussed for purposes of this 
RFA analysis. Even were such effects relevant, the Bureau believes that 
it would be very unlikely that any supervisory activities with respect 
to the service providers to the potential larger participants of the 
market for automobile financing would result in a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities.\176\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \176\ As noted above, according to the 2007 Economic Census, 
more than 2,000 small firms are encompassed under NAICS code 522220, 
and the number of those firms that are service providers for the 
approximately 34 potential larger participants and their affiliated 
companies will be only a small fraction of that number. Other 
service providers may be classified under NAICS code 522320 for 
financial transactions processing, reserve, and clearing house 
activities, which also includes more than 2,000 small firms. U.S. 
Census Bureau, American FactFinder Database, Estab and Firm Size: 
Summary Statistics by Revenue Size of Establishments for the United 
States: 2007, available at http://factfinder2.census.gov/bkmk/table/
1.0/en/ECN/2007_US/52SSSZ4//naics~522320. Still other service 
providers are likely to be considered in other NAICS codes 
corresponding to the service provider's primary business activities. 
As noted above with respect to larger participants themselves, the 
frequency and duration of examinations that would be conducted at 
any particular service provider would depend on a variety of 
factors. However, it is implausible that in any given year the 
Bureau would conduct examinations of a substantial number of the 
more than 4,000 small firms in NAICS code 522220 and 522320, or the 
small firm service providers that happen to be in any other NAICS 
code. Moreover, the impact of supervisory activities, including 
examinations, at such small firm service providers can be expected 
to be less, given the Bureau's exercise of its discretion in 
supervision, than at the larger participants themselves.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Accordingly, the undersigned certifies that the Final Rule will not 
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities.

VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act

    The Bureau has determined that this Final Rule does not impose any 
new recordkeeping, reporting, or disclosure requirements on covered 
entities or members of the public that would constitute collections of 
information requiring approval under the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 
U.S.C. 3501, et seq.

List of Subjects in 12 CFR Parts 1001 and 1090

    Consumer protection, Credit.

Authority and Issuance

    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Bureau adds 12 CFR 
part 1001 and amends 12 CFR part 1090, to read as follows:

[[Page 37526]]


0
1. Add part 1001 to read as follows:

PART 1001--FINANCIAL PRODUCTS OR SERVICES

Sec.
1001.1 Authority and purpose.
1001.2 Definitions.

    Authority:  12 U.S.C. 5481(15)(A)(xi); and 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(1).


Sec.  1001.1  Authority and purpose.

    Under 12 U.S.C. 5481(15)(A)(xi), the Bureau is authorized to define 
certain financial products or services for purposes of title X of the 
Dodd-Frank Act, Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010) (Title X) in 
addition to those defined in 12 U.S.C. 5481(15)(A)(i)-(x). The purpose 
of this part is to implement that authority.


Sec.  1001.2  Definitions.

    Except as otherwise provided in Title X, in addition to the 
definitions set forth in 12 U.S.C. 5481(15)(A)(i)-(x), the term 
``financial product or service'' means, for purposes of Title X:
    (a) Extending or brokering leases of an automobile, as automobile 
is defined by 12 CFR 1090.108(a), where the lease:
    (1) Qualifies as a full-payout lease and a net lease, as provided 
by 12 CFR 23.3(a), and has an initial term of not less than 90 days, as 
provided by 12 CFR 23.11; and
    (2) Is not a financial product or service under 12 U.S.C. 
5481(15)(A)(ii).

PART 1090--DEFINING LARGER PARTICIPANTS OF CERTAIN CONSUMER 
FINANCIAL PRODUCT AND SERVICE MARKETS

0
2. The authority citation for part 1090 continues to read as follows:

    Authority:  12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)(B); 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(2); 12 
U.S.C. 5514(b)(7)(A); and 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(1).

Subpart A--General

0
3. Section 1090.101 is amended by revising the definition of ``Nonbank 
covered person'' to read as follows:


Sec.  1090.101  Definitions.

* * * * *
    Nonbank covered person means, except for persons described in 12 
U.S.C. 5515(a) and 5516(a):
    (1) Any person that engages in offering or providing a consumer 
financial product or service; and
    (2) Any affiliate of a person that engages in offering or providing 
a consumer financial product or service if such affiliate acts as a 
service provider to such person.
* * * * *

Subpart B--Markets

0
4. Section 1090.104 is amended by revising paragraph (iii)(D) of the 
definition of ``Annual receipts'' to read as follows:


Sec.  1090.104  Consumer reporting market.

    (a) * * *
    Annual receipts* * *
    (iii) * * *
    (D) The annual receipts of a formerly affiliated company are not 
included in the annual receipts of a nonbank covered person for 
purposes of this section, if the affiliation ceased before the 
applicable period of measurement as set forth in paragraph (ii) of this 
definition. The annual receipts of a nonbank covered person and its 
formerly affiliated company are aggregated for the entire period of 
measurement if the affiliation ceased during the applicable period of 
measurement as set forth in paragraph (ii) of this definition.
* * * * *

0
5. Section 1090.105 is amended by revising paragraph (iii)(D) of the 
definition of ``Annual receipts'' to read as follows:


Sec.  1090.105  Consumer debt collection market.

    (a) * * *
    Annual receipts* * *
    (iii) * * *
    (D) The annual receipts of a formerly affiliated company are not 
included in the annual receipts of a nonbank covered person for 
purposes of this section if the affiliation ceased before the 
applicable period of measurement as set forth in paragraph (ii) of this 
definition. The annual receipts of a nonbank covered person and its 
formerly affiliated company are aggregated for the entire period of 
measurement if the affiliation ceased during the applicable period of 
measurement as set forth in paragraph (ii) of this definition.
* * * * *

0
6. Add Sec.  1090.108 to subpart B to read as follows:


Sec.  1090.108  Automobile financing market.

    (a) Market-related definitions. As used in this section:
    Aggregate annual originations means the sum of the number of annual 
originations of a nonbank covered person and the number of annual 
originations of each of the nonbank covered person's affiliated 
companies, calculated as follows:
    (i) Annual Originations.
    (A) Annual originations means the sum of the following transactions 
for the preceding calendar year:
    (1) Credit granted for the purpose of purchasing an automobile;
    (2) Automobile leases;
    (3) Refinancings of obligations described in (i)(A)(1) of this 
definition that are secured by an automobile, and any subsequent 
refinancings thereof that are secured by an automobile; and
    (4) Purchases or acquisitions of obligations described in 
(i)(A)(1), (2), or (3) of this definition.
    (B) The term annual originations does not include:
    (1) Investments in asset-backed securities; and
    (2) Purchases or acquisitions of obligations by a special purpose 
entity established for the purpose of facilitating asset-backed 
securities transactions if the purchases or acquisitions are made for 
the purpose of facilitating an asset-backed securities transaction.
    (ii) Aggregating the annual originations of affiliated companies. 
The annual originations of a nonbank covered person must be aggregated 
with the annual originations of any person (other than an entity 
described in paragraph (c) of this section) that was an affiliated 
company of the nonbank covered person at any time during the preceding 
calendar year. The annual originations of a nonbank covered person and 
its affiliated companies are aggregated for the entire preceding 
calendar year, even if the affiliation did not exist for the entire 
calendar year.
    Automobile means any self-propelled vehicle primarily used for 
personal, family, or household purposes for on-road transportation. The 
term does not include motor homes, recreational vehicles (RVs), golf 
carts, and motor scooters.
    Automobile financing means providing or engaging in the 
transactions identified under the term ``Annual originations'' as 
defined in this section.
    Automobile lease means a lease that is for the use of an 
automobile, as defined in this section, and that meets the requirements 
of 12 U.S.C. 5481(15)(A)(ii) or 12 CFR 1001.2(a).
    Refinancing has the same meaning as in 12 CFR 1026.20(a), except 
that the nonbank covered person need not be the original creditor or a 
holder or servicer of the original obligation.
    (b) Test to define larger participants. Except as provided in 
paragraph (c) of this section, a nonbank covered person that engages in 
automobile financing is a larger participant of the automobile 
financing market if the person has at

[[Page 37527]]

least 10,000 aggregate annual originations.
    (c) Exclusion for dealers. The following entities do not qualify as 
larger participants under this section:
    (1) Persons excluded from the Bureau's authority by 12 U.S.C. 5519; 
and
    (2) Persons who meet the definition in 12 U.S.C. 5519(f)(2); are 
identified in 12 U.S.C. 5519(b)(2); and are predominantly engaged in 
the sale and servicing of motor vehicles (as that term is defined in 12 
U.S.C. 5519(f)(1)), the leasing and servicing of motor vehicles, or 
both.

    Dated: June 5, 2015.
Richard Cordray,
Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.
[FR Doc. 2015-14630 Filed 6-29-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-AM-P



                                                  37496              Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL                            SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                             does not include investments in asset-
                                                  PROTECTION                                                                                                     backed securities. The Final Rule also
                                                                                                          I. Summary of Final Rule
                                                                                                                                                                 excludes certain purchases or
                                                  12 CFR Parts 1001 and 1090                                 The Dodd-Frank Act authorizes the                   acquisitions by special purpose entities
                                                                                                          Bureau to define by regulation larger                  that are established for the purpose of
                                                  [Docket No. CFPB–2014–0024]
                                                                                                          participants of certain markets for                    facilitating asset-backed securities
                                                  RIN 3170–AA46                                           financial products or services.1 On                    transactions.
                                                                                                          September 17, 2014, the Bureau                            Under the Final Rule, a nonbank
                                                  Defining Larger Participants of the                     proposed a rule to define larger                       covered person that engages in
                                                  Automobile Financing Market and                         participants of a market for automobile                automobile financing 3 is a larger
                                                  Defining Certain Automobile Leasing                     financing and to make certain technical                participant of the automobile financing
                                                  Activity as a Financial Product or                      amendments to its rules defining larger                market if it has at least 10,000 aggregate
                                                  Service                                                 participants of other consumer financial               annual originations. To determine a
                                                  AGENCY:  Bureau of Consumer Financial                   product and service markets (Proposed                  nonbank covered person’s aggregate
                                                  Protection.                                             Rule).2 Pursuant to authority granted by               annual originations, the Final Rule
                                                                                                          the Dodd-Frank Act, the Proposed Rule                  provides that the annual originations of
                                                  ACTION: Final rule.
                                                                                                          also defines the term ‘‘financial product              a nonbank covered person must be
                                                  SUMMARY:    The Bureau of Consumer                      or service’’ for purposes of title X of the            aggregated with the annual originations
                                                  Financial Protection (Bureau or CFPB)                   Dodd-Frank Act to include certain                      of any person (other than a dealer that
                                                  amends the regulation defining larger                   automobile leases that are not currently               is excluded from larger-participant
                                                  participants of certain consumer                        defined as a financial product or service              status under the Final Rule 4) that was
                                                  financial product and service markets                   under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the                   an affiliated company of the nonbank
                                                  by adding a new section to define larger                Dodd-Frank Act. The Bureau is now                      covered person at any time during the
                                                  participants of a market for automobile                 issuing this final rule (Final Rule)                   preceding calendar year.
                                                  financing. The new section defines a                    largely as proposed.                                      As noted above, the Bureau is
                                                  market that includes: grants of credit for                 The Final Rule defines a market for                 including automobile leases in the
                                                  the purchase of an automobile;                          automobile financing that covers                       criterion it uses to define larger
                                                  refinancings of such obligations (and                   specific activities and sets forth a test to           participants in the market for
                                                  subsequent refinancings thereof) that are               determine whether a nonbank covered                    automobile financing. Certain consumer
                                                  secured by an automobile; automobile                    person is a larger participant of that                 leases are identified as a financial
                                                                                                          market. The Final Rule defines                         product or service under section
                                                  leases; and purchases or acquisitions of
                                                                                                          ‘‘automobile’’ to mean any self-                       1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
                                                  any of the foregoing obligations. The
                                                                                                          propelled vehicle primarily used for                   and therefore count toward the
                                                  Bureau issues this rule pursuant to its
                                                                                                          personal, family, or household purposes                aggregate annual originations threshold
                                                  authority, under the Dodd-Frank Wall
                                                                                                          for on-road transportation, with certain               for the larger-participant test in this
                                                  Street Reform and Consumer Protection
                                                                                                          exclusions (motor homes, recreational                  Final Rule. For the reasons explained
                                                  Act (Dodd-Frank Act), to supervise
                                                                                                          vehicles (RVs), golf carts, and motor                  below, the Bureau believes that the
                                                  certain nonbank covered persons for
                                                                                                          scooters). The Final Rule defines                      purpose of the Final Rule and the
                                                  compliance with Federal consumer
                                                                                                          ‘‘annual originations’’ to mean the sum                Bureau’s overall mission are best served
                                                  financial law and for other purposes.
                                                                                                          of the following transactions for the                  by covering automobile leasing more
                                                  The Bureau has the authority to                         preceding calendar year:
                                                  supervise nonbank covered persons of                                                                           broadly. Accordingly, under its
                                                                                                             • credit granted for the purchase of an
                                                  all sizes in the residential mortgage,                                                                         authority granted by section
                                                                                                          automobile;
                                                  private education lending, and payday                      • refinancings of such obligations                  1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the Dodd-Frank
                                                  lending markets. In addition, the Bureau                (and any subsequent refinancings                       Act, the Bureau is adding §§ 1001.1 and
                                                  has the authority to supervise nonbank                  thereof) that are secured by an                        1001.2 in new part 1001 to title 12 of the
                                                  ‘‘larger participant[s]’’ of markets for                automobile;                                            Code of Federal Regulations. Section
                                                  other consumer financial products or                       • automobile leases; and                            1001.1 states the authority and purpose
                                                  services, as the Bureau defines by rule.                   • purchases or acquisitions of any of               of part 1001, which is to implement the
                                                  This final rule identifies a market for                 the foregoing obligations.                             Bureau’s authority, granted by section
                                                  automobile financing and defines as                     For purposes of the Final Rule,                        1002(15)(A)(xi) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
                                                  larger participants of this market certain              refinancing has the same meaning as it                 to define the term ‘‘financial product or
                                                  nonbank covered persons that will be                    does in Regulation Z, except that, for a               service’’ for purposes of title X of the
                                                  subject to the Bureau’s supervisory                     refinancing to be considered an annual
                                                                                                                                                                    3 For purposes of the Final Rule, ‘‘automobile
                                                  authority. It also defines certain                      origination under this Final Rule, the
                                                                                                                                                                 financing’’ means providing or engaging in any
                                                  automobile leases as a ‘‘financial                      nonbank covered person need not be the                 annual originations as defined in the rule. The
                                                  product or service’’ under section                      original creditor or a holder or servicer              terms ‘‘automobile’’ and ‘‘automobile financing’’ are
                                                  1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the Dodd-Frank                   of the original obligation. The term                   used in this Supplementary Information in a
                                                  Act. Finally, this final rule makes                     ‘‘automobile lease’’ means a lease that is             manner consistent with how they are defined in the
                                                                                                          for the use of an automobile and that                  Final Rule. The terms ‘‘auto’’ and ‘‘auto financing’’
                                                  certain technical corrections to existing                                                                      are used more generically.
                                                  larger-participant rules.                               meets the requirements of section                         4 The Final Rule provides that certain auto
                                                                                                          1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act or
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                  DATES: Effective August 31, 2015.                                                                              dealers do not qualify as larger participants. Under
                                                  FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                                                                          of new § 1001.2(a), which is discussed                 section 1029 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Bureau
                                                                                                          below.                                                 may not exercise its authority over certain auto
                                                  Dania Ayoubi or Jolina Cuaresma,                                                                               dealers, as outlined in that section. As explained
                                                                                                             As in the Proposed Rule, the term
                                                  Counsels; or Amanda Quester, Senior                                                                            below, the final larger-participant rule also excludes
                                                                                                          ‘‘annual originations’’ in the Final Rule              certain dealers that extend retail credit or retail
                                                  Counsel, Office of Regulations,
                                                                                                                                                                 leases directly to consumers without routinely
                                                  Consumer Financial Protection Bureau,                     1 Public Law 111–203, section 1024, 124 Stat.
                                                                                                                                                                 assigning them to unaffiliated third party finance or
                                                  1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC                      1376, 1987 (2010) (codified at 12 U.S.C. 5514).        leasing sources, even though such dealers are not
                                                  20552, at (202) 435–7700.                                 2 79 FR 60762 (Oct. 8, 2014).                        subject to the statutory exclusion of section 1029.



                                             VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:23 Jun 29, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00002   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\30JNR5.SGM   30JNR5


                                                                       Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                    37497

                                                  Dodd-Frank Act to include certain                         services,’’ as the Bureau defines by                      encompass all activities that could be
                                                  financial products or services in                         rule.7                                                    considered auto financing. Any
                                                  addition to those defined in section                         Subpart A of the Bureau’s existing                     reference herein to the ‘‘automobile
                                                  1002(15)(A)(i)–(x). Section 1001.2(a)                     larger-participant rule, 12 CFR part                      financing market’’ means only the
                                                  defines the term ‘‘financial product or                   1090, prescribes various procedures,                      particular market for automobile
                                                  service’’ under that same authority to                    definitions, standards, and protocols                     financing identified by the Final Rule.
                                                  include certain automobile leases that                    that apply to all markets in which the                       The Final Rule defining larger
                                                  national banks are authorized to offer                    Bureau defines larger participants.8                      participants of a market for automobile
                                                  and that do not fall under the definition                 Those generally applicable provisions                     financing does not impose new
                                                  in section 1002(15)(A)(ii).                               also apply to the automobile financing                    substantive consumer protection
                                                     The Final Rule also makes certain                      market described by this Final Rule.                      requirements. Nonbank covered persons
                                                  technical corrections to existing larger-                    As prescribed by existing § 1090.102,                  generally are subject to the Bureau’s
                                                  participant rules. Specifically, the Final                any nonbank covered person that                           regulatory and enforcement authority,
                                                  Rule inserts the word ‘‘financial’’ before                qualifies as a larger participant remains                 and any applicable Federal consumer
                                                  the term ‘‘product or service’’ in the                    a larger participant until two years after                financial law, regardless of whether they
                                                  definition of ‘‘nonbank covered person’’                  the first day of the tax year in which the                are subject to the Bureau’s supervisory
                                                  in § 1090.101. The Final Rule also                        person last met the applicable test.                      authority.
                                                  amends §§ 1090.104(a) and 1090.105(a)                     Pursuant to existing § 1090.103, a                           The Bureau is authorized to supervise
                                                  to clarify that if a company ceases to be                 person will be able to dispute whether                    nonbank covered persons subject to
                                                  an affiliated company of a nonbank                        it qualifies as a larger participant in the               section 1024 of the Dodd-Frank Act for
                                                  covered person during the relevant                        automobile financing market. The                          purposes of: (1) assessing compliance
                                                  measurement period, its annual receipts                   Bureau will notify an entity when the                     with Federal consumer financial law; (2)
                                                  must be aggregated for the entire period                  Bureau intends to undertake                               obtaining information about such
                                                  of measurement for purposes of the                        supervisory activity; the entity will then                persons’ activities and compliance
                                                  consumer reporting and consumer debt                      have an opportunity to submit                             systems or procedures; and (3) detecting
                                                  collection larger-participant rules.                      documentary evidence and written                          and assessing risks to consumers and
                                                                                                            arguments in support of its claim that it                 consumer financial markets.11 The
                                                  II. Background                                            is not a larger participant.9 Section                     Bureau conducts examinations, of
                                                     Section 1024 of the Dodd-Frank Act                     1090.103(d) provides that the Bureau                      various scopes, of supervised entities. In
                                                  gives the Bureau supervisory authority                    may require submission of certain                         addition, the Bureau may, as
                                                  over all nonbank covered persons 5                        records, documents, and other                             appropriate, request information from
                                                  offering or providing three enumerated                    information for purposes of assessing                     supervised entities without conducting
                                                  types of consumer financial products or                   whether a person is a larger participant                  examinations.12
                                                  services: (1) origination, brokerage, or                  of a covered market; this authority will                     The Bureau prioritizes supervisory
                                                  servicing of consumer loans secured by                    be available to the Bureau to facilitate                  activity among nonbank covered
                                                  real estate, and related mortgage loan                    its identification of larger participants of              persons on the basis of risk, taking into
                                                  modification or foreclosure relief                        the automobile financing market, just as                  account, among other factors, the size of
                                                  services; (2) private education loans;                    in other markets.                                         each entity, the volume of its
                                                  and (3) payday loans.6 The Bureau also                       The Bureau includes relevant market                    transactions involving consumer
                                                  has supervisory authority over ‘‘larger                   descriptions and larger-participant tests,                financial products or services, the size
                                                  participant[s] of a market for other                      as it develops them, in subpart B. The                    and risk presented by the market in
                                                  consumer financial products or                            Final Rule is the fifth in a series of                    which it is a participant, the extent of
                                                                                                            rulemakings to define larger participants                 relevant State oversight, and any field
                                                     5 The provisions of 12 U.S.C. 5514 apply to
                                                                                                            of markets for other consumer financial                   and market information that the Bureau
                                                  certain categories of nondepository (nonbank)             products or services within subpart B.
                                                  covered persons, described in subsection (a)(1), and                                                                has on the entity. Such field and market
                                                                                                            The first four rules define larger
                                                  expressly exclude from coverage persons described                                                                   information might include, for example,
                                                  in 12 U.S.C. 5515(a) or 5516(a). ‘‘Covered persons’’      participants of markets for consumer
                                                                                                                                                                      information from complaints and any
                                                  include: ‘‘(A) any person that engages in offering or     reporting, consumer debt collection,
                                                  providing a consumer financial product or service;                                                                  other information the Bureau has about
                                                                                                            student loan servicing, and international
                                                  and (B) any affiliate of a person described [in (A)]                                                                risks to consumers posed by a particular
                                                                                                            money transfers.10
                                                  if such affiliate acts as a service provider to such
                                                                                                               This Final Rule describes a market for                 entity.
                                                  person.’’ 12 U.S.C. 5481(6).                                                                                           The specifics of how an examination
                                                     6 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)(A), (D), (E). The Bureau also   consumer financial products or services,
                                                                                                                                                                      takes place vary by market and entity.
                                                  has the authority to supervise any nonbank covered        which the Final Rule labels ‘‘automobile
                                                  person that it ‘‘has reasonable cause to determine,       financing.’’ The definition does not                      However, the examination process
                                                  by order, after notice to the covered person and a                                                                  generally proceeds as follows. Bureau
                                                  reasonable opportunity . . . to respond . . . is                                                                    examiners contact the entity for an
                                                                                                              7 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)(B), (a)(2); see also 12 U.S.C.
                                                  engaging, or has engaged, in conduct that poses
                                                  risks to consumers with regard to the offering or         5481(5) (defining ‘‘consumer financial product or         initial conference with management and
                                                  provision of consumer financial products or               service’’). The Bureau’s supervisory authority also       often request records and other
                                                  services.’’ 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)(C); see also 12 CFR      extends to service providers of those covered             information. Bureau examiners will
                                                  part 1091 (prescribing procedures for making              persons that are subject to supervision under 12
                                                                                                            U.S.C. 5514(a)(1). 12 U.S.C. 5514(e); see also 12         ordinarily also review the components
                                                  determinations under 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)(C)). In
                                                  addition, the Bureau has supervisory authority over       U.S.C. 5481(26) (defining ‘‘service provider’’).          of the supervised entity’s compliance
                                                                                                                                                                      management system. Based on these
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                                                                                                              8 12 CFR 1090.100–.103.
                                                  very large depository institutions and credit unions
                                                  and their affiliates. 12 U.S.C. 5515(a). Furthermore,       9 12 CFR 1090.103(a).
                                                                                                                                                                      discussions and a preliminary review of
                                                  the Bureau has certain authorities relating to the          10 77 FR 42874 (July 20, 2012) (Consumer
                                                                                                                                                                      the information received, examiners
                                                  supervision of other depository institutions and          Reporting Rule) (codified at 12 CFR 1090.104); 77
                                                  credit unions. 12 U.S.C. 5516(c)(1), (e). One of the      FR 65775 (Oct. 31, 2012) (Consumer Debt Collection
                                                                                                                                                                      determine the scope of an on-site
                                                  Bureau’s mandates under the Dodd-Frank Act is to          Rule) (codified at 12 CFR 1090.105); 78 FR 73383
                                                                                                                                                                        11 12 U.S.C. 5514(b)(1).
                                                  ensure that ‘‘Federal consumer financial law is           (Dec. 6, 2013) (Student Loan Servicing Rule)
                                                  enforced consistently without regard to the status        (codified at 12 CFR 1090.106); 79 FR 56631 (Sept.           12 See 12 U.S.C. 5514(b) (authorizing the Bureau
                                                  of a person as a depository institution, in order to      23, 2014) (International Money Transfer Rule)             both to conduct examinations and to require reports
                                                  promote fair competition.’’ 12 U.S.C. 5511(b)(4).         (codified at 12 CFR 1090.107).                            from entities subject to supervision).



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                                                  37498              Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  examination and then coordinate with                    financial products or services, as                     section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the Dodd-
                                                  the entity to initiate the on-site portion              defined by rule; 16 (2) section 1024(b)(7),            Frank Act to include extending or
                                                  of the examination. While on-site,                      which, among other things, authorizes                  brokering certain leases of an
                                                  examiners spend a period of time                        the Bureau to prescribe rules to facilitate            automobile that (1) meet the
                                                  discussing with management the                          the supervision of covered persons                     requirements of leases authorized under
                                                  entity’s policies, processes, and                       under section 1024; 17 (3) section                     section 108 of the Competitive Equality
                                                  procedures; reviewing documents and                     1022(b)(1), which grants the Bureau the                Banking Act of 1987 (CEBA),21 as
                                                  records; testing transactions and                       authority to prescribe rules as may be                 implemented by 12 CFR part 23, and are
                                                  accounts for compliance; and evaluating                 necessary or appropriate to enable the                 thus permissible for banks to offer or
                                                  the entity’s compliance management                      Bureau to administer and carry out the                 provide; and (2) are not currently
                                                  system. Examinations may involve                        purposes and objectives of Federal                     defined as a financial product or service
                                                  issuing confidential examination                        consumer financial law, and to prevent                 under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the
                                                  reports, supervisory letters, and                       evasions of such law; 18 and (4) section               Dodd-Frank Act. The proposal
                                                  compliance ratings. In addition to the                  1002(15)(A)(xi), which authorizes the                  explained that under section
                                                  process described above, the Bureau                     Bureau to prescribe rules to define                    1002(15)(A)(xi), for purposes of title X
                                                  may also conduct off-site examinations.                 ‘‘other financial product[s] or                        of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Bureau may
                                                     The Bureau has published a general                   service[s],’’ if the Bureau finds that such            define as a financial product or service,
                                                  examination manual describing the                       financial products or services are: (i)                by regulation:
                                                  Bureau’s supervisory approach and                       entered into or conducted as a                         such other financial product or service . . .
                                                  procedures.13 As explained in the                       subterfuge or with a purpose to evade                  if the Bureau finds that such financial
                                                  manual, the Bureau will structure                       any Federal consumer financial law; or                 product or service is— . . . (II) permissible
                                                  examinations to address various factors                 (ii) permissible for a bank or a financial             for a bank or for a financial holding company
                                                  related to a supervised entity’s                        holding company to offer or provide                    to offer or to provide under any provision of
                                                  compliance with Federal consumer                        under any applicable Federal law or                    a Federal law or regulation applicable to a
                                                  financial law and other relevant                        regulation, and have, or likely will have,             bank or a financial holding company, and
                                                                                                                                                                 has, or likely will have, a material impact on
                                                  considerations. In connection with this                 a material impact on consumers.19                      consumers.
                                                  Final Rule, the Bureau is releasing
                                                  examination procedures related to                       B. Effective Date of Final Rule                        The Bureau proposed § 1001.2 pursuant
                                                  automobile finance originations and                        The Administrative Procedure Act                    to this authority. For the reasons
                                                  servicing.14 These procedures are a                     generally requires that rules be                       discussed below, the Bureau adopts
                                                  component of the CFPB’s general                         published not less than 30 days before                 § 1001.2 as proposed with one technical
                                                  Supervision and Examination Manual                      their effective dates.20 The Bureau                    change that has no substantive effect.22
                                                  and provide guidance on how the                         proposed that the Final Rule would be                     The Bureau proposed to include
                                                  Bureau will be conducting its                           effective 60 days after publication and                automobile leasing in the consumer
                                                  monitoring in the automobile financing                  received no comments relating to the                   financial product or service market for
                                                  market.                                                 effective date. The Bureau has decided                 automobile financing for purposes of a
                                                                                                          that the Final Rule will be effective 60               rule defining larger participants in that
                                                  III. Summary of Rulemaking Process                      days after publication in the Federal                  market. Section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the
                                                     On September 17, 2014, the Bureau                    Register.                                              Dodd-Frank Act defines the term
                                                  issued a notice of proposed                                                                                    ‘‘financial product or service’’ to
                                                  rulemaking 15 and requested public                      V. Section-by-Section Analysis                         include certain leases that, among other
                                                  comment. The Bureau received                            A. 12 CFR Part 1001—Financial Product                  things, are the functional equivalent of
                                                  approximately 30 comments from                          or Service                                             purchase finance arrangements.
                                                  consumer advocates, civil rights groups,                                                                          The proposal set forth the Bureau’s
                                                                                                          Section 1001.1 Authority and Purpose                   belief that the phrase ‘‘functional
                                                  industry participants, trade associations,
                                                  individual consumers, members of                           Proposed § 1001.1 stated the authority              equivalent of purchase finance
                                                  Congress, and others. The Bureau has                    and purpose for proposed new part                      arrangements’’—which is not defined in
                                                  considered these comments in adopting                   1001. It explained that under section                  the Dodd-Frank Act 23—is reasonably
                                                  this Final Rule.                                        1002(15)(A)(xi) of the Dodd-Frank Act,                 interpreted to encompass most
                                                                                                          the Bureau is authorized to define                     automobile leases. Specifically, the
                                                  IV. Legal Authority and Procedural                      certain financial products or services for             Bureau explained that in light of the
                                                  Matters                                                 purposes of title X of the Dodd-Frank                  Bureau’s purpose and mandate, the
                                                  A. Rulemaking Authority                                 Act, in addition to those defined in                   phrase ‘‘functional equivalent of
                                                                                                          section 1002(15)(A)(i)–(x). Proposed                   purchase finance arrangements’’ is best
                                                     The Bureau is issuing this Final Rule
                                                                                                          § 1001.1 explained that the purpose of                 interpreted from the perspective of the
                                                  pursuant to its authority under the
                                                                                                          proposed part 1001 was to implement                    consumer.
                                                  following provisions of the Dodd-Frank                  that authority.                                           The proposal explained that, for
                                                  Act: (1) Sections 1024(a)(1)(B) and                        The Bureau received no comments on                  consumers, the leasing process
                                                  (a)(2), which authorize the Bureau to                   proposed § 1001.1. Section 1001.1 is                   functions in ways that are equivalent to
                                                  supervise nonbanks that are larger                      finalized as proposed.                                 a financed purchase. For example,
                                                  participants of markets for consumer                                                                           leasing a vehicle requires an application
                                                                                                          Section 1001.2 Definitions
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                                                    13 CFPB
                                                                                                                                                                 process and an ongoing contractual
                                                             Supervision and Examination Manual              Proposed § 1001.2(a) defined the term
                                                  (Oct. 1, 2012), available at http://                                                                           obligation that are both financial in
                                                  files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201210_cfpb_
                                                                                                          ‘‘financial product or service’’ under
                                                  supervision-and-examination-manual-v2.pdf.                                                                       21 Public Law 100–86, section 108, 101 Stat. 552,
                                                                                                            16 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)(B), (a)(2).
                                                     14 CFPB Automobile Finance Examination                                                                      579 (1987) (codified at 12 U.S.C. 24(Tenth)).
                                                                                                            17 12 U.S.C. 5514(b)(7).
                                                  Procedures (June 10, 2015), available at http://                                                                 22 The Final Rule includes a minor clarifying
                                                                                                            18 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(1).
                                                  www.consumerfinance.gov/guidance/supervision/                                                                  change in the wording of § 1001.2(a).
                                                  manual/.                                                  19 12 U.S.C. 5481(15)(A)(xi).                          23 The Bureau is not aware of any Federal or State
                                                     15 79 FR 60762 (Oct. 8, 2014).                         20 5 U.S.C. 553(d).                                  statute or regulation that defines the term.



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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                        37499

                                                  nature and similar to entering into a                   carry similar obligations and risks to                    most automobile leases, the consumer,
                                                  financial arrangement to purchase a                     consumers as automobile loans.                            rather than the lessor, is responsible for
                                                  vehicle. Like a consumer seeking to                        As the Bureau further observed in the                  ensuring the care and maintenance of
                                                  qualify for a loan to purchase a vehicle,               proposal, in an automobile leasing                        the vehicle.32 Second, most leases have
                                                  a consumer seeking to lease a vehicle                   arrangement, the consumer can                             terms well beyond 90 days. Lease terms
                                                  must provide basic financial                            typically purchase the vehicle at the end                 for automobiles typically range from 12
                                                  information such as income and credit                   of the lease term for a pre-determined                    to 48 months, with the majority of leases
                                                  history.24 Though a consumer who                        amount, which is generally based on the                   ranging from 25 to 48 months.33 Thus,
                                                  leases an automobile need not finance                   residual value of the vehicle.30                          the Bureau observed that the extending
                                                  the entire cost of the vehicle, the                     Accordingly, from the perspective of a                    or brokering of most automobile leases
                                                  consumer still undertakes a major                       consumer, leasing presents an                             readily falls under section
                                                  financial obligation in the form of a                   alternative method to a loan for                          1002(15)(A)(ii) as a financial product or
                                                                                                          acquiring a vehicle through a series of                   service.
                                                  commitment to make a stream of                                                                                       However, as the Bureau explained in
                                                                                                          installment payments.
                                                  payments over a significant period of                                                                             the proposal, the requirement that leases
                                                                                                             Moreover, the proposal explained that
                                                  time.25 The consumer must consider                      automobiles are important to the                          that fall under section 1002(15)(A)(ii)
                                                  how much cash to use, if any, for a                     financial well-being of consumers                         (‘‘category (ii) leases’’) be the functional
                                                  capitalized cost reduction (similar to a                regardless of whether the consumer                        equivalent of purchase finance
                                                  down payment),26 the preferred lease                    obtains the use of a vehicle through a                    arrangements means that coverage of
                                                  term, and the affordability of monthly                  lease or a loan. Consumers rely on                        leases under that section will
                                                  payments and other costs including                      automobiles for their transportation                      necessarily depend on a number of
                                                  maintenance, insurance, and State                       needs. From a consumer’s standpoint,                      factors and circumstances that may vary
                                                  registration fees.                                      whether a vehicle is leased or financed                   among particular leases and institutions.
                                                     The proposal further noted that                      through a loan, any act or practice that                  Given this potential variance, the
                                                  automobile leasing shares many other                    impedes access to a vehicle or otherwise                  Bureau expressed concern in the
                                                  features with automobile lending. A                     creates problems related to the loan or                   proposal that not all automobile leases
                                                  consumer must demonstrate an ability                    leasing arrangement can have a critical                   that materially impact consumers will
                                                  to pay the monthly payments in order                    impact on the consumer. Based on these                    necessarily qualify for coverage under
                                                  to qualify for a lease, and a consumer’s                factors, the Bureau reasoned in the                       section 1002(15)(A)(ii) and that market
                                                                                                          proposal that, from the perspective of                    participants may have a difficult time
                                                  creditworthiness impacts the terms of
                                                                                                          the consumer, most automobile leases                      discerning which leases meet the
                                                  the lease. An automobile finance
                                                                                                          are the functional equivalent of                          definition and which do not. Such a
                                                  company may furnish information about                                                                             result would make the automobile
                                                  a lessee, such as payment history, to                   purchase finance arrangements.
                                                                                                             The Bureau also noted in the proposal                  financing larger-participant rule
                                                  credit bureaus in the same manner that                                                                            difficult to administer with respect to
                                                  the company does for a borrower. Also,                  that typical automobile leases meet the
                                                                                                          remaining two requirements of section                     leasing and would not provide optimal
                                                  similar to a consumer who finances an                                                                             protection to consumers. Accordingly,
                                                                                                          1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
                                                  automobile with a loan, a consumer                                                                                to further the mandate of protecting
                                                                                                          First, automobile leases are generally
                                                  who leases an automobile bears the                                                                                consumers and for ease of administering
                                                                                                          ‘‘non-operating.’’ Consistent with the
                                                  responsibility for the vehicle’s upkeep                                                                           the automobile financing larger-
                                                                                                          definition in Regulation Y, which
                                                  and must maintain, repair, and service                                                                            participant rule, the Bureau proposed to
                                                                                                          governs bank holding companies and
                                                  the vehicle during the lease term.27 The                changes in bank control, ‘‘non-                           exercise its authority under section
                                                  consumer must also insure the vehicle                   operating,’’ as interpreted by the Bureau                 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the Dodd-Frank
                                                  and bears the risk should the vehicle                   in the proposal, means that the lease                     Act to define certain automobile leases
                                                  become damaged or totaled.28 Similarly,                 provider is not, directly or indirectly,                  not covered under section
                                                  if a consumer fails to make loan or lease               engaged in operating, servicing,                          1002(15)(A)(ii) as financial products or
                                                  payments, the vehicle must be returned                  maintaining, or repairing the leased                      services within the meaning of section
                                                  to the automobile finance company, and                  property during the lease term.31 Under                   1002(15)(A).
                                                  fees or penalties may apply.29 Also,                                                                                 As discussed above, under section
                                                  regardless of whether consumers seek to                    30 CFPB, Ask CFPB: What Is Residual Value?             1002(15)(A)(xi)(II), for purposes of title
                                                  purchase or lease a vehicle, they must                  (June 24, 2012), available at http://                     X of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Bureau
                                                  negotiate the price and terms. For all the              www.consumerfinance.gov/askcfpb/737/what-                 may define as a covered financial
                                                                                                          residual-value.html. The residual value is the            product or service other financial
                                                  foregoing reasons, the Bureau reasoned                  projected market value of the vehicle at the end of
                                                  in the proposal that automobile leases                  the lease, which is used in calculating the amount
                                                                                                                                                                    products or services that are permissible
                                                                                                          the consumer would have to pay to purchase the
                                                    24 See Fed. Trade Comm’n, Consumer                    vehicle at the end of the lease term. Additionally,       of the leased vehicle; (4) purchase insurance for the
                                                                                                          the consumer may be responsible for any applicable        lessee; or (5) provide for the renewal of the vehicle’s
                                                  Information: Understanding Vehicle Financing (Jan.
                                                                                                          taxes or fees.                                            license merely as a service to the lessee where the
                                                  2014), available at http://www.consumer.ftc.gov/           31 12 CFR 225.28(b)(3)(i) n.6 (‘‘The requirement       lessee could renew the license without
                                                  articles/0056-understanding-vehicle-financing.                                                                    authorization from the lessor.’’).
                                                    25 Like consumers who borrow money to                 that the lease be on a non-operating basis means
                                                                                                                                                                       32 See Fed. Reserve Bd., Key to Vehicle Leasing
                                                                                                          that the bank holding company may not, directly or
                                                  purchase a vehicle, consumers who lease are                                                                       Consumer Guide (Mar. 13, 2013),
                                                                                                          indirectly, engage in operating, servicing,
                                                  contractually obligated to make monthly lease
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                                                                                                          maintaining, or repairing leased property during the      available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/
                                                  payments during the lease term. See Fed. Reserve                                                                  leasing/.
                                                                                                          lease term. For purposes of the leasing of
                                                  Bd., Key to Vehicle Leasing Consumer Guide (Mar.
                                                                                                          automobiles, the requirement that the lease be on            33 See Melinda Zabritski, Experian Automotive,
                                                  13, 2013), available at http://
                                                                                                          a non-operating basis means that the bank holding         State of the Automotive Finance Market Fourth
                                                  www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/leasing/.
                                                    26 See id.
                                                                                                          company may not, directly or indirectly: (1) Provide      Quarter 2014, at 20 (Feb. 19, 2015), available at
                                                                                                          servicing, repair, or maintenance of the leased           http://www.experian.com/assets/automotive/white-
                                                    27 See id.
                                                                                                          vehicle during the lease term; (2) purchase parts         papers/experian-auto-2014-q4-
                                                    28 See id.
                                                                                                          and accessories in bulk or for an individual vehicle      presentation.pdf?WT.srch=Auto_
                                                    29 See id. Also, if a consumer terminates a lease     after the lessee has taken delivery of the vehicle; (3)   Q42014FinanceTrends_PDF; see also Fed. Reserve
                                                  early, early termination fees may apply. See id.        provide the loan of an automobile during servicing        Bd., supra note 32.



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                                                  37500               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  for a bank or for a financial holding                    leasing covered by the proposed                            expressed its belief that because leases
                                                  company to offer, and have, or likely                    definition has a material impact on                        that are not the functional equivalent of
                                                  will have, a material impact on                          consumers. The Bureau noted that                           purchase finance arrangements can raise
                                                  consumers. To implement this                             access to a vehicle is critical for                        the same consumer protection concerns
                                                  provision, the Bureau proposed to                        consumers, automobile leasing is a                         as category (ii) leases, it was appropriate
                                                  define the term ‘‘financial product or                   significant financial obligation, and                      to subject these additional leases to the
                                                  service’’ under section                                  consumers are increasingly turning to                      Dodd-Frank Act provisions that apply to
                                                  1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) to include                           leasing as a means to obtain a vehicle.                    ‘‘financial product[s] or service[s].’’ The
                                                  automobile leases that: (1) meet the                     The Bureau further stated in the                           Bureau also noted that comprehensive
                                                  requirements of leases authorized under                  proposal that the impact of automobile                     coverage of automobile leasing would
                                                  section 108 of CEBA, as implemented by                   leasing on consumers and their financial                   make the larger-participant rule easier to
                                                  12 CFR part 23, and therefore are                        well-being does not turn on whether a                      administer by eliminating uncertainty
                                                  permissible for national banks to offer or               lease is the functional equivalent of a                    about which types of leasing activities
                                                  provide; and (2) are not the functional                  purchase finance arrangement.                              are counted towards the larger-
                                                  equivalent of purchase finance                             Accordingly, as authorized under                         participant threshold.
                                                  arrangements under section                               section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the Dodd-                      The Bureau received a number of
                                                  1002(15)(A)(ii).                                         Frank Act, the Bureau proposed to                          comments relating to its interpretation
                                                     As explained in the proposal, banks                   define the term ‘‘financial product or                     of leases that fall within section
                                                  and financial holding companies are                      service’’ to include extending or                          1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act
                                                  broadly authorized to engage in                          brokering leases for automobiles, where                    and to the proposed new definition
                                                  automobile leasing. With respect to                      the lease: (1) qualifies as a full-payout                  under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II). A
                                                  national banks, CEBA amended the                         lease 37 and a net lease, as provided by                   consumer group agreed with the
                                                  National Bank Act, to add, among other                   12 CFR 23.3(a), and has an initial term                    Bureau’s interpretation that, from the
                                                  things, 12 U.S.C. 24(Tenth), which                       of not less than 90 days, as provided by                   perspective of the consumer, certain
                                                  authorizes national banks to ‘‘invest in                 12 CFR 23.11; and (2) is not a financial                   leases are the ‘‘functional equivalent of
                                                  tangible personal property, including,                   product or service under section                           purchase finance arrangements’’ under
                                                  without limitation, vehicles,                            1002(15)(A)(ii).38 The Bureau asserted                     section 1002(15)(A)(ii). The commenter
                                                  manufactured homes, machinery,                           that the proposed definition met the                       reasoned that whether or not the
                                                  equipment, or furniture, for lease                       requirements of section                                    transaction results in owning a car,
                                                  financing transactions on a net lease                    1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the Dodd-Frank                      consumers likely experience leases
                                                  basis,’’ as long as such investment does                 Act because banks and financial holding                    much in the same way as they do
                                                  not exceed 10 percent of its assets.34                   companies are permitted to engage in                       purchase loans. The commenter also
                                                  Neither CEBA nor its implementing                        automobile leasing described under this                    noted that both are financial
                                                  regulations require that such leases be                  definition, and such automobile leasing                    transactions paid by the consumer over
                                                  the functional equivalent of loans,                      has a material impact on consumers.                        a certain period of time, and both grant
                                                                                                             The Bureau explained that the                            the consumer exclusive use and
                                                  credit, or purchase finance
                                                                                                           proposed definition would also ensure                      possession of an automobile. The
                                                  arrangements.35 Similarly, under
                                                                                                           that leases falling under the definition                   commenter also supported the Bureau’s
                                                  Regulation Y, banks and financial
                                                                                                           are subject to the range of protections                    inclusion under section
                                                  holding companies may engage in
                                                                                                           applicable to ‘‘financial product[s] or                    1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of certain other leases
                                                  leasing of personal property irrespective
                                                                                                           service[s]’’ under the Dodd-Frank Act.                     because those leases also have a
                                                  of whether the leases are the functional
                                                                                                           For example, it would ensure that the                      material impact on consumers.
                                                  equivalent of loans, credit, or purchase                 offering or providing of the defined                          Other commenters including several
                                                  finance arrangements.36                                  leases is subject to the prohibition                       trade associations suggested that the
                                                     Additionally, in the proposal, the                    against unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts                 Bureau erred in interpreting the phrase
                                                  Bureau expressed its belief that,                        or practices in section 1031 of the Dodd-                  ‘‘functional equivalent of purchase
                                                  whether or not a particular automobile                   Frank Act.39 The Bureau further                            finance arrangements’’ from the
                                                  lease qualifies as a category (ii) lease, all                                                                       perspective of the consumer. These
                                                    34 Under   the implementing regulations, net lease
                                                                                                              37 Under the implementing regulations, ‘‘full-
                                                                                                                                                                      commenters argued that: (1) the
                                                                                                           payout lease’’ is defined as:                              Bureau’s interpretation is inconsistent
                                                  is defined as:                                              a lease in which the national bank reasonably
                                                     a lease under which the national bank will not,       expects to realize the return of its full investment
                                                                                                                                                                      with prior judicial and prudential
                                                  directly or indirectly, provide or be obligated to       in the leased property, plus the estimated cost of         regulator interpretations that leases are
                                                  provide for:                                             financing the property over the term of the lease,         only functionally equivalent to loans
                                                     (1) Servicing, repair, or maintenance of the leased   from:
                                                  property during the lease term;
                                                                                                                                                                      and/or credit where the residual value
                                                                                                              (1) Rentals;
                                                     (2) Parts or accessories for the leased property;                                                                of the leased asset falls below a
                                                                                                              (2) Estimated tax benefits; and
                                                     (3) Loan of replacement or substitute property           (3) The estimated residual value of the property
                                                                                                                                                                      specified threshold; (2) contrary to the
                                                  while the leased property is being serviced;             at the expiration of the lease term.                       Bureau’s interpretation, the term
                                                     (4) Payment of insurance for the lessee, except          12 CFR 23.2(e).                                         ‘‘functional equivalent of purchase
                                                  where the lessee has failed in its contractual              38 For purposes of this definition, ‘‘automobile’’ is
                                                  obligation to purchase or maintain required              defined as proposed in § 1090.108(a).                      risks associated with the product or service; (2) the
                                                  insurance; or                                               39 12 U.S.C. 5531. The proposed definition also         Bureau’s authority under section 1022(c) of the
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                                                     (5) Renewal of any license or registration for the    would affect the scope of certain other Bureau             Dodd-Frank Act to ‘‘monitor for risks to consumers
                                                  property unless renewal by the bank is necessary         authorities under title X of the Dodd-Frank Act. For       in the offering or provision of consumer financial
                                                  to protect its interest as owner or financier of the     example, the proposed definition would have an             products or services, including developments in
                                                  property.                                                impact on: (1) the Bureau’s rulemaking authority           markets for such products or services;’’ and (3) the
                                                     12 CFR 23.2(f).                                       under section 1032 of the Dodd-Frank Act, which            scope of the Bureau’s authority under section 1033
                                                     35 12 U.S.C. 24(Tenth); 12 CFR 23.2, 23.3.
                                                                                                           authorizes the Bureau to prescribe rules to ensure         of the Dodd-Frank Act to prescribe rules for covered
                                                     36 12 CFR 225.28(b)(3). Bank holding companies        that the features of any consumer financial product        persons with respect to consumer rights to access
                                                  are limited to leases that are non-operating, as         or service are fully, accurately, and effectively          information concerning consumer financial
                                                  described above, and have an initial term of at least    disclosed to consumers in a manner that permits            products or services that the consumer received
                                                  90 days. Id.                                             consumers to understand the costs, benefits, and           from such person.



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                                                                       Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                    37501

                                                  finance arrangements’’ requires that the                   Notwithstanding this regulatory history,                ‘‘functional equivalent of a loan’’ 44 or
                                                  lease result in the transfer of ownership;                 the Bureau does not believe that the                    the Federal Reserve Board’s ‘‘functional
                                                  (3) the Bureau’s interpretation is                         phrase ‘‘functional equivalent of                       equivalent of an extension of credit’’ 45)
                                                  inconsistent with lease                                    purchase financing arrangements’’ in                    weighs against the contention that
                                                  recharacterization provisions under the                    section 1002(15)(A)(ii) must be                         Congress intended for those specific
                                                  Truth in Lending Act (TILA), the                           interpreted to impose a limit on the                    interpretations to control the meaning of
                                                  Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), and                         residual value of leased assets for                     the term ‘‘functional equivalent of
                                                  certain State laws; and (4) the Bureau’s                   category (ii) leases, and, thus (assuming               finance purchase arrangements’’ in
                                                  interpretation would confuse                               most leases would exceed such limit), to                section 1002(15)(A)(ii).
                                                  consumers. According to these                              exclude most automobile leases.42 It is                    Even if the ‘‘functional equivalent’’
                                                  commenters, under a correct                                not clear that Congress intended the                    language in section 1002(15)(A)(ii) were
                                                  interpretation of the term, most                           interpretation of the phrase ‘‘functional               identical to the language interpreted by
                                                  automobile leases would not qualify as                     equivalent of purchase finance                          the prudential regulators and judicial
                                                  functionally equivalent to purchase                        arrangements’’ in section 1002(15)(A)(ii)               precedent to impose a residual value
                                                  finance arrangements under section                         to be controlled by the prudential                      limit, the Bureau believes that the
                                                  1002(15)(A)(ii). The Bureau has                            regulators’ and judicial interpretations                difference in the roles of the prudential
                                                  considered each of these arguments and                     raised by commenters and discussed                      regulators and the Bureau, and the
                                                  concludes that its interpretation of                       above.43 Instead, the Bureau believes                   different purposes of the provisions at
                                                  category (ii) leases, as laid out in the                   that the phrase ‘‘functional equivalent of              issue, would make it reasonable for the
                                                  proposal, is reasonable and best fulfills                  purchase finance arrangements’’ is                      Bureau to interpret the same language
                                                  the relevant purposes of the Dodd-Frank                    ambiguous and—in light of the Bureau’s                  differently from those prior
                                                  Act. The Bureau therefore adheres to                       unique mission—is reasonably                            interpretations. In interpreting what
                                                  that interpretation. Under that                            interpreted, from the perspective of the                leases might be the ‘‘functional
                                                  interpretation, most automobile leases                     consumer, not to incorporate a                          equivalent’’ of a purchase finance
                                                  qualify as section 1002(15)(A)(ii)                         limitation on the residual value of the                 arrangement, a key question is how the
                                                  financial products or services.                            leased item.                                            leases function and with respect to
                                                     Commenters are correct in pointing                                                                              whom. The prudential regulators’
                                                                                                               First, the phrase used in section                     primary role is to ensure safety and
                                                  out that the prudential regulators, as
                                                                                                             1002(15)(A)(ii)—‘‘functional equivalent                 soundness of financial institutions by,
                                                  well as at least one court decision, have
                                                                                                             of purchase financing arrangements’’—                   among other things, serving as the
                                                  interpreted regulatory requirements that
                                                                                                             does not appear in any of the other                     gatekeepers of permissible banking
                                                  a lease offered by a financial institution
                                                                                                             statutes or regulations pertaining to the               activity. In light of this role, it made
                                                  be the ‘‘functional equivalent’’ of a loan
                                                                                                             leasing activities of financial                         sense for prudential regulators to focus
                                                  and/or credit to impose limits on the
                                                                                                             institutions. The prudential regulators                 on how leases function vis-a-vis the
                                                  residual value 40 that the lessor may rely
                                                                                                             and courts have consequently never                      financial institution and thus to
                                                  on for the return of its full investment.41
                                                                                                             addressed the meaning of that specific                  consider primarily the risk posed to the
                                                     40 As noted above, the residual value is the            language. That Congress chose a phrase                  financial stability of the institution
                                                  projected market value of the vehicle at the end of        different from the language utilized by                 when delineating permissible leasing
                                                  the lease. See CFPB, Ask CFPB: What Is Residual            other regulators (e.g., the Office of the               activity. Accordingly, the prudential
                                                  Value? (June 24, 2012), available at http://               Comptroller of the Currency’s
                                                  www.consumerfinance.gov/askcfpb/737/what-                                                                          regulators deemed leases ‘‘functionally
                                                  residual-value.html.                                                                                               equivalent’’ to credit transactions only
                                                     41 See M &M Leasing Corp. v. Seattle First Nat’l        Fed. Reserve Bd., Amendment to Regulation Y, 62         when the lease and the loan created a
                                                  Bank, 563 F.2d 1377, 1382 (9th Cir. 1977) (holding         FR 9290 (Feb. 28, 1997) (eliminating functional
                                                                                                             equivalence and residual value requirements and         similar level of risk to the institution,
                                                  that, for a lease to be ‘‘functionally interchangeable’’
                                                  with a loan, and thus permissible for a national           noting that ‘‘permissible high residual value leasing   such as in the case of low residual value
                                                  bank to engage in as the ‘‘business of banking’’           may not be the functional equivalent of an              leasing.
                                                  under 12 U.S.C. 24(Seventh), the residual value of         extension of credit’’).                                    By contrast, Congress charged the
                                                                                                               42 Commenters assert that most auto leases would
                                                  the item must ‘‘contribute[] insubstantially to the                                                                Bureau with a different mission than the
                                                  bank’s recovery’’); see also Fed. Reserve Bd.,             not be considered functionally equivalent to
                                                  Revision of Regulation Y, 49 FR 794, 827 (Jan. 5,          purchase finance arrangements if that term were         prudential regulators, and, accordingly,
                                                  1984) (permitting bank holding companies to                interpreted to incorporate the residual value limits    the Bureau believes that the ‘‘functional
                                                  engage in leases that are the ‘‘functional equivalent      set by prudential regulators as discussed above.        equivalent’’ language in section
                                                  of an extension of credit’’ and setting a residual         They also assert that vehicle residual values are
                                                                                                             typically in the range of 30 to 50 percent of the
                                                                                                                                                                     1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act
                                                  value limit of 20 percent for those leases); Office of
                                                  the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), Lease               Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price, which they       should play a different role from the
                                                  Financing Transactions, 56 FR 28314 (June 20,              describe as close to the adjusted capitalized cost in   language governing the prudential
                                                  1991) (adopting provision that permits national            the lease.                                              regulators’ leasing provisions. As set
                                                  banks to engage in leasing with a residual value of          43 To support their argument that the Bureau
                                                                                                                                                                     forth in the Dodd-Frank Act, the
                                                  25 percent or less as ‘‘consistent with the                should model its interpretation on that of the
                                                  parameters set forth in M & M Leasing’’); 12 CFR           Federal banking regulators, commenters pointed to       Bureau’s purpose is to ‘‘ensur[e] that all
                                                  160.41 (OCC regulation for Federal savings                 the Senate Report for the Senate bill that was the      consumers have access to markets for
                                                  associations setting a 25 percent residual value           precursor to the Dodd-Frank Act. Commenters note        consumer financial products and
                                                  limit for leasing that is ‘‘the functional equivalent      that the report states that the definition of the       services and that markets for consumer
                                                  of a loan’’); Nat’l Credit Union Admin. Interpretive       phrase ‘‘financial product or service’’ in the Senate
                                                  Rule and Policy Statement 83–3, 48 FR 52568 (Nov.          bill was ‘‘modeled on the activities that are           financial products and services are fair,
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                                                  21, 1983) (indicating that leases that, among other        permissible for a bank or a bank holding company,       transparent, and competitive.’’ 46 The
                                                  requirements, meet a 25 percent residual value limit       such as under section 4(k) of the Bank Holding          Bureau’s objectives, moreover, include
                                                  are ‘‘the functional equivalent of secured lending’’);     Company Act and implementing regulations.’’ S.          working to ensure that consumers are
                                                  cf. Fed. Reserve Bd., Final Rule-Amendment to              Rept. 111–176, at 159–60 (2010). Notably, the
                                                  Regulation Y, 78 Fed. Reserve Bull. 548–49 (July           current regulation authorizing leasing activities for
                                                                                                                                                                       44 12 CFR 160.41.
                                                  1992) (permitting bank holding companies to invest         bank holding companies does not have a residual
                                                                                                                                                                       45 As noted above, the Federal Reserve Board’s
                                                  up to 10 percent of their assets in certain ‘‘high         value requirement. See Fed. Reserve Bd.,
                                                  residual value leasing,’’ in which the residual value      Amendment to Regulation Y, 62 FR 9290 (Feb. 28,         leasing regulations included this language until
                                                  could be up to 100 percent and increasing the              1997) (eliminating functional equivalence and           1997. See 62 FR 9290, 9306 (1997).
                                                  residual value limit for other leases to 25 percent);      residual value requirements).                             46 12 U.S.C. 5511(a).




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                                                  37502                Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  provided with timely and                                   provide that a lease creates a security                  did not intend to impose a similar
                                                  understandable information to make                         interest or is a credit sale where the                   ownership requirement on other leases.
                                                  responsible decisions about financial                      lessee has the option to become the                         Nor are the UCC, TILA, and other
                                                  transactions and that they are protected                   owner of the property for nominal or no                  similar provisions invoked by
                                                  from unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts                    consideration upon compliance with the                   commenters instructive. These
                                                  and practices and from                                     contract.50 Commenters maintained                        provisions seek to identify financial
                                                  discrimination.47 Given the Bureau’s                       that, for consistency with these                         arrangements that are labeled as leases
                                                  responsibility to protect consumers in                     analogous standards, most automobile                     but are in fact disguised security
                                                  markets for financial products and                         leases should not be treated as the                      interests or credit sales.52 Section
                                                  services, the Bureau believes that its                     functional equivalent of purchase                        1002(15)(A)(ii) by contrast is
                                                  interpretation of section 1002(15)(A)(ii)                  finance arrangements.                                    appropriately understood to encompass
                                                  of the Dodd-Frank Act should focus on                         The Bureau does not disagree with                     leases that are ‘‘functional[ly]
                                                  the similar ways in which leases and                       commenters that the phrase ‘‘purchase                    equivalent’’ to, though in fact distinct
                                                  loans function for consumers. Placing                      finance arrangement’’ suggests financing                 from, purchase finance arrangements.
                                                  limits on the interpretation of leasing                    used for a purchase. However, the                        As noted in the proposal, the Bureau
                                                  activity that qualifies as a consumer                      touchstone of the relevant requirement                   believes that one feature of most leases
                                                  financial product or service unrelated to                  of section 1002(15)(A)(ii) is not whether                that makes them functionally equivalent
                                                  the impact of that activity on consumers                   a lease is a ‘‘purchase finance                          to purchase finance arrangements is that
                                                  would create artificial barriers to                        arrangement,’’ but rather whether the                    the consumer can typically purchase the
                                                  consumer protection and would hinder                       two are functionally equivalent. The                     vehicle at the end of the lease term for
                                                  the Bureau’s ability to accomplish its                     Bureau does not believe that transfer of                 a pre-determined amount, which is
                                                  purpose and objectives. The Bureau                         ownership or the option to acquire a                     generally based on the residual value of
                                                  does not interpret the plain text of                       vehicle for nominal or no consideration                  the vehicle. This feature provides the
                                                  section 1002(15)(A)(ii) to impose such                     is a necessary hallmark of functional                    opportunity for ownership, which from
                                                  limits. For these reasons, the Bureau                      equivalence under section                                the consumer’s perspective contributes
                                                  believes that analyzing whether leases                     1002(15)(A)(ii) or that most automobile                  to making a lease ‘‘functionally
                                                  are the ‘‘functional equivalent of                         leases therefore do not qualify as                       equivalent’’ to a purchase finance
                                                  purchase finance arrangements’’ from                       functionally equivalent to purchase                      arrangement even if the consumer
                                                  the perspective of the consumer, as set                    finance arrangements.51 With respect to                  chooses not to acquire the vehicle (and
                                                  forth in the proposal, remains an                          real property leases, section                            a transfer of ownership therefore does
                                                  appropriate inquiry and is a reasonable                    1002(15)(A)(ii)(III) imposes an                          not result) and even though more than
                                                  approach to interpreting an ambiguous                      additional condition necessary to                        nominal consideration must be paid for
                                                  statutory provision, as well as the                        qualify as a financial product or service                the purchase.53
                                                  approach best suited to the Bureau’s                       on top of the functional equivalence test                   Commenters further suggested that
                                                  purpose and objectives.                                    applicable to all leases: That such leases               interpreting an automobile lease to be
                                                     Commenters also asserted that, even                     be intended to result in ownership of                    functionally equivalent to a purchase
                                                  from the perspective of the consumer, a                    the leased property to be transferred to                 finance arrangement may cause
                                                  lease cannot be the ‘‘functional                           the lessee. If the functional equivalence                consumer confusion about the
                                                  equivalent of [a] purchase finance                         standard were only met where a lease                     difference between an automobile lease
                                                  arrangement’’ unless the lease                             resulted in a transfer of ownership at the               and an automobile loan. The Bureau
                                                  agreement actually results in the                          end of the lease term, there would have                  does not think that these concerns are
                                                  acquisition or ownership of the leased                     been no reason for Congress to impose                    warranted. Consumers are unlikely to
                                                  item by the lessee at the end of the lease                 this separate requirement with respect                   rely on this rule as a source of
                                                  term. They argued that for a product to                    to real property leases. Likewise, that                  information on automobile leases.
                                                  be functionally equivalent to a                            Congress chose to impose such a                          However, even if consumers do so, the
                                                  ‘‘purchase finance arrangement’’ it must                   requirement only with respect to real                    Bureau does not take the position here
                                                  necessarily result in a ‘‘purchase.’’ They                 property leases suggests that Congress                   that automobile leases and purchase
                                                  further stated that the core function of                                                                            finance arrangements are identical.
                                                  a purchase finance arrangement is to                       become, the owner of the property upon full              Rather, the discussion above specifically
                                                  finance the acquisition of ownership,                      compliance with his obligations under the                explains that the two are ‘‘functionally
                                                  and that any product or service that                       contract’’).                                             equivalent’’ for the reasons identified,
                                                  lacks this specific function, cannot be                       50 Commenters also invoked similar provisions
                                                                                                                                                                      though they remain distinct products.54
                                                  said to be functionally equivalent to                      under State laws. See California Automobile Sales
                                                                                                             Finance Act, Cal. Civ. Code § 2981(a) (defining
                                                  such an arrangement. Along similar                         ‘‘conditional sale’’ to include ‘‘[a] contract for the      52 Commenters relying on these provisions

                                                  lines, commenters maintained that the                      bailment of a motor vehicle between a buyer and          pointed to legislative history characterizing the
                                                  Bureau’s approach is in fundamental                        a seller, with or without accessories, by which the      TILA provision as intended to ‘‘include leases, only
                                                                                                             bailee or lessee agrees to pay as compensation for       if they are, in essence, disguised sale
                                                  conflict with provisions under the                                                                                  arrangements.’’ See H. Rept. No. 90–1040, at 23
                                                                                                             use a sum substantially equivalent to or in excess
                                                  UCC 48 and TILA 49 that respectively                       of the aggregate value of the vehicle and its            (1967).
                                                                                                             accessories, if any, at the time the contract is            53 Commenters point out that, under the UCC
                                                    47 12 U.S.C. 5511(b).                                    executed, and by which it is agreed that the bailee      provision, aspects of leases such as the option to
                                                    48 See UCC § 1–203 (stating that ‘‘[a] transaction       or lessee will become, or for no other or for a          purchase for market value or higher, the assumption
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                                                  in the form of a lease creates a security interest’’ if,   nominal consideration has the option of becoming,        of risk of loss, and the payment of maintenance and
                                                  among other things, ‘‘the lessee has an option to          the owner of the vehicle upon full compliance with       other costs, are not sufficient to create a security
                                                  become the owner of the goods for no additional            the terms of the contract’’); New York Motor             interest. See UCC § 1–203(c). They therefore argue
                                                  consideration or for nominal additional                    Vehicle Retail Instalment Sales Act, N.Y. Pers. Prop.    that the Bureau’s reliance on such similarities for
                                                  consideration upon compliance with the lease               Law § 301(5); Texas Motor Vehicle Installment            its functional equivalence analysis is flawed. For
                                                  agreement’’).                                              Sales Provisions, Tex. Fin. Code § 348.002.              the reasons discussed above, the Bureau does not
                                                    49 See 15 U.S.C. 1602(h) (defining ‘‘credit sale’’ to       51 Notably, none of the prudential regulators’        find the UCC provision to be instructive of the
                                                  include a lease if, among other things, ‘‘it is agreed     provisions discussed above pertaining to leases that     correct interpretation of section 1002(15)(A)(ii).
                                                  that the bailee or lessee will become, or for no other     are the functional equivalent of credit require that        54 In the unlikely event that consumer confusion

                                                  or a nominal consideration has the option to               the lease result in the transfer of ownership.           arises as a result of this rule, the Bureau believes



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                    37503

                                                     Having considered the comments                       financial products or services under                    leases falling within proposed and final
                                                  discussed above, the Bureau adheres to                  section 1002(15)(A)(ii).                                § 1001.2(a) may be offered by banks
                                                  its position in the proposal that it is                    The Bureau also received a number of                 under Federal law. As noted above and
                                                  reasonable, and best suited to the                      comments regarding its decision to                      in the proposal, CEBA allows banks to
                                                  Bureau’s purpose and objectives, to                     define certain leases as financial                      offer certain automobile leases even
                                                  assess the functional equivalence                       products or services under section                      when they are not the functional
                                                  requirement from the perspective of the                 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) of the Dodd-Frank                   equivalent of purchase finance
                                                  consumer. For the reasons set forth in                  Act. Commenters did not dispute the                     arrangements.57 Section 1001.2(a)
                                                  the proposal and relayed above, the                     Bureau’s assertion that national banks                  defines as a financial product or service
                                                  Bureau believes that, from the                          may offer or provide such leases under                  extending or offering only those leases
                                                  consumer’s perspective, most                            CEBA. Commenters also did not dispute                   that banks may offer under CEBA and
                                                  automobile leases are therefore                         the Bureau’s assertion that invoking                    that are not financial products or
                                                  functionally equivalent to purchase                     authority under section                                 services under section 1002(15)(A)(ii).
                                                  finance arrangements.55 Accordingly,                    1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) to define CEBA leases                  The Bureau also finds that all CEBA
                                                  the Bureau believes that interpreting the               as financial products or services would                 automobile leases have a material
                                                  phrase ‘‘functional equivalent of                       make the larger-participant rule easier to              impact on consumers even if they are
                                                  purchase finance arrangements’’ in                      administer.                                             not the functional equivalent of
                                                  section 1002(15)(A)(ii) from the                           However, the Bureau received                         purchase finance arrangements. Access
                                                  perspective of the consumer to include                  comments stating that the Bureau may                    to a vehicle is critical for consumers,
                                                  most automobile leases is both a                        not or should not rely on its authority                 and consumers are increasingly turning
                                                  reasonable interpretation of the                        under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) with                  to leasing as a means to obtain
                                                  statutory language and the                              respect to automobile leases that are not               possession and use of a vehicle. For
                                                  interpretation that best fulfills the                   the functional equivalent of purchase                   consumers who choose to lease an
                                                  relevant purposes of the Dodd-Frank                     finance arrangements. Those comments                    automobile, the lease is a significant
                                                  Act.                                                    argued that: (1) The Bureau failed to                   financial obligation. The average
                                                     The Bureau received no comments                      provide a proper record for its definition              monthly payment for new leases as of
                                                  challenging its assertion that most                     of automobile leases as financial                       the fourth quarter of 2014 was $408, and
                                                  automobile leases meet the other two                    products or services under section                      the average lease term was 35 months
                                                  requirements of section 1002(15)(A)(ii)                 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II); (2) the Bureau                     (with nearly two-thirds of lease terms
                                                  for personal property leases—that is,                   underestimated the number of leases                     between 25 and 36 months).58
                                                  that they have terms longer than 90 days                that would be covered by that                           Furthermore, an automobile lease can
                                                  and are non-operating. The Bureau                       definition; (3) the Bureau has not                      have significant consequences for a
                                                  adheres to its position that most                       demonstrated that leases covered by the                 consumer’s financial well-being.
                                                  automobile leases meet these                            definition will have a material impact                  Because consumers rely on automobiles
                                                  requirements. For the foregoing reasons,                on consumers as a whole; (4) because                    for their transportation needs and
                                                  the Bureau continues to believe that                    Congress already defined some leases as                 because—as explained above—
                                                  most automobile leases qualify as                       financial products or services under                    automobile leases carry significant risks
                                                                                                          section 1002(15)(A)(ii), the Bureau lacks
                                                  that it can resolve this confusion through              authority under section                                    57 The purpose of section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) is to

                                                  appropriate consumer-facing documents.                  1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) to define additional                help ensure that the Bureau has jurisdiction over
                                                     55 The Federal Reserve Board noted similarities                                                              consumer financial products or services that banks
                                                                                                          leases as financial products or services;               may offer (if they have or likely will have a material
                                                  between auto leases and loans in its 1976 statement
                                                  Automobile Leasing as an Activity for Bank Holding      and (5) expansion of the Bureau’s                       impact on consumers). It thus bears noting that
                                                  Companies, 62 Fed. Reserve Bull. 928 (Nov. 1976).       authority over automobile leasing is                    banks have long had authority to offer automobile
                                                  The Board discussed advocates’ arguments about          unnecessary because automobile leases                   leases regardless of whether they are the functional
                                                  the similarities:                                       are sufficiently regulated.56 The Bureau                equivalent of purchase finance arrangements. As
                                                     Those parties to the proceeding in favor of the                                                              discussed in the proposal, in 1987, Congress passed
                                                  performance of the activity by bank holding
                                                                                                          has considered each of these arguments.                 CEBA, which allows national banks to invest up to
                                                  companies (generally hereafter ‘‘proponents’’)             With regard to the comment that the                  10 percent of their assets in personal property
                                                  argued that leasing is essentially a financial          Bureau has failed to provide a proper                   leases, including vehicle leases, without regard to
                                                  transaction since it is an alternate method of          record to support its definition of                     the residual value of the leased asset and without
                                                  financing the purchase of an automobile without                                                                 a functional equivalence requirement. Public Law
                                                                                                          certain automobile leases as financial                  100–86, 101 Stat. 552 (1987); see also 12 CFR
                                                  the necessity of a large initial down payment. Thus,
                                                  to the customer it is a means of obtaining the          products or services under section                      23.2(c). For its part, the Federal Reserve Board
                                                  possession and use of an automobile through             1002(15)(A)(xi)(II), the Bureau believes                (Board), in 1997, amended its leasing provisions
                                                  deferred payment. To the bank it is another in a        that it has appropriately met the two-                  under Regulation Y to eliminate the ‘‘functional
                                                  spectrum of methods of new car financing that                                                                   equivalent of an extension of credit’’ requirement as
                                                                                                          part showing required under section                     well as any limitations on the residual value of the
                                                  includes instalment credit transactions, floor
                                                  planning and commercial lending to independent          1002(15)(A)(xi)(II): That the financial                 leased item for permissible leasing activities. 62 FR
                                                  lessors.                                                product or service may be offered by                    9290 (Feb. 28, 1997). Even before this amendment,
                                                     Id. at 931–32. The Board also separately             banks and has (or likely will have) a                   which eliminated the functional equivalence test,
                                                  recognized ‘‘many’’ other similarities between          material impact on consumers.                           beginning in 1992, Board regulations permitted
                                                  leases and loans: In each case there is a sum certain                                                           bank holding companies to invest up to 10 percent
                                                  in amount. This sum includes the acquisition cost
                                                                                                             For the reasons set forth in the                     of their assets in certain ‘‘high residual value
                                                  of the vehicle and the cost of financing and is         proposal, the Bureau finds that the                     leasing,’’ in which the residual value could be up
                                                  recovered through a schedule of noncancellable                                                                  to 100 percent. Final Rule-Amendment to
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                                                  deferred payments. The term of the payment period         56 One commenter also stated that the Bureau has      Regulation Y, 78 Fed. Reserve Bull. 548–49 (July
                                                  in both cases is 24 to 36, or recently to 48 months.    not provided an accurate statement of its definition.   1992). Board regulations now allow bank holding
                                                  The vehicle serves as a type of collateral to           As noted in the proposal and reiterated above, the      companies to issue any non-operating leases of
                                                  guarantee payment on both the instalment loan and       Bureau is defining as financial products or services    personal property with terms greater than 90 days.
                                                  the lease. Both forms of financing are applied to a     extending or brokering any automobile leases where      12 CFR 225.28(b)(3). Accordingly, to the extent that
                                                  specific automobile that is chosen prior to             the lease: (1) Qualifies as a full-payout lease and a   certain automobile leases that may be offered by
                                                  preparation of the document . . . All attributes of     net lease, as provided by 12 CFR 23.3(a), and has       banks are not already covered by section
                                                  ownership pass to the lessee who is responsible for     an initial term of not less than 90 days, as provided   1002(15)(A)(ii), it nonetheless is appropriate for
                                                  servicing, insurance, and depreciation.                 by 12 CFR 23.11; and (2) is not a financial product     them to be covered by section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II).
                                                     Id. at 932.                                          or service under section 1002(15)(A)(ii).                  58 Zabritski, supra note 33, at 20.




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                                                  37504               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  to and obligations of the consumer, any                 automobile leases, the Bureau believes                   The provision does not define the term
                                                  act or practice that impedes access to a                that its definition under § 1001.2(a)                    ‘‘material impact on consumers,’’ nor
                                                  vehicle or otherwise creates problems                   would nevertheless be authorized under                   does it state how the Bureau must assess
                                                  related to the leasing arrangement can                  section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II). As noted                    a financial product or service’s
                                                  have a critical impact on consumers.                    above, the Bureau has found that banks                   ‘‘material impact on consumers.’’ The
                                                     Indeed, Congress, in enacting the                    may offer automobile leases under                        ordinary meaning of the term ‘‘material
                                                  Consumer Leasing Act of 1976 (CLA),59                   CEBA even if they are not the functional                 impact’’ is also vague.64 In light of these
                                                  recognized the impact that automobile                   equivalent of purchase finance                           ambiguities, the Bureau believes that a
                                                  leases have on consumers. In issuing the                arrangements. This is true irrespective                  product may have a ‘‘material impact on
                                                  statute nearly 30 years ago, Congress                   of the number of leases that fall under                  consumers’’ in the aggregate,
                                                  noted that ‘‘there has been a recent                    section 1002(15)(A)(ii). The Bureau has                  individually, or both. In the Bureau’s
                                                  trend toward leasing automobiles and                    also found that all CEBA automobile                      view, this interpretation of the
                                                  other durable goods for consumer use as                 leases—regardless of whether they are                    applicable standard is essential to
                                                  an alternative to installment credit sales              the functional equivalent of purchase                    provide comprehensive coverage of
                                                  and that these leases have been offered                 finance arrangements—have a material                     financial products or services offered or
                                                  without adequate cost disclosures.’’ 60                 impact on consumers. The need for the                    provided by banks that could materially
                                                  Given the recent growth of automobile                   Bureau’s definition under section                        affect the financial well-being of
                                                  leasing and the importance of                           1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) would only be                        consumers, either individually or in the
                                                  automobile leases to a consumer’s                       magnified if the Bureau overestimated,                   aggregate.
                                                  financial well-being, Congress’ finding                 as the commenter suggested, the number                      A commenter suggested that because
                                                  in the CLA that automobile leases can                   of leases that already qualify as financial              Congress already defined some leases as
                                                  pose risks to consumers is even truer                   products or services under section                       financial products or services under
                                                  today. The CLA establishes, among                       1002(15)(A)(ii). Therefore, even if the                  section 1002(15)(A)(ii), the Bureau lacks
                                                  other things, disclosure requirements                   Bureau’s interpretation that section                     authority under section
                                                  pertaining to lease costs and terms,                    1002(15)(A)(ii) covers most automobile                   1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) to define additional
                                                  limitations on the size of penalties for                leases were erroneous, the Bureau’s                      leases as financial products or services.
                                                  delinquency or default and on the size                  findings and exercise of its authority                   However, there is no indication that
                                                  of lessee’s residual liabilities, and                   under section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) in this                Congress intended for the categories of
                                                  disclosure requirements for lease                       rulemaking would be sufficient to                        financial products or services defined in
                                                  advertising.61 These consumer                           define all automobile leases that banks                  section 1002(15)(A)(i)–(x) to serve as a
                                                  protections further highlight Congress’                 may offer under CEBA, and that are not                   limit on the types of other financial
                                                  recognition of the many ways in which                   already covered under section                            products or services that the Bureau
                                                  leases can significantly impact                         1002(15)(A)(ii), as financial products or                may define under section
                                                  consumers’ financial well-being. For                    services.                                                1002(15)(A)(xi)(II). Congress itself
                                                  these reasons, the Bureau finds that all                   A commenter also suggested that                       decided to define a number of specific
                                                  automobile leases under proposed and                    because the Bureau’s proposed                            financial products or services as areas of
                                                  final § 1001.2(a) have a material impact                definition under section                                 special interest to Congress for
                                                  on consumers irrespective of whether                    1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) would apply to a                     regulation and oversight by the Bureau,
                                                  they are the functional equivalent of                   small number of automobile leases, the                   but it also vested the Bureau with broad
                                                  purchase finance arrangements.62                        Bureau has not demonstrated that these                   discretionary rulemaking authority to
                                                     Commenters also suggested that the                   leases will have a material impact on                    define ‘‘other’’ financial products or
                                                  Bureau overestimated the number of                      consumers as a whole. As the Bureau                      services to fill any gaps left by Congress
                                                  leases that are financial products or                   understands it, the premise of this                      where the two conditions of section
                                                  services under section 1002(15)(A)(ii)                  comment is that section                                  1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) are met. The Bureau
                                                  and that, as a result, section                          1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) requires the Bureau                  believes that, in order to best fulfill the
                                                  1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) would have to be the                to find that a financial product or                      purposes of the Dodd-Frank Act and to
                                                  primary basis for defining automobile                   service has a ‘‘material impact’’ on                     provide comprehensive protections for
                                                  leases as financial products or services.               consumers in the aggregate rather than                   consumers, its authority in section
                                                  The Bureau does not agree with the                      on individual consumers. The Bureau                      1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) should allow it to
                                                  premise of this comment. As explained                   believes that it appropriately                           define a new financial product or
                                                  above, the Bureau believes that section                 demonstrated material impact as                          service even if it is within the same
                                                  1002(15)(A)(ii) should be interpreted                   required under section                                   category as a product or service defined
                                                  from the perspective of the consumer                    1002(15)(A)(xi)(II). Nothing in section                  in section 1002(15)(A)(i)–(x). In other
                                                  and would thus cover most consumer                      1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) requires the Bureau,                 words, although Congress defined
                                                  automobile leases. However, even if the                 in defining a financial product or                       certain leases as financial products or
                                                  commenter were correct that section                     service, to find that it has a material                  services in section 1002(15)(A)(ii), the
                                                  1002(15)(A)(ii) covered no or very few                  impact on consumers in the aggregate.63                  Bureau is free to define ‘‘other’’ leases
                                                                                                                                                                   as financial products or services under
                                                     59 Public Law 94–240, 90 Stat. 257 (codified as
                                                                                                            63 At any rate, the Bureau notes that leasing is, as
                                                  amended at 15 U.S.C. 1667–1667f).                       a general matter, an important and growing part of       approximately 14 percent occurred through leasing
                                                     60 15 U.S.C. 1601(b).
                                                                                                          the automobile financing market for consumers.           arrangements, while the remainder used purchase
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                                                     61 15 U.S.C. 1667a–1667c.                                                                                     financing. See id.
                                                                                                          While the automobile financing market is largely
                                                     62 Section 1002(A)(xi)(II) requires the Bureau to    comprised of purchase loans, in recent years                64 For instance, the Oxford English Dictionary

                                                  find that a financial product or service ‘‘has, or      consumers have begun to migrate more towards             includes several definitions of the word ‘‘material,’’
                                                  likely will have, a material impact on consumers.’’     leasing agreements. As of the fourth quarter of 2014,    including ‘‘of serious or substantial import;
                                                  For the same reasons that support the Bureau’s          leases comprised approximately 30 percent of new         significant, important, of consequence.’’ Oxford
                                                  finding above that all automobile leases under          vehicle automotive financing transactions, which is      University Press, OED Online (2015), available at
                                                  § 1001.2(a) have a material impact on consumers,        up from about 20 percent at the end of 2009. See         http://www.oed.com. It also defines ‘‘impact’’ as
                                                  the Bureau also finds that all automobile leases        Zabritski, supra note 33, at 16. Furthermore, of all     ‘‘the effective action of one thing or person upon
                                                  under § 1001.2(a) likely will have a material impact    new and used automobile financing transactions           another; the effect of such action; influence;
                                                  on consumers.                                           recorded in the fourth quarter of 2014,                  impression.’’ Id.



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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                       37505

                                                  section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II), as long as it              necessary to ensure a fair, transparent,                relevant measurement period but ceases
                                                  makes the requisite findings. The                       and competitive market for consumer                     to be an affiliated company during the
                                                  Bureau believes that a contrary                         automobile leasing. The Bureau further                  same period, the annual receipts of the
                                                  interpretation would artificially limit                 notes that the existence of the                         nonbank covered person and the
                                                  the scope of section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II)                complementary regulatory framework                      formerly affiliated company must be
                                                  and would leave some financial                          noted by the commenter is not unique                    aggregated for the entire period of
                                                  activities that are important to                        to automobile leasing. Numerous                         measurement. As noted below, the
                                                  consumers under-regulated for purposes                  products that qualify as financial                      Bureau proposed to make the same
                                                  of the Dodd-Frank Act.                                  products or services under title X and                  change to paragraph (iii)(D) of the
                                                     As further discussed above, those                    are thus subject to the Bureau’s title X                definition of ‘‘annual receipts’’ in
                                                  conditions are met with respect to the                  authorities also fall under one or more                 § 1090.105(a) in the Consumer Debt
                                                  automobile leasing activities described                 ‘‘enumerated consumer laws’’ 65 and are                 Collection Rule. For the reasons
                                                  under § 1001.2(a). And the Bureau is not                subject to section 5 of the Federal Trade               explained below, the Bureau is
                                                  seeking to define under section                         Commission Act. Title X requires the                    finalizing these changes as proposed.69
                                                  1002(15)(A)(xi)(II) activities that already             Bureau to coordinate with other Federal                    Under section 1024(a)(3)(B) of the
                                                  qualify as financial products or services               regulators to ‘‘promote consistent                      Dodd-Frank Act, the activities of
                                                  under section 1002(15)(A)(i)–(x) or to                  regulatory treatment,’’ 66 and sets forth               affiliated companies are to be aggregated
                                                  modify the definition of leasing                        specific procedures for coordination                    for purposes of computing activity
                                                  activities described under section                      between the Bureau and the Federal                      levels for the larger-participant rules. In
                                                  1002(15)(A)(ii). To the contrary, the                   Trade Commission.67 The Bureau takes                    the Consumer Reporting and Consumer
                                                  Bureau is defining ‘‘other’’ financial                  these coordination obligations seriously                Debt Collection Rules, the Bureau
                                                  products or services and has expressly                  and believes that they will ensure                      implemented the aggregation called for
                                                  carved out from its definition in                       optimal synergies between the Bureau’s                  by section 1024(a)(3)(B) by prescribing
                                                  § 1001.2(a) financial products or                       authorities and the existing regulatory                 the addition of all the receipts of a
                                                  services already covered under section                  structure. For all these reasons, the                   nonbank covered person and its
                                                  1002(15)(A)(ii).                                        Bureau adopts § 1001.2(a) essentially as
                                                     Finally, one commenter generally                                                                             affiliated companies to produce the
                                                                                                          proposed with one minor clarificatory
                                                  suggested that expansion of the Bureau’s                                                                        nonbank covered person’s annual
                                                                                                          addition.68
                                                  authority over automobile leasing is                                                                            receipts.70 The Bureau prescribed
                                                  unnecessary because, in the                             B. 12 CFR Part 1090—Defining Larger                     similar calculations for account volume
                                                  commenter’s view, automobile leases                     Participants of Certain Consumer                        in the Student Loan Servicing Rule and
                                                  are sufficiently regulated. This                        Financial Product and Service Markets                   for aggregate annual international
                                                  commenter noted that the Bureau                                                                                 money transfers in the International
                                                                                                          Section 1090.101—Definitions
                                                  administers and enforces the CLA and                                                                            Money Transfer Rule.71
                                                                                                             The Bureau proposed to make a                           The affiliate aggregation provisions of
                                                  its implementing Regulation M, which
                                                                                                          technical correction to the definition of               each of the larger-participant rules
                                                  cover automobile leases. The
                                                                                                          ‘‘nonbank covered person’’ in                           address circumstances where a
                                                  commenter also noted that automobile
                                                                                                          § 1090.101 by substituting the term                     company becomes affiliated with a
                                                  leases are subject to section 5 of the
                                                                                                          ‘‘consumer financial product or service’’               nonbank covered person or ceases to be
                                                  Federal Trade Commission Act, which
                                                                                                          for ‘‘consumer product or service’’
                                                  prohibits unfair or deceptive acts or                                                                           affiliated with the nonbank covered
                                                                                                          where it appears. The Bureau did not
                                                  practices. The commenter further                                                                                person during the relevant measurement
                                                                                                          receive any comments on this change
                                                  highlighted that the Federal prudential                                                                         period.72 The Bureau believes it is
                                                                                                          and is finalizing § 1090.101 as proposed.
                                                  regulators may supervise banks for                                                                              appropriate in both circumstances to
                                                  compliance with section 5 with respect                  Section 1090.104          Consumer Reporting            aggregate the activity of the company
                                                  to automobile leasing activities.                       Market                                                  with that of the nonbank covered person
                                                     The Bureau agrees that the existing                  104(a)     Market-Related Definitions                   for the entire period of measurement,
                                                  regulatory framework governing                                                                                  even though the company was an
                                                  automobile leasing is important, but the                104(a), Paragraph (iii)(D) of the                       affiliated company of the nonbank
                                                  Bureau believes this framework would                    Definition of ‘‘Annual Receipts’’—                      covered person for only part of the
                                                  best protect consumers when applied in                  ‘‘Annual Receipts of Affiliated                         measurement period.
                                                  conjunction with the Bureau’s particular                Companies’’
                                                                                                                                                                     This is the approach used in the
                                                  authorities under title X. Those                           The Bureau proposed to make a                        Student Loan Servicing Rule’s
                                                  authorities include authority to                        technical correction to paragraph (iii)(D)              definition of ‘‘account volume’’ and the
                                                  supervise nonbank ‘‘larger                              of the definition of ‘‘annual receipts’’ in             International Money Transfer Rule’s
                                                  participant[s]’’ in markets for consumer                § 1090.104(a), which governs how the                    definition of ‘‘aggregate annual
                                                  financial products or services, 12 U.S.C.               affiliate aggregation rules apply to
                                                  5514(a)(1)(B); to prohibit unfair,                      formerly affiliated companies for                          69 The Final Rule also includes a clarifying
                                                  deceptive, and abusive acts or practices;               purposes of the Consumer Reporting                      change in the wording of the first sentence of
                                                  to monitor markets for a consumer                       Rule. The correction clarifies that if a                paragraph (iii)(D) of the definition of ‘‘annual
                                                  financial product or service, 12 U.S.C.                 company is an affiliated company of the                 receipts’’ in § 1090.104(a). This change from the
                                                  5512(c)(1); to require disclosures                                                                              proposal does not have any substantive effect.
                                                                                                          nonbank covered person during the
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                                                                                                                                                                     70 12 CFR 1090.104(a), .105(a).
                                                  regarding the features of a consumer                                                                               71 12 CFR 1090.106(a), .107(a).
                                                  financial product or service, 12 U.S.C.                   65 12  U.S.C. 5481(12).                                  72 This aspect is addressed in paragraphs (iii)(B)
                                                  5532(a); and to prescribe rules for                       66 12  U.S.C. 5495.                                   and (iii)(D) of the definition of ‘‘annual receipts’’ in
                                                  consumers to seek information                              67 See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. 5493(b)(3), 5512(c)(6)(C),
                                                                                                                                                                  § 1090.104(a), paragraphs (iii)(B) and (iii)(D) of the
                                                  concerning a consumer financial                         5514(a)(2), 5514(c)(3).                                 definition of ‘‘annual receipts’’ in § 1090.105(a),
                                                                                                             68 The Final Rule also includes a clarifying         paragraphs (iii)(B) and (iii)(C) of the definition of
                                                  product or service they have obtained,                  change in the wording of § 1001.2(a). This change       ‘‘account volume’’ in § 1090.106(a), and paragraph
                                                  12 U.S.C. 5533(a). The Bureau believes                  from the proposal does not have any substantive         (iii)(B) of the definition of ‘‘aggregate annual
                                                  that these title X-specific authorities are             effect.                                                 international money transfers’’ in § 1090.107(a).



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                                                  37506                Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  international money transfers.’’ 73 It is                 administrative difficulties associated                Section 1090.108 Automobile
                                                  also the approach that the Bureau                         with part-year calculations of annual                 Financing Market
                                                  intended to adopt in the Consumer                         receipts in some instances.                             Section 1090.108 relates to
                                                  Reporting and Consumer Debt                                  The Bureau provided the public with                automobile financing. Autos have
                                                  Collection Rules. However, the language                   notice of these proposed changes and an               become indispensable for most working
                                                  addressing aggregation of formerly                        opportunity to comment in the proposal                individuals, with nearly 90 percent of
                                                  affiliated companies in the definition of                 that was published in the Federal                     the workforce commuting to work by
                                                  ‘‘annual receipts’’ in those rules is                     Register on October 8, 2014. The                      car, truck, or van, and most driving
                                                  unclear.74 To clarify the operation of                    proposal described the changes in the                 alone.77 Autos are also commonly used
                                                  those paragraphs, the Bureau proposed                     summary and discussed them in full in                 for other purposes that are important to
                                                  to replace the final sentence of                          the section-by-section analysis. In                   consumers, such as transportation to
                                                  paragraph (iii)(D) of the definition of                   addition, the amended regulation was                  school or healthcare providers, travel,
                                                  ‘‘annual receipts’’ in § 1090.104(a) and                  provided for commenters to review. In                 and recreation. Consumers’ reliance on
                                                  § 1090.105(a).                                            suggesting that this change will burden               vehicles is underscored by recent
                                                     Only one commenter addressed this                                                                            studies on repayment patterns, which
                                                                                                            companies by requiring them to obtain
                                                  proposed technical correction. An                                                                               show that consumers pay their auto
                                                                                                            information from their former affiliates,
                                                  industry trade association urged the                                                                            loans before other secured and
                                                                                                            the commenter may have been assuming
                                                  Bureau not to use this rulemaking to                                                                            unsecured debt.78 Auto loans are the
                                                                                                            that companies will need to calculate
                                                  make changes to the larger-participant                                                                          third largest category of outstanding
                                                                                                            whether they are larger participants.
                                                  rules for the consumer reporting and                                                                            household debt, behind mortgage and
                                                                                                            However, as the Bureau has explained
                                                  consumer debt collection markets. It                                                                            student loans. In the fourth quarter of
                                                                                                            in prior larger-participant rulemakings,
                                                  stated that doing so would undermine                                                                            2014, Experian Automotive estimated
                                                                                                            the larger-participant rules do not
                                                  transparency and public participation in                                                                        that consumers in the United States had
                                                                                                            require such a calculation. Generally, an
                                                  the rulemaking process. This                                                                                    auto loans valued at roughly $886
                                                  commenter acknowledged that the                           entity will need to calculate its annual
                                                                                                            receipts only if it decides to dispute that           billion.79
                                                  proposed change may be simpler for the                                                                            While a significant number of
                                                  Bureau but suggested that it may be                       it is a larger participant when the
                                                                                                            Bureau initiates supervision activity,                consumers obtain credit to purchase
                                                  difficult for companies to secure
                                                  necessary financial records from entities                 such as an examination or a requirement
                                                                                                            that the company provide reports to the               receipts’’ in § 1090.105(a). This change from the
                                                  with which they are no longer affiliated.                                                                       proposal does not have any substantive effect.
                                                     The Bureau believes that when                          Bureau. Under rare circumstances such                    77 See Brian McKenzie & Melanie Rapino, U.S.

                                                  companies have been affiliated at any                     as this, the Bureau does not believe it               Census Bureau, Commuting in the United States:
                                                  time during the measurement period it                     would be difficult for a nonbank                      2009, at 2 (2011), http://www.census.gov/prod/
                                                                                                            covered person to obtain information                  2011pubs/acs-15.pdf.
                                                  is simplest and most appropriate to                                                                                78 See TransUnion, 2014 Payment Hierarchy
                                                  aggregate annual receipts corresponding                   regarding the annual receipts of                      Study (2014), available at http://
                                                  to the entire measurement period. As                      companies with which it was recently                  media.marketwire.com/attachments/201403/
                                                  explained above, doing so will promote                    affiliated.75                                         233081_
                                                                                                                                                                  PaymentHierarchyInfographic2014FINAL.jpg &
                                                  consistency across the larger-participant                 Section 1090.105 Consumer Debt                        http://www.transunioninsights.com/studies/
                                                  rules and will make the handling of                       Collection Market                                     behaviorstudy.
                                                  formerly affiliated companies more                                                                                 79 Zabritski, supra note 33, at 6. An Equifax report

                                                  consistent with the approach taken for                    105(a)    Market-Related Definitions                  estimated that the total number of outstanding loans
                                                                                                                                                                  exceeded 65 million in 2014 and that the total
                                                  newly affiliated companies in the                         105(a), Paragraph (iii)(D) of the                     balance of outstanding auto loans was $924.2
                                                  Consumer Reporting and Consumer                           Definition of ‘‘Annual Receipts’’—                    billion in August 2014. See Equifax, Auto Market
                                                  Debt Collection Rules. It may also avoid                  ‘‘Annual Receipts of Affiliated                       Revels in Record Vehicle Loan Totals: A Breakdown
                                                                                                            Companies’’                                           of the Recent National Consumer Credit Trends
                                                     73 Paragraph (iii)(C) of the definition of ‘‘account
                                                                                                                                                                  Report (Nov. 10, 2014), available at http://
                                                                                                                                                                  insight.equifax.com/auto-market-revels-in-record-
                                                  volume’’ in § 1090.106(a) provides: ‘‘If two affiliated      The Bureau proposed to amend the                   vehicle-loan-totals-a-breakdown-of-the-recent-
                                                  companies cease to be affiliated companies, the           final sentence of paragraph (iii)(D) of               national-consumer-credit-trends-report/. The
                                                  number of accounts of each continues to be                § 1090.105(a)’s definition of ‘‘annual                Federal Reserve Bank of New York estimated that
                                                  included in the other’s account volume until the                                                                consumers in the United States had 87.4 million
                                                  succeeding December 31.’’ Paragraph (iii)(B) of the       receipts’’ to clarify that if a company is
                                                                                                                                                                  outstanding auto loans valued at nearly $900 billion
                                                  definition of ‘‘aggregate annual international money      an affiliated company of the nonbank                  as of the first quarter of 2014. Fed. Reserve Bank
                                                  transfers’’ in § 1090.107(a) provides:                    covered person during the relevant                    of N.Y., Quarterly Report on Household Debt and
                                                     The annual international money transfers of a          measurement period but ceases to be an                Credit (May 2014), available at http://
                                                  nonbank covered person must be aggregated with                                                                  www.newyorkfed.org/householdcredit/2014-q1/
                                                  the annual international money transfers of any
                                                                                                            affiliated company during the same
                                                                                                                                                                  data/pdf/HHDC_2014Q1.pdf & http://
                                                  person that was an affiliated company of the              period, the annual receipts of the                    www.ny.frb.org/householdcredit/2014-q4/data/xls/
                                                  nonbank covered person at any time during the             nonbank covered person and the                        HHD_C_Report_2014Q4.xlsx. For purposes of these
                                                  preceding calendar year. The annual international         formerly affiliated company must be                   statistics, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York
                                                  money transfers of the nonbank covered person and                                                               defines ‘‘auto loans’’ as ‘‘loans taken out to
                                                  its affiliated companies are aggregated for the entire
                                                                                                            aggregated for the entire period of
                                                                                                                                                                  purchase a car, including Auto Bank loans provided
                                                  preceding calendar year, even if the affiliation did      measurement. For the same reasons                     by banking institutions (banks, credit unions,
                                                  not exist for the entire calendar year.                   described above with respect to                       savings and loan associations), and Auto Finance
                                                     74 Paragraph (iii)(D) of the definition of ‘‘annual
                                                                                                            § 1090.104(a), the Bureau is finalizing               loans, provided by automobile dealers and
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                                                  receipts’’ in both § 1090.104(a) and § 1090.105(a)        the changes to § 1090.105(a) as                       automobile financing companies.’’ In a technical
                                                  provides:                                                                                                       comment, one industry trade association noted that
                                                     The annual receipts of a formerly affiliated
                                                                                                            proposed.76                                           the proposal’s Supplementary Information refers to
                                                  company are not included if affiliation ceased                                                                  dealers giving ‘‘loans’’ and asserted that dealers in
                                                                                                              75 Participants seeking to self-assess could also
                                                  before the applicable period of measurement as set                                                              fact sell a vehicle through an installment contract
                                                  forth in paragraph (ii) of this definition. This          arrange to obtain information relevant to the         rather than giving loans. Unless otherwise
                                                  exclusion of annual receipts of formerly affiliated       threshold in advance of ending such an affiliation.   indicated, the term ‘‘auto loan’’ is used throughout
                                                  companies applies during the entire period of               76 The Final Rule also includes a clarifying        this preamble to include credit extended through
                                                  measurement, rather than only for the period after        change in the wording of the first sentence of        installment sales contracts as well as other types of
                                                  which affiliation ceased.                                 paragraph (iii)(D) of the definition of ‘‘annual      financing.



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                                                                       Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                    37507

                                                  their autos,80 in recent years, consumers                 associated with certain dealers. BHPH                   company.87 Depository institutions and
                                                  have begun to migrate more toward                         dealers traditionally focus on subprime                 credit unions have an advantage in the
                                                  leasing agreements. Leasing is growing                    and deep subprime borrowers. While                      direct lending space because these
                                                  quickly as a proportion of new vehicle                    BHPH dealers are mostly                                 entities often have a pre-existing
                                                  financing.81                                              independently-owned entities that serve                 relationship with consumers. Captives
                                                     Recognizing the significant impact                     as the primary lender and receive                       and other specialty finance companies
                                                  that automobile financing has on                          payments directly from consumers,                       are more active in the indirect channel.
                                                  consumers’ lives, the Bureau proposed                     some larger BHPH dealers will sell or                   Most consumers who finance the
                                                  to identify a market for automobile                       assign their contracts to specific BHPH                 purchase of an auto use the indirect
                                                  financing. Commenters generally                           finance companies once the contract has                 channel.
                                                  supported the Bureau’s identification of                                                                             With indirect lending, dealers rather
                                                                                                            been consummated with the consumer.
                                                  an automobile financing market,                                                                                   than consumers typically select the
                                                                                                            Unlike captives, these BHPH finance
                                                  although some raised specific concerns                                                                            lender that will provide the financing.
                                                  regarding the scope of the market that                    companies do not focus on a particular                  Upon completion of the vehicle
                                                  are discussed in the section-by-section                   auto manufacturer.83                                    selection process, the dealer usually
                                                  analysis of § 1090.108(a) and (b) below.                     According to the Bureau’s estimates                  collects basic information regarding the
                                                  Because automobile financing is an                        based on 2013 data from Experian                        applicant and uses an automated system
                                                  important activity that affects millions                  Automotive’s AutoCount® database,84                     to forward that information to
                                                  of consumers, the Bureau believes that                    the automobile financing market                         prospective indirect auto lenders. After
                                                  supervision will be beneficial to both                    defined in this Final Rule includes over                evaluating the applicant, indirect auto
                                                  consumers and the market as a whole.                      500 nonbank automobile lenders.85 The                   lenders may provide the dealer with
                                                  Supervision of larger participants in the                 Bureau estimates that fewer than 40                     purchase eligibility criteria or
                                                  automobile financing market will help                     entities comprise over 90 percent of the                stipulations including, but not limited
                                                  the Bureau ensure that these market                       auto loan and lease transactions in the                 to, a risk-based ‘‘buy rate’’ that
                                                  participants are complying with                           nonbank market, as measured by the                      establishes a minimum interest rate at
                                                  applicable Federal consumer financial                     number of transactions identified in the                which the lender is willing to purchase
                                                  law and thereby will further the                          AutoCount Lender ReportSM.86 Large                      a retail installment sales contract
                                                  Bureau’s mission to ensure consumers’                     captives dominate the top tier of this                  executed between the consumer and the
                                                  access to fair, transparent, and                          market. The other large companies in                    dealer for the purchase of the vehicle.88
                                                  competitive markets for consumer                                                                                     A franchised dealer often can choose
                                                                                                            the nonbank automobile financing                        from a selection of funding sources in
                                                  financial products and services.
                                                     The automobile financing market                        market are either specialty finance                     arranging credit for a consumer.
                                                  identified by the Final Rule includes: (1)                companies or BHPH finance companies.                    However, a franchised dealer that is
                                                  Specialty finance companies; (2)                          The lower tiers of the nonbank market                   affiliated with a manufacturer can be
                                                  ‘‘captive’’ nonbanks (commonly referred                   are comprised generally of smaller                      incentivized to use a captive through
                                                  to as ‘‘captives’’); and (3) Buy Here Pay                 regional specialty finance companies.                   mechanisms such as promotional
                                                  Here (BHPH) finance companies.82                             Auto credit is provided both through                 discounts or limited-time financing
                                                  Specialty financing companies serve                       direct and indirect channels creating                   offers that can be used to attract
                                                  consumers in specialized markets. Many                    different dynamics for consumers and                    consumers. An independent auto dealer,
                                                  of these companies focus on providing                     industry participants. In the direct                    which is not associated with a specific
                                                  financing to subprime borrowers who                       lending channel, a consumer seeks                       manufacturer or brand, typically does
                                                  tend to have past credit problems, lower                  credit directly from the financing                      not have access to captive finance
                                                  income, or limited credit histories,                      source, whereas in the indirect lending                 sources but will have access to other
                                                  which prevent them from being able to                     channel, the dealer typically enters into               indirect sources, including depository
                                                  obtain financing elsewhere.                               a retail installment sales contract that it             institutions engaged in indirect lending
                                                     Generally, captives are subsidiary                                                                             as well as specialty finance companies.
                                                                                                            then sells to a third-party finance
                                                  finance companies owned by auto                                                                                      With the relevant eligibility criteria
                                                  manufacturers. They provide consumers                       83 Typically, only after the BHPH dealer assesses
                                                                                                                                                                    and stipulations, the dealer then selects
                                                  with financing for the primary purpose                    a consumer’s creditworthiness and determines the
                                                                                                                                                                    the indirect lender that will provide the
                                                  of facilitating their parent companies’                   maximum monthly payment based on that                   financing and extends the credit
                                                  and associated franchised dealers’ auto                   creditworthiness does the dealer present auto           through a retail installment sales
                                                  sales.                                                    options.
                                                                                                              84 Experian Automotive’s AutoCount database is
                                                     Some BHPH finance companies are                                                                                   87 Such sources include depository institutions,
                                                                                                            a vehicle database that collects monthly transaction    nonbank affiliates of a depository institution,
                                                  similar to captives in that they are                      data from State Departments of Motor Vehicles. See      independent nonbanks, and captives.
                                                                                                            also infra notes 116–117 and accompanying text.            88 An indirect auto lender may also have a policy
                                                    80 In addition to financing the initial acquisition       85 To reach this estimate, the Bureau considered
                                                                                                                                                                    that allows the dealer to mark up the interest rate
                                                  of an auto, some consumers refinance their existing       data on nonbanks from Experian Automotive’s             above the indirect auto lender’s buy rate. In the
                                                  auto loans. Consumers typically refinance their auto      AutoCount database for calendar year 2013, with         event that the dealer charges the consumer an
                                                  loans to lower their interest rates in order to achieve   several adjustments. First, transactions with no        interest rate that is higher than the lender’s buy
                                                  lower monthly payments. The level of refinancing          lender listed were excluded from the sample.            rate, the lender may pay the dealer what is typically
                                                  depends on trends in interest rate levels over the        Second, entities with fewer than 360 loans and          referred to as ‘‘reserve’’ (or ‘‘participation’’),
                                                  term for most auto loans, which ranges from three         leases on an annual basis were excluded from the        compensation based upon the difference in interest
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                                                  to seven years.                                           sample. Third, entities that were identified by         revenues between the buy rate and the actual note
                                                    81 As stated above, at the end of the fourth quarter    Experian Automotive as ‘‘Other’’ in the lender type     rate charged to the consumer in the retail
                                                  of 2014, leases comprised approximately 30 percent        category were excluded from the sample. Fourth,         installment sales contract executed with the dealer.
                                                  of new vehicle automotive financing transactions,         the Bureau excluded entities that already fall within   Dealer reserve is one method lenders use to
                                                  which is up from about 21 percent five years earlier.     the Bureau’s supervisory authority or that it           compensate dealers for the value they add by
                                                  See Zabritski, supra note 33, at 16.                      identified as BHPH dealers and title lenders. In        originating retail installment sales contracts and
                                                    82 Although dealers may also engage in some             some cases, entities were also consolidated due to      finding financing sources. The exact computation of
                                                  automobile financing activities, they are not             known affiliations.                                     compensation based on dealer markup varies across
                                                  included for purposes of this discussion of market          86 These estimates were derived using the same        lenders and may vary between programs at the same
                                                  participants.                                             methodology described in note 85 above.                 lender.



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                                                  37508                Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  contract that the indirect lender                        additional terms relevant to the                          Purchases of retail installment
                                                  purchases or acquires. The dealer is                     proposed automobile financing market.                  contracts. Two trade association
                                                  typically compensated for arranging                      These terms include ‘‘aggregate annual                 commenters expressed concern that the
                                                  indirect financing. In the indirect                      originations,’’ which the Proposed Rule                proposed definition of ‘‘annual
                                                  model, the indirect auto lender typically                used as the criterion for assessing larger-            originations’’ may fail to adequately
                                                  becomes responsible for servicing the                    participant status; ‘‘annual                           capture purchases of retail installment
                                                  retail installment sales contract, and                   originations’’; ‘‘automobile’’;                        sales contracts by indirect automobile
                                                  consumers will then make payments to                     ‘‘automobile financing’’; ‘‘automobile                 lenders from dealers. These commenters
                                                  the lender.                                              lease’’; and ‘‘refinancing.’’ The Bureau is            indicated that while the proposed
                                                     Leases can also be obtained through                   adopting the Proposed Rule’s                           definition includes, among other things,
                                                  direct or indirect channels. To purchase                 definitions largely as proposed, with                  ‘‘[c]redit granted for the purpose of
                                                  an auto lease from a dealer, finance                     certain modifications that are discussed               purchasing an automobile,’’ the indirect
                                                  sources express their interest by                        below.                                                 automobile lender is not itself granting
                                                  providing the dealer with the relevant                                                                          credit. One of the commenters
                                                  terms of a lease similar to those                        Aggregate Annual Originations
                                                                                                                                                                  explained that it is the dealer that offers
                                                  considered for a loan. These terms can                      The Bureau proposed to use aggregate                credit to consumers in this scenario
                                                  include a ‘‘money factor,’’ which can be                 annual originations as the criterion to                rather than the indirect lender.
                                                  used to determine the rent charge                        assess whether a nonbank covered                          Purchases of retail installment
                                                  portion of the monthly payment, and                      person is a larger participant of the                  contracts are included in paragraph
                                                  the length or term of the lease.89                       automobile financing market. Proposed                  (i)(A)(4) of the proposed definition of
                                                  However, in a lease, a finance source                    § 1090.108(a) defined the term                         ‘‘aggregate annual originations,’’ which
                                                  will also quote a residual value, which                  ‘‘aggregate annual originations’’ as the               includes ‘‘purchases or acquisitions’’ of
                                                  is the projected market value of the                     sum of the number of annual                            ‘‘[c]redit granted for the purpose of
                                                  vehicle at the end of the lease. As a                    originations of a nonbank covered                      purchasing an automobile.’’ Therefore,
                                                  practical matter, few auto dealers enter                 person and the number of annual                        originations that are made indirectly are
                                                  into a financing or leasing arrangement                  originations of each of the nonbank                    captured by the proposed definition,
                                                  with a consumer unless there is an                       covered person’s affiliated companies,                 and the Final Rule does not modify this
                                                  indirect lender or lessor that will                      calculated according to instructions set               aspect of the proposed definition.
                                                  purchase the retail installment sales                    forth in the Proposed Rule. The Bureau                    Inclusion of refinancings. The Bureau
                                                  contract or leasing contract.90                          is finalizing this definition as proposed,             proposed to include refinancings of
                                                     Refinancing of an existing credit                     except that the Final Rule: (1) Counts                 credit granted for the purpose of
                                                  obligation can enable a consumer to                      refinancings as ‘‘annual originations’’                purchasing an automobile and any
                                                  reduce his or her monthly auto                           only if they meet the requirements set                 subsequent refinancings thereof in the
                                                  payment. The refinancing market is                       forth in the Proposed Rule and are also                term ‘‘annual originations.’’ A number
                                                  highly dependent on interest rates and,                  secured by an automobile, and (2)                      of consumer advocacy and civil rights
                                                  thus, activity typically increases as rates              excludes certain purchases or                          organizations supported the Bureau’s
                                                  decrease relative to the initial rate at                 acquisitions by special purpose entities               inclusion of refinancings in ‘‘annual
                                                  origination. According to Experian                       that are made for the purpose of                       originations.’’ However, two trade
                                                  Automotive, the average auto loan term                   facilitating asset-backed securitizations.             associations and an industry commenter
                                                  as of the fourth quarter of 2014 was                     The Bureau has also made some                          suggested that covered persons would
                                                  around 66 months for new vehicles and                    technical changes to proposed                          not have the information necessary to
                                                  around 62 months for used vehicles.91                    § 1090.108(a) for clarity.                             determine whether they are refinancing
                                                  Market rates during the loan repayment                      Annual originations. Proposed
                                                                                                                                                                  credit granted for the purpose of
                                                  period typically do not differ much from                 § 1090.108(a) defined the term ‘‘annual
                                                                                                                                                                  purchasing an automobile.94
                                                  the rates at origination. These dynamics                 originations’’ to mean the sum of the                     The Bureau continues to believe that
                                                  explain why the Bureau believes that                     following transactions for the preceding               it is appropriate to include refinancing
                                                  overall refinancing volumes comprise                     calendar year: Credit granted for the                  activity in the automobile financing
                                                  only a small niche of the broader auto                   purchase of an automobile, refinancings
                                                                                                                                                                  market defined in this rule, and is
                                                  financing market. Unfortunately, only                    of such obligations and any subsequent
                                                                                                                                                                  therefore finalizing this element of the
                                                  limited data on refinancing volume are                   refinancings thereof, automobile leases,
                                                                                                                                                                  proposed definition of ‘‘annual
                                                  available because, among other things,                   and purchases or acquisitions of any of
                                                                                                                                                                  originations’’ as proposed. Like
                                                  publicly traded market participants                      the foregoing obligations. The Bureau
                                                                                                                                                                  purchase-money loans, the refinancings
                                                  generally tend to consolidate                            proposed to exclude from annual
                                                                                                                                                                  that are included in the proposed
                                                  refinancing activity within origination                  originations any investments in asset-
                                                                                                                                                                  definition involve debt arising from the
                                                  activity for financial reporting purposes.               backed securities. The Bureau received
                                                                                                                                                                  purchase of an automobile. The
                                                                                                           a number of comments relating to this
                                                  108(a) Market-Related Definitions                                                                               creditors that offer such refinancings are
                                                                                                           proposed definition of ‘‘annual
                                                                                                           originations,’’ which are discussed                    in competition with other creditors in
                                                    Unless otherwise specified, the                                                                               the automobile financing market for the
                                                  definitions in § 1090.101 should be used                 below. For the reasons that follow, the
                                                                                                           Bureau is finalizing the definition of                 right to hold and service such debt.
                                                  when interpreting terms in this Final                                                                           Although refinancing activity is limited
                                                  Rule.92 The Proposed Rule defined                        ‘‘annual originations’’ largely as
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                                                                                                           proposed, with modifications related to
                                                                                                                                                                  annual originations’’ for clarity. This change from
                                                    89 Fed. Reserve Bd., Glossary, Keys to Vehicle         refinancings and asset-backed securities               the proposal does not have any substantive effect.
                                                  Leasing (Mar. 13, 2013), available at http://            and technical changes for clarity.93                     94 These commenters also argued that the
                                                  www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/leasing/glossary.htm.                                                               proposed definition of ‘‘refinancing’’ is too broad
                                                    90 This does not apply to those auto dealers, such
                                                                                                           § 1090.101 already provides a definition of            and suggested that the Bureau should not include
                                                  as BHPH dealers, that serve as the primary lender.       ‘‘affiliated company,’’ which should be used when      refinancing activity conducted by third parties in
                                                    91 Zabritski, supra note 33, at 34.                    interpreting terms in this Final Rule.                 the definition. Their comments relating to the
                                                    92 Some commenters suggested that the Bureau              93 The Bureau has adjusted the wording of           definition of ‘‘refinancing’’ are discussed in the
                                                  should provide a definition of ‘‘affiliate.’’ However,   paragraph (i)(A)(4) of the definition of ‘‘aggregate   section-by-section analysis of that definition below.



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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                     37509

                                                  at present, it could become more                           The Bureau received comments from                   facilitating an asset-backed securities
                                                  prevalent in the future should                          industry trade associations and an                     transaction.96
                                                  conditions change (for example, in a                    industry participant in support of the                    Title loans. The Bureau proposed to
                                                  rapidly declining interest rate                         proposed exclusion and no comments                     define a market for automobile
                                                  environment).                                           opposing it. However, several of these                 financing that would not include title
                                                     The Bureau considered the concern                    commenters stated that the final rule                  loans, in which a lender extends credit
                                                  raised by some commenters that covered                  should also exclude purchases or                       to a consumer that is secured by the title
                                                  persons may not have the information                    acquisitions of obligations by                         to an automobile that the consumer
                                                  necessary to determine whether they are                 securitization trusts and other special                owns free and clear prior to the loan.
                                                  refinancing an obligation subject to the                purpose entities that are created to                   The Bureau explained that title loans
                                                  proposed definition. As explained                       facilitate securitization transactions.                may be better analyzed separately from
                                                  above, the Final Rule does not require                  They indicated that without this change,               the automobile financing market as a
                                                  automobile finance companies to                         many securitization entities would be                  part of a future larger-participant
                                                  calculate whether they are larger                                                                              rulemaking because the Bureau believes
                                                                                                          considered larger participants, which
                                                  participants. In any event, most auto                                                                          that title loans are substantially different
                                                                                                          would negatively impact the
                                                                                                                                                                 from the automobile financing activities
                                                  loans are purchase-money loans, and                     securitization process. Some of these
                                                                                                                                                                 included in the Proposed Rule.
                                                  the Bureau believes that covered                        commenters stated that if the Bureau                   However, the Bureau solicited feedback
                                                  persons that refinance vehicle-secured                  did not exclude these transactions, the                on whether it should define the market
                                                  loans generally know whether the debt                   rule would lead to double or triple                    for automobile financing and annual
                                                  they are refinancing was originally                     counting of the same automobile loan or                originations to include title loans and
                                                  incurred for the purpose of purchasing                  lease contract.                                        other types of loans secured by
                                                  the vehicle.95
                                                                                                             Raising similar concerns, an industry               automobiles, and if so, whether it would
                                                     The Bureau recognizes, however, that                 trade association requested that the                   be appropriate to use the same criterion
                                                  in rare cases a purchase-money loan                     Bureau clarify the exclusion to                        and threshold as in the proposal. For the
                                                  could be refinanced without the                         expressly exclude all securitization                   reasons stated below, the Bureau has
                                                  refinancing creditor taking a security                  activities from the definition of annual               decided not to include title lending in
                                                  interest in the automobile, making the                  originations. It stated that securitization            this larger-participant rulemaking.
                                                  original purpose of the debt less                       activities are not a consumer financial                   Most commenters supported the
                                                  obvious. To address such circumstances                  product or service and have no impact                  Bureau’s proposal to exclude title loans
                                                  and for ease of administration, the                     on consumers.                                          from the automobile financing market.
                                                  Bureau has included language in                                                                                Several trade associations and an
                                                  paragraph (i)(A)(3) of the definition of                   Another trade association commented                 industry commenter urged the Bureau
                                                  ‘‘aggregate annual originations’’ to                    that the language does not clearly                     not to expand the scope to include loans
                                                  clarify that a refinancing must be                      exclude the various transactions                       that are not made for the purpose of
                                                  secured by an automobile to be included                 creating those securities, and requested               purchasing or refinancing an
                                                  in the definition. The Bureau is                        that the Bureau clarify that any                       automobile.97 One of these trade
                                                  otherwise finalizing paragraph (i)(A)(3)                purchases or acquisitions of credit                    associations stated that title loans are a
                                                  of the definition of ‘‘aggregate annual                 obligations for securitization purposes                separate consumer financial product or
                                                  originations’’ as proposed.                             and transfers of credit obligations                    service, and that the nature, purpose,
                                                     Exclusion related to asset-backed                    among affiliated entities do not fall                  and timing of title loans distinguish
                                                  securities. Proposed paragraph (i)(B) of                within the scope of the rule. This                     them from financing for the acquisition
                                                  the definition of ‘‘aggregate annual                    commenter also requested that the                      of an automobile. This commenter noted
                                                  originations’’ excluded investments in                  Bureau not define the term ‘‘asset-                    that title loans are given to consumers
                                                  asset-backed securities. As the Bureau                  backed securities.’’ No commenter urged                who already have an ownership interest
                                                  explained in the proposal, automobile                   the Bureau to define the term ‘‘asset-                 in their car and wish to obtain money
                                                  asset-backed securities are investment                  backed securities.’’                                   for a purpose other than acquiring the
                                                  vehicles in which the principal and                        For the same reasons expressed in the               vehicle. By contrast, it noted that
                                                  interest payments from automobile                       proposal, the Bureau believes that it is               automobile financing occurs for the
                                                  loans serve as collateral for bonds sold                appropriate to exclude investments in                  purpose of obtaining a vehicle, and
                                                  to investors and do not generally alter                                                                        refinancing occurs generally to secure
                                                                                                          asset-backed securities from ‘‘annual
                                                  the contractual obligation between the                                                                         better terms related to the acquisition of
                                                                                                          originations’’ and is therefore finalizing
                                                  consumer and the entity that granted the                                                                       that vehicle.
                                                                                                          that element of the proposal in                           A number of individuals and
                                                  credit or services the loan. The Bureau                 paragraph (i)(B)(1) of the definition of
                                                  sought comment on whether the                                                                                  consumer advocacy groups also
                                                                                                          ‘‘aggregate annual originations.’’ In
                                                  proposed exclusion for asset-backed                     addition, the Final Rule excludes                         96 The Final Rule does not, however, exclude all
                                                  securities was appropriate and whether                  certain purchases or acquisitions of                   transfers among affiliated entities, as one
                                                  the Bureau should define the term                       obligations by special purpose entities                commenter suggested. The Bureau believes that the
                                                  ‘‘asset-backed securities’’ in proposed                 established for the purpose of                         types of purchases or acquisitions included in the
                                                  § 1090.108(a).                                                                                                 definition of ‘‘aggregate annual originations’’ reflect
                                                                                                          facilitating asset-backed securities in                participation in the automobile finance market,
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                                                                                                          paragraph (i)(B)(2) of the definition of               even if they are made or received from an affiliated
                                                    95 The Bureau recognizes that some loans secured
                                                                                                          ‘‘aggregate annual originations.’’ In light            entity, and has therefore limited the exclusion in
                                                  by a vehicle such as title loans are not purchase-                                                             paragraph (i)(B) of the definition to transactions
                                                                                                          of the limited role that these special                 relating to asset-backed securitizations.
                                                  money loans or refinancings of purchase-money
                                                  debt. However, such loans typically have very           purpose entities play, the Bureau does                    97 Some of these commenters also suggested that

                                                  different terms, interest rates, and loan amounts       not believe that their purchases or                    the Bureau use Delaware’s definition of ‘‘title loan’’
                                                  than the automobile lending covered in this rule,       acquisitions should be included in the                 as a basis for defining title lending. The Bureau has
                                                  making it unlikely that a company would be in the                                                              not, however, attempted to define title lending in
                                                  business of refinancing covered loans without
                                                                                                          definition of ‘‘annual originations’’ if               this rulemaking and does not need to do so for
                                                  knowing that it was doing so.                           they are made for the purpose of                       purposes of the Final Rule.



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                                                  37510               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  supported the Bureau’s decision to                      loan.100 These differences may warrant                   calculated separately and then
                                                  exclude title loans from the scope of this              a different criterion and threshold than                 aggregated with the originations of the
                                                  automobile financing market. Many of                    is appropriate for the automobile                        covered entity. Paragraph (ii) of the
                                                  these commenters encouraged the                         financing market defined in this rule. In                proposed definition of ‘‘aggregate
                                                  Bureau to cover title lending as soon as                light of all of these factors, the Bureau                annual originations’’ set forth the
                                                  possible in a future rulemaking.                        believes that title loans are best                       method of aggregating the annual
                                                     On the other hand, a few commenters                  addressed through a future larger-                       originations of a nonbank covered
                                                  recommended that the Bureau include                     participant rulemaking.                                  person and its affiliated companies
                                                                                                             There is no need for the Bureau to                    when affiliation has started or ended
                                                  title loans in the market defined in this
                                                                                                          address in this rulemaking the assertion                 within the preceding calendar year. It
                                                  rulemaking. Citing the potential
                                                                                                          by one commenter that title loans are
                                                  consumer harms stemming from title                                                                               provided that the annual originations of
                                                                                                          more similar to automobile financing
                                                  lending, one consumer group                                                                                      a nonbank covered person must be
                                                                                                          transactions than to payday loans
                                                  encouraged the Bureau to include title                                                                           aggregated with the annual originations
                                                                                                          because payday lending is not a part of
                                                  lenders that made more than 25                          this larger-participant rulemaking.101                   of any person that was an affiliated
                                                  extensions of credit during the                         Regulation C’s handling of dwelling-                     company of the nonbank covered person
                                                  preceding calendar year.                                secured loans is also not relevant here                  at any time during the preceding
                                                     A trade association representing title               because Regulation C and this larger-                    calendar year. The annual originations
                                                  lenders also encouraged the Bureau to                   participant rule serve different purposes                of a nonbank covered person and its
                                                  include title loans.98 The commenter                    and involve different financial products                 affiliated companies were to be
                                                  stated that title loans are more similar                or services.102 For the reasons set forth                aggregated for the entire preceding
                                                  to automobile financing than they are to                above, the Bureau believes that title                    calendar year, even if the affiliation did
                                                  payday loans and asserted that the                      loans are sufficiently different from the                not exist for the entire calendar year.
                                                  Proposed Rule presents a more                           automobile financing transactions                        The aggregation provision would not
                                                  appropriate framework of regulation                     covered by this rule that they should not                apply, however, if the affiliated
                                                  than any rulemaking that the Bureau                     be included in the market defined in                     company was a dealer excluded by
                                                  may issue for the payday lending                        this larger-participant rulemaking.                      proposed § 1090.108(c), which is
                                                  industry. The commenter also noted                         Aggregating the annual originations of                discussed below.
                                                  that the proposed rule amending                         affiliated companies. Under the Dodd-                       Several commenters supported the
                                                  Regulation C, which implements the                      Frank Act, the activities of affiliated                  Bureau’s proposal to aggregate annual
                                                  Home Mortgage Disclosure Act,99 would                   companies are to be aggregated for                       originations of all affiliated companies
                                                  impose reporting requirements on both                   purposes of computing activity levels                    in the previous calendar year for the
                                                  closed-end mortgage loans and home                      for rules—like this Final Rule—to                        purpose of calculating aggregate annual
                                                  equity lines of credit. The commenter                   determine larger participants in                         originations. One trade association
                                                  suggested that it would be consistent                   particular markets for consumer                          objected to the Bureau’s proposal to
                                                  with the proposed revisions to                          products or services under section                       count ‘‘annual originations’’ in a
                                                  Regulation C for the Bureau to include                  1024(a)(1).103 The Proposed Rule
                                                                                                                                                                   manner that includes an affiliate’s
                                                  both automobile purchase-money loans                    therefore defined ‘‘aggregate annual
                                                                                                                                                                   annual originations during a calendar
                                                  and title loans within the scope of this                originations’’ for each nonbank covered
                                                                                                                                                                   year, regardless of whether an affiliation
                                                  rule.                                                   person as the sum of the number of
                                                                                                                                                                   existed during the entire calendar year.
                                                     After considering all of these                       annual originations of the covered entity
                                                                                                                                                                   This commenter suggested that it may
                                                  comments, the Bureau has decided to                     and the number of annual originations
                                                                                                          of all its affiliated companies, and laid                be difficult for a company to secure
                                                  exclude title loans from the Final Rule.                                                                         necessary financial records from an
                                                  Loans provided by title lenders are not                 out specifics on how this aggregation
                                                                                                          should be done. For the reasons set forth                unaffiliated company.
                                                  used for the same purposes as the types
                                                                                                          below, the Bureau is finalizing this                        Because the criterion for the rule is
                                                  of financing included within the
                                                  proposed market (i.e., to purchase or                   aggregation method as proposed.                          aggregate annual originations, the
                                                  lease an automobile or to adjust the                       For purposes of computing the                         Bureau believes that it is simplest and
                                                  terms of debt incurred to purchase an                   covered person’s aggregate annual                        most appropriate to aggregate
                                                  automobile). As the Bureau noted in the                 originations, the Proposed Rule                          originations for the entire calendar year
                                                  proposal, title loans are generally                     provided that the annual originations of                 when companies have been affiliated at
                                                  provided by companies that do not                       each affiliated company were first to be                 any time during that calendar year. This
                                                  compete with lenders that finance the                                                                            approach is similar to the approach
                                                                                                             100 Title loans are also generally significantly
                                                  acquisition of a vehicle. Further, title                                                                         taken with respect to other larger-
                                                                                                          shorter in term than leases used to finance an
                                                  loans are generally significantly shorter               automobile.
                                                                                                                                                                   participant rules, including in
                                                  in term and smaller in size than loans                     101 No larger-participant rulemaking is required to   §§ 1090.104(a) and 1090.105(a) as
                                                  used to purchase an automobile or to                    establish supervisory authority over payday lenders      described above, and will avoid the
                                                                                                          because the Bureau already has supervisory               administrative difficulties associated
                                                  refinance an existing automobile                        authority over the offering or providing of payday
                                                                                                          loans pursuant to section 1024(a)(1)(E) of the Dodd-
                                                                                                                                                                   with part-year calculations of annual
                                                    98 While encouraging the Bureau to include title      Frank Act, 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)(E).                      originations. As noted above, the larger-
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                                                  loans in this larger-participant rule, this commenter      102 The purpose of Regulation C is to implement       participant rules do not impose a
                                                  also challenged the Bureau’s authority to regulate      the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, which provides         record-keeping requirement and do not
                                                  the title lending industry. The Bureau does not         the public with loan data that can be used for the
                                                  agree with the commenter’s assertions regarding the     purposes set forth in 12 CFR 1003.1(b).
                                                                                                                                                                   require nonbank covered persons to
                                                  scope of the Bureau’s rulemaking authority but does        103 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(3)(B) (‘‘For purposes of        keep track of their annual originations.
                                                  not need to address them in this rulemaking             computing activity levels under [12 U.S.C.               Moreover, the Bureau does not believe
                                                  because it has chosen, for the reasons stated below,    5514(a)(1)] or rules issued thereunder, activities of    it would be difficult to gather this type
                                                  to exclude title lending from the scope of the          affiliated companies (other than insured depository
                                                  market defined in this larger-participant rule.         institutions or insured credit unions) shall be
                                                                                                                                                                   of information from current or former
                                                    99 12 U.S.C. 2801–10.                                 aggregated.’’).                                          affiliates should a nonbank have


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                                                                       Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                  37511

                                                  occasion to do so.104 For the reasons                    might warrant different larger-                          Agencies reasoned that motorcycle
                                                  described above and in the Proposed                      participant criteria and thresholds if                   loans should not be exempt because the
                                                  Rule, the Bureau adopts the aggregation                  they were included in the market                         ‘‘overall risk profile of motorcycles as a
                                                  method as proposed.                                      defined for the Proposed Rule. The                       class remains distinct from that of
                                                                                                           Bureau sought comment and additional                     automobiles and, like other recreational
                                                  Automobile
                                                                                                           market data related to its assumptions.                  vehicles, [motorcycles] exhibit overall a
                                                     The Bureau proposed to define                         The Bureau also sought comment on its                    higher risk profile.’’ 110
                                                  ‘‘automobile’’ to mean any self-                         proposed definition of ‘‘automobile,’’                      The Bureau has considered these
                                                  propelled vehicle primarily used for                     including whether the proposed                           comments but believes that similarities
                                                  personal, family, or household purposes                  definition should address other vehicles                 in the financing process, relevant
                                                  for on-road transportation.105 The                       or types of vehicles and whether                         compliance requirements, pricing, and
                                                  proposed definition of ‘‘automobile’’                    motorcycles should be a separately                       how the vehicles may be used support
                                                  expressly excluded motor homes, RVs,                     defined term.                                            inclusion in the same market for
                                                  golf carts, and motor scooters. The                         Industry participants, two trade                      supervisory purposes. Similar to cars
                                                  Bureau has considered the comments on                    associations, and several members of                     and light-duty trucks, motorcycles are
                                                  the definition of ‘‘automobile’’ and, for                Congress urged the Bureau to exclude                     often purchased at a dealership where
                                                  the reasons set forth below, is finalizing               motorcycles from the definition of                       the price is negotiated, add-ons may be
                                                  the definition as proposed.                              ‘‘automobile,’’ maintaining that                         sold, and financing is arranged through
                                                     The proposed definition of                            motorcycles are more akin to the types                   an application and credit check.111
                                                  ‘‘automobile’’ was informed by the                       of recreational vehicles excluded from                   Compliance issues also appear to be
                                                  definition of ‘‘motor vehicle’’ in section               the proposed definition than to cars and                 very similar and would likely involve
                                                  1029(f) of the Dodd-Frank Act,106 but                    light trucks. These commenters stated                    the same requirements of Federal
                                                  included modifications to limit its                      that motorcycles are largely                             consumer financial law, the same
                                                  application to vehicles primarily used                   discretionary purchases and are not                      examination procedures, and the same
                                                  for personal, family, or household                       commonly used for commuting. They                        potential consumer harms. While
                                                  purposes for on-road transportation. In                  also stated that motorcycles are                         motorcycles are generally less expensive
                                                  the proposal, the Bureau explained that                  significantly less expensive than cars                   than cars, average prices of cars and
                                                  the ‘‘motor vehicle’’ definition in the                  and that the overall volume of                           motorcycles are not that far apart.112
                                                  Dodd-Frank Act encompasses a wide                        motorcycle sales is equal to only a small                   Unlike many of the vehicles excluded
                                                  range of vehicles, and that the use of                   fraction of car sales.                                   from the proposal, motorcycles are
                                                  such a broad definition in a larger-                        These commenters urged the Bureau                     commonly used for on-road
                                                  participant rulemaking would make the                    to follow the approach taken by six                      transportation and can be used for many
                                                  rule difficult to administer. Consistent                 other Federal regulators (the Agencies)                  of the same purposes as automobiles,
                                                  with the definition of ‘‘motor vehicle,’’                that recently excluded motorcycle loans                  such as daily errands and long-distance
                                                  the proposed definition of ‘‘automobile’’                from the definition of ‘‘automobile                      trips. They can also be used for
                                                  covered vehicles such as cars, sports                    loan’’ in the Credit Risk Retention                      transportation to work, even if that is
                                                  utility vehicles, light-duty trucks, and                 Rule.107 That rule implements the credit                 uncommon. Although the proposal
                                                  motorcycles. However, other vehicles                     risk retention requirements for asset-                   noted that automobiles are important to
                                                  such as heavy-duty trucks, buses, and                    backed securities under section 941 of                   many consumers as a means of
                                                  ambulances were not included because                     the Dodd-Frank Act.108 Pursuant to                       transportation to work, the Bureau did
                                                  the proposed definition was limited to                   section 941, securitizers of asset-backed                not intend to suggest that the rule would
                                                  vehicles primarily used for personal,                    securities are generally required to                     only cover vehicles that are used for that
                                                  family, or household purposes.                           retain not less than 5 percent of the                    purpose or that the financing of vehicles
                                                     The Bureau also proposed expressly                    credit risk of the assets collateralizing                used for recreational purposes is
                                                  to exclude certain types of motor                        the asset-backed securities. In the Credit               unimportant. The proposed definition
                                                  vehicles, such as motor homes, RVs, golf                 Risk Retention Rule, the Agencies                        includes, for example, cars or light-duty
                                                  carts, and motor scooters, from the                      exempted, among other things,                            trucks that are not used for commuting.
                                                  definition of ‘‘automobile.’’ The Bureau                 securitizations consisting solely of
                                                  did not have extensive data on the                       ‘‘automobile loans’’ that meet specific
                                                                                                                                                                      110 Id.

                                                  financing activity associated with these                 underwriting standards, but did not
                                                                                                                                                                       111 Indeed, some companies that offer motorcycle

                                                  types of vehicles, and indicated that the                                                                         financing operate as captives for affiliated
                                                                                                           include motorcycle loans in the                          manufacturers in the same manner as described
                                                  vehicles excluded from the definition
                                                                                                           definition of ‘‘automobile loan.’’ 109 The               above.
                                                                                                                                                                       112 One industry commenter reported that the
                                                     104 Participants seeking to self-assess could also
                                                                                                              107 Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Fed.   average Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price of a
                                                  arrange to obtain information relevant to the                                                                     new on-road motorcycle in 2013 was $15,366,
                                                  threshold in advance of ending the affiliation.          Reserve Bd., Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp., U.S. Sec. &
                                                                                                                                                                    according to data compiled by the Motorcycle
                                                                                                           Exch. Comm’n, Fed. Hous. Fin. Agency, & Dep’t of
                                                     105 The proposed definition applies to both new                                                                Industry Council. This is similar to the average
                                                                                                           Hous. & Urban Dev., Credit Risk Retention, 79 FR         price of a used car in 2013, which was $15,900
                                                  and used vehicles.
                                                     106 Under section 1029(f)(1) of the Dodd-Frank
                                                                                                           77602 (Dec. 24, 2014).                                   according to one report. See Greg Gardner, Average
                                                                                                              108 Section 941 of the Dodd-Frank Act amends the
                                                  Act, the term ‘‘motor vehicle’’ means:                                                                            Used Car Price Hits Record High in 2014, USA
                                                                                                           Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the Exchange Act)       Today, Feb. 18, 2015, available at http://
                                                     (A) Any self-propelled vehicle designed for           and adds a new section 15G to the Exchange Act,
                                                  transporting persons or property on a street,                                                                     www.usatoday.com/story/money/cars/2015/02/18/
                                                                                                           15 U.S.C. 78o–11. Specifically, section 941 of the       record-used-car-prices-in-2014/23637775/.
                                                  highway, or other road;
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                                                                                                           Dodd-Frank Act requires the Securities Exchange          According to Kelley Blue Book, the average
                                                     (B) recreational boats and marine equipment;          Commission, the Federal banking agencies, and,           transaction price of a light vehicle as of December
                                                     (C) motorcycles;                                      with respect to residential mortgages, the Secretary     2013 was roughly double that, $33,525. Kelley Blue
                                                     (D) motor homes, recreational vehicle trailers,       of Housing and Urban Development and the Federal         Book, New-Car Transaction Prices Reach New
                                                  and slide-in campers, as those terms are defined in      Housing Finance Agency to prescribe rules to             Record, Up Nearly 3 Percent in December 2014,
                                                  sections 571.3 and 575.103(d) of title 49, Code of       require that a securitizer retain an economic interest   According to Kelley Blue Book (Jan. 5, 2015),
                                                  Federal Regulations, or any successor thereto; and       in a portion of the credit risk for any asset that it    available at http://mediaroom.kbb.com/2015-01-05-
                                                     (E) other vehicles that are titled and sold through   transfers, sells, or conveys to a third party through    New-Car-Transaction-Prices-Reach-New-Record-
                                                  dealers.                                                 the issuance of an asset-backed security.                Up-Nearly-3-Percent-In-December-2014-According-
                                                     12 U.S.C. 5519(f)(1).                                    109 79 FR 77602, 77683 (Dec. 24, 2014).               To-Kelley-Blue-Book.



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                                                  37512                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                     Although some commenters suggested                     definition.114 As noted in the proposal,               industry commenter suggested that the
                                                  that the Bureau should follow the                         including the financing of these vehicles              Bureau should include only a narrower
                                                  approach taken in the Credit Risk                         in this market could warrant a different               category of leases that meet certain
                                                  Retention Rule, the Agencies’ exclusion                   criterion or threshold given the                       residual value limits and, in their view,
                                                  of motorcycles from the exemption                         differences in scale and nature of                     are the functional equivalent of a
                                                  provided in that rule was based on their                  financing, and the Bureau has limited                  purchase finance arrangement. Because
                                                  assessment that motorcycles—like other                    data about the financing of the excluded               of the similarities between automobile
                                                  vehicles that are used for recreational                   vehicles. As the Bureau gathers more                   leases and automobile loans described
                                                  purposes—as a class have a riskier                        information about financing for the                    above and the importance of leases to
                                                  profile than the vehicles that are                        types of vehicles that it is excluding                 consumers, the Bureau believes that it is
                                                  included in the Agencies’ definition of                   from this Final Rule, it can evaluate                  important to maintain broad coverage of
                                                  ‘‘automobile loans.’’ 113 The Agencies’                   whether it is appropriate to cover them                automobile leases in this larger-
                                                  decision to exclude motorcycle loans                      in a future larger-participant                         participant rule. The Bureau therefore is
                                                  from ‘‘automobile loans’’ was for the                     rulemaking. Accordingly, the Bureau is                 not narrowing the scope of leases
                                                  purpose of determining whether a                          finalizing the definition of ‘‘automobile’’            included in the manner suggested by
                                                  securitizer should be exempt from                         as proposed.                                           some commenters and is finalizing the
                                                  retaining any risk on vehicle loans. In                                                                          definition of ‘‘automobile lease’’ as
                                                                                                            Automobile Financing                                   proposed.
                                                  this rule, the Bureau is defining larger
                                                  participants of a market in order to carry                  Proposed § 1090.108(a) defined the
                                                                                                                                                                   Refinancing
                                                  out the Bureau’s consumer protection                      term ‘‘automobile financing’’ to mean
                                                                                                            providing the transactions identified                     The Proposed Rule defined
                                                  mission through its supervisory                                                                                  ‘‘refinancing’’ by reference to the
                                                  function. In light of the different                       under the term ‘‘annual originations’’ as
                                                                                                            defined in proposed § 1090.108(a). The                 definition contained in Regulation Z
                                                  purposes of the two rulemakings, the                                                                             § 1026.20(a), except that the Proposed
                                                  Bureau continues to believe that                          Bureau intended this proposed
                                                                                                            definition to reflect the number of                    Rule indicated that a refinancing need
                                                  including motorcycle loans in ‘‘annual                                                                           not be by the original creditor, holder,
                                                  originations’’ is appropriate.                            consumer loans and leases made or
                                                                                                            facilitated (through purchases of the                  or servicer of the original obligation.
                                                     One industry trade association                         loans and leases) regarding one of the                 Section 1026.20(a) provides that ‘‘[a]
                                                  expressed support for the Bureau’s                        most important assets of American                      refinancing occurs when an existing
                                                  decision to exclude RVs from the                          households. The comments that the                      obligation that was subject to this
                                                  definition of ‘‘automobile’’ in this rule,                Bureau received relating to the                        subpart is satisfied and replaced by a
                                                  while emphasizing that RVs should still                   definition of ‘‘automobile financing’’                 new obligation undertaken by the same
                                                  be considered motor vehicles as defined                   were similar to those relating to the                  consumer’’ and identifies certain
                                                  in the Dodd-Frank Act. This commenter                     definition of ‘‘annual originations.’’ For             transactions that are not treated as a
                                                  believed that using the broad definition                  the same reasons discussed above in the                refinancing. The Bureau sought
                                                  of ‘‘motor vehicle’’ found in the Dodd-                   section-by-section analysis of the                     comment on whether the Regulation Z
                                                  Frank Act would make this rule difficult                  definition of ‘‘aggregate annual                       definition of refinancing as modified is
                                                  to administer. It also stated that there                  originations,’’ the Bureau is finalizing               appropriate, and whether the Bureau
                                                  are no significant nonbank financial                      the definition of ‘‘automobile financing’’             should consider a new definition of
                                                  institutions in the RV industry and that                  as proposed, with one minor clarifying                 refinancing for purposes of this larger-
                                                  including motor homes and RVs in the                      change that does not have any                          participant rulemaking. The Bureau also
                                                  Final Rule would thus have little if any                  substantive effect.                                    sought data on refinancing activity in
                                                  impact. No other commenters addressed                                                                            the market and its participants.
                                                  the Proposed Rule’s exclusions for                        Automobile Lease                                          Two trade associations and an
                                                  specific categories of motor vehicles.                       Proposed § 1090.108(a) defined the                  industry commenter suggested that the
                                                                                                            term ‘‘automobile lease’’ to mean a lease              Bureau should adopt a narrower
                                                     The Bureau is finalizing the specific                                                                         definition of ‘‘refinancing’’ that is fully
                                                  exclusions to the definition of                           for the use of an automobile, as defined
                                                                                                            in the Proposed Rule, that is a financial              consistent with the definition in
                                                  ‘‘automobile’’ as proposed. These                                                                                Regulation Z. These commenters stated
                                                  exclusions will promote clarity and ease                  product or service under either section
                                                                                                            1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act or               that the proposed definition should be
                                                  of administration by providing bright                                                                            modified so as not to include
                                                  lines regarding which vehicles are                        proposed § 1001.2(a). A number of
                                                                                                            consumer groups, civil rights groups,                  refinancing activity conducted by third
                                                  covered. The Bureau also recognizes                                                                              parties.
                                                  that the uses of the excluded vehicles                    and individual commenters supported
                                                                                                                                                                      The definition of ‘‘refinancing’’ in
                                                  are either different or more limited than                 the proposal to include automobile
                                                                                                                                                                   Regulation Z § 1026.20(a) serves a
                                                  those of the vehicles that are included                   leasing in the market for automobile
                                                                                                                                                                   different purpose than the concept of
                                                  in the definition. For example, motor                     financing. However, as discussed above,
                                                                                                                                                                   refinancing in this larger-participant
                                                  scooters generally are not suitable for                   two industry trade associations and an
                                                                                                                                                                   rule. Section 1026.20(a) addresses when
                                                  long-distance trips or highway driving,                     114 For example, the Recreation Vehicle Industry     the original creditor, holder, or servicer
                                                  while RVs and motor homes generally                       Association indicates that type A, B, and C new        of an existing consumer credit
                                                  cannot be used for commuting or daily                     motorhomes typically cost between $43,000 and          obligation must provide new cost
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                                                  errands due to parking limitations. On                    $500,000. Recreation Vehicle Indus. Ass’n, RV          disclosures and other protections that
                                                  average, the categories of vehicles                       Types, Terms & Prices (Aug. 28, 2013), available at
                                                                                                            http://www.rvia.org/
                                                                                                                                                                   that same creditor already provided to
                                                  excluded in the Proposed Rule are also                    UniPop.cfm?v=2&OID=1004&CC=1120. According             the consumer before initial credit was
                                                  either substantially more or less                         to Consumer Reports, small motor scooters begin at     extended. As comment 20(a)–5 to
                                                  expensive than the vehicles that qualify                  about $1,000, while large scooters range up to about   § 1026.20(a) explains, a third party that
                                                  as automobiles under the proposed                         $10,000. Consumer Reports, Motorcycle & Scooter
                                                                                                            Buying Guide 2 (Apr. 2015), available at http://
                                                                                                                                                                   refinances an existing obligation must
                                                                                                            www.consumerreports.org/cro/motorcycles-               generally provide disclosures and
                                                    113 See   79 FR 77602, 77683 (Dec. 24, 2014).           scooters/buying-guide.htm.                             protections to the consumer, and such


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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                   37513

                                                  transactions are thus excluded from the                 assets of American households. Further,                Specifically, the Final Rule defines
                                                  definition of a ‘‘refinancing’’ under                   because the Final Rule defines the term                ‘‘annual originations’’ to include the
                                                  section 1026.20(a).115 In contrast, the                 ‘‘aggregate annual originations,’’ in part,            sum of a nonbank covered person’s
                                                  term ‘‘refinancing’’ is used in this                    in terms of how many loans or leases an                credit granted for the purchase of an
                                                  rulemaking to identify transactions that                entity granted or purchased, the Bureau                automobile, refinancings of such
                                                  should be counted as ‘‘annual                           expects that aggregate annual                          obligations (and any subsequent
                                                  originations,’’ which in turn are used to               originations criterion will generally                  refinancings thereof) that are secured by
                                                  determine whether a covered person is                   correlate to the size of the entity’s loan             an automobile, automobile leases, and
                                                  a larger participant in the automobile                  and lease portfolios.                                  purchases or acquisitions of any of the
                                                  financing market.                                          The Bureau anticipates that nonbank                 foregoing obligations. In contrast, the
                                                     Given the purpose of this rulemaking,                covered persons will be able to calculate              AutoCount data track only loans and
                                                  it would not be appropriate to exclude                  aggregate annual originations without                  leases for which a title and registration
                                                  third-party refinancings from the term                  difficulty, should the occasion arise to               is filed with the State DMV and are less
                                                  ‘‘refinancing.’’ Refinancings by the                    do so. As a general matter, most market                inclusive than the Final Rule in a
                                                  original creditor and a third party are                 participants generally know the number                 number of respects. For example, the
                                                  sufficiently similar so as to be                        of loans and leases they extend because                AutoCount data may not include certain
                                                  considered part of the same market for                  they handle the servicing for these                    refinancings and purchases and
                                                  automobile financing. Therefore,                        accounts and are presumably expecting                  acquisitions of credit obligations and
                                                  consistent with the proposal, the Bureau                a payment for each loan and lease.                     leases that are included in the Final
                                                  is finalizing the rule to include                       Further, they generally know the                       Rule definition of ‘‘annual
                                                  refinancings by nonbank covered                         number of loans they make or purchase                  originations.’’ 117 Similar to the Final
                                                  persons that were not the original                      because they execute liens against the                 Rule, AutoCount excludes vehicles that
                                                  creditor, holder, or servicer of the                    automobile titles.                                     are designed for and used primarily for
                                                  obligation. In addition, as explained in                   In the proposal, the Bureau relied on               commercial purposes. However, the
                                                  the discussion of the definition of                     Experian Automotive’s AutoCount                        exact scope of which commercial
                                                  ‘‘aggregate annual originations’’ above,                database for data on a significant                     transactions are excluded in AutoCount
                                                  the Bureau has added a requirement in                   portion of annual originations.                        may be different than in the Final Rule.
                                                  paragraph (i)(A)(3) of the definition of                AutoCount is a vehicle database that                      Notwithstanding the differences
                                                  ‘‘aggregate annual originations’’ that a                collects monthly transaction data from                 between AutoCount and the Final Rule
                                                  refinancing must be secured by a                        State Departments of Motor Vehicles                    definitions, AutoCount data provide a
                                                  vehicle to be counted as an ‘‘annual                    (DMVs). In 46 States, DMV title and                    reasonable proxy for the Bureau’s
                                                  origination’’ in order to facilitate                    registration information includes the                  definition of ‘‘annual originations’’ for
                                                  application of the criterion.                           finance source on record.116 These                     rulemaking purposes. The dataset
                                                                                                          finance sources are listed either                      covers almost the entire United States
                                                  108(b) Test To Define Larger                            individually or categorized into lender                and is relatively reliable because it is
                                                  Participants                                            type. The proposal invited comments on                 based on title and registration
                                                  Criterion                                               this data source as well as suggestions                information filed with State DMVs.
                                                                                                          for other data sources that commenters                 AutoCount is therefore the most
                                                     The Bureau proposed to use aggregate                                                                        comprehensive database that the Bureau
                                                                                                          believed might augment the Bureau’s
                                                  annual originations as the criterion that                                                                      could identify for this rulemaking, and
                                                                                                          understanding and analysis of the
                                                  establishes which entities are larger                                                                          commenters did not identify any other
                                                                                                          market.
                                                  participants of the automobile financing                   Two industry trade associations and                 database that the Bureau should use. In
                                                  market. A discussion of the comments                    an industry commenter urged the                        light of these factors, the Bureau
                                                  received relating to the definition of                  Bureau to provide more detail on why                   believes that the AutoCount data can
                                                  ‘‘aggregate annual originations’’ and the               the Experian AutoCount database was                    adequately inform the decision of
                                                  adjustments the Bureau has made to that                 chosen and how the data in the database                setting a threshold using the criterion of
                                                  proposed definition is set forth above.                 was gathered. These commenters asked                   aggregate annual originations.
                                                  For the reasons stated there and below,                 if the Bureau would be using the same                     The Bureau’s use of the AutoCount
                                                  the Bureau is finalizing ‘‘aggregate                    definitions as Experian, and expressed                 database in this rulemaking will not
                                                  annual originations’’ as the criterion as               concern that the use of the database                   result in covered persons being
                                                  proposed.                                               could misidentify larger participants                  misidentified as larger participants, as
                                                     The Final Rule uses aggregate annual                 due to differences in the Experian                     some commenters asserted. To the
                                                  originations because, among other                       dataset and the Bureau’s criterion. No                 extent that the Final Rule’s definitions
                                                  things, it is a meaningful measure of a                 commenter suggested an alternative                     differ from the types of transactions that
                                                  nonbank covered person’s level of                       national source of data.
                                                  participation in the automobile                            The Bureau recognizes that estimates                   117 The AutoCount data analyzed by the Bureau

                                                  financing market and of its impact on                   of ‘‘annual originations’’ based on the
                                                                                                                                                                 also do not include motorcycle transactions.
                                                  consumers. A particular nonbank                                                                                However, given the relative size of the motorcycle
                                                                                                          AutoCount data may be either over- or                  segment as compared to the car and light-duty truck
                                                  entity’s annual number of originations                  under-inclusive due to differences                     segments of the market, the Bureau does not believe
                                                  reflects the number of loans and leases                 between what is included in the                        that this limitation will substantially undermine the
                                                  it makes or facilitates (through                        AutoCount data and in the Bureau’s
                                                                                                                                                                 accuracy of its estimate of the number of larger
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                                                  purchases of the loans and leases)                                                                             participants. According to the U.S. Department of
                                                                                                          definitions. For example, the term                     Transportation, there were approximately 234
                                                  regarding one of the most important                     ‘‘annual originations,’’ as defined in this            million light-duty vehicles registered in the United
                                                                                                          Final Rule, includes transactions not                  States in 2012, as compared to only 8.45 million
                                                    115 12 CFR 1026.20, comment 20(a)–5 (‘‘Section                                                               motorcycles. U.S. Department of Transportation
                                                  1026.20(a) applies only to refinancings undertaken      tracked in the AutoCount data.                         Bureau of Transportation Statistics, National
                                                  by the original creditor or a holder or servicer of                                                            Transportation Statistics tbl. 1–11 (2015), available
                                                  the original obligation. A ‘refinancing’ by any other      116 The AutoCount data cover transactions in        at http://www.rita.dot.gov/bts/sites/rita.dot.gov.bts/
                                                  person is a new transaction under the regulation,       every State, excluding Oklahoma, Wyoming, Rhode        files/publications/national_transportation_
                                                  not a refinancing under this section.’’).               Island, and Delaware.                                  statistics/html/table_01_11.html.



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                                                  37514               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  are included in AutoCount, the Final                      to larger participants.120 Accordingly,                  The Bureau estimates that these entities
                                                  Rule’s definitions control for purposes                   where a third-party servicer acts as a                   account for roughly 7 percent of all
                                                  of determining whether an entity is in                    service provider to a larger participant,                nonbank covered persons in the
                                                  fact a larger participant of the                          the Bureau will have the authority to                    automobile financing market and are
                                                  automobile financing market. The                          supervise the servicer’s performance of                  responsible for approximately 91
                                                  Bureau will consider a variety of data                    services for the larger participant. In                  percent of the activity in the nonbank
                                                  sources in determining whether a                          light of these considerations, the Bureau                automobile financing market.
                                                  nonbank covered person qualifies as a                     has decided not to include servicing                        As the Bureau explained in its
                                                  larger participant before initiating any                  activity within the criterion.                           proposal, the aggregate annual
                                                  supervisory activity. In addition to                         Two industry trade associations and                   originations threshold of 10,000 will
                                                  AutoCount data, these sources may                         an industry commenter also suggested                     allow the Bureau to supervise market
                                                  include, for example, filings with the                    that the Bureau should exclude all                       participants that represent a substantial
                                                  U.S. Securities and Exchange                              direct lending from the scope of the                     portion of the automobile financing
                                                  Commission, public shareholder                            market defined in this rule. These                       market and that have a significant
                                                  information, and industry surveys. In                     commenters suggested that the Bureau’s                   impact on consumers. The Bureau
                                                  some instances, if sufficient information                 primary concerns are with practices that                 estimates that in 2013 the entities that
                                                  is not available to the Bureau to assess                  only occur in the purchase of motor                      would qualify as larger participants
                                                  a person’s larger-participant status, the                 vehicle sales finance contracts, such as                 under the proposed threshold provided
                                                  Bureau may require submission of                          pricing disparities that result when                     loans and leases to approximately 6.8
                                                  certain records, documents, and other                     dealers are given pricing authority. The                 million consumers.122
                                                  information pursuant to existing                          Bureau has considered these comments                        A number of consumer groups, civil
                                                  § 1090.103. The Bureau will notify an                     but believes that direct lending is an                   rights groups, and consumer attorneys
                                                  entity if the Bureau decides to                           integral and important part of the                       supported the proposed threshold and
                                                  undertake supervisory activity.118                        automobile financing market defined in                   encouraged the Bureau to ensure that a
                                                  Pursuant to § 1090.103, a person will                     this rule. Like indirect lending and                     threshold of 10,000 aggregate annual
                                                  then be able to dispute whether it                        leasing, direct lending can affect a                     originations covers finance companies
                                                  qualifies as a larger participant in the                  consumer’s access to transportation.                     that target subprime consumers,
                                                  automobile financing market, should it                    Supervision will allow the Bureau to                     regional finance companies, and finance
                                                  choose to do so.                                          ensure that market participants engaging                 companies related to Buy Here Pay Here
                                                     While generally agreeing with the                      in these activities are complying with                   (BHPH) dealers. One consumer
                                                  Bureau’s proposal to consider aggregate                   applicable Federal consumer financial                    advocacy group urged the Bureau to
                                                  annual originations, a number of                          law. The Bureau therefore declines to                    decrease the threshold to 5,000,
                                                                                                            carve direct lending out of the scope of                 asserting that the Bureau should protect
                                                  consumer advocates and civil rights
                                                                                                            this rule and is finalizing the criterion                as many consumers as feasible. A
                                                  groups suggested that the Bureau
                                                                                                            as proposed.                                             consumer banking trade association
                                                  include servicing activity within the
                                                                                                                                                                     urged the Bureau not to raise the
                                                  criterion or otherwise ensure that the                    Threshold                                                threshold above 10,000 because the
                                                  Final Rule will cover large servicers as                    The Proposed Rule defined a nonbank                    proposed threshold would allow the
                                                  well. These commenters noted that                         covered person as a larger participant of                Bureau to supervise a more varied mix
                                                  servicing may be done by entities that                    the automobile financing market if the                   of entities and would help to level the
                                                  do not own the obligations that are                       person has at least 10,000 aggregate                     playing field between banks and
                                                  being serviced and that it is important                   annual originations. The Bureau                          nonbanks.
                                                  to ensure that consumer protection laws                   received comments supporting the                            Two trade associations and an
                                                  and regulations are being followed in                     Bureau’s proposed approach, as well as                   industry participant encouraged the
                                                  servicing.                                                comments advocating a higher or lower                    Bureau to raise the threshold to 50,000.
                                                     The Bureau agrees that oversight of                    threshold. For the reasons that follow,                  They believe that a lower threshold
                                                  servicing in the automobile financing                     the Bureau is finalizing the rule with a                 might prompt some covered persons to
                                                  market is important, but believes it can                  threshold of 10,000 aggregate annual                     limit their originations to larger loans
                                                  accomplish that goal without including                    originations as proposed.                                and to avoid making smaller loans, in
                                                  servicing activity within the Final                         Based on the Bureau’s estimates, a                     order to avoid the rule’s coverage. Three
                                                  Rule’s criterion. As the commenters                       threshold of 10,000 aggregate annual                     trade associations and an industry
                                                  recognize, the use of non-holder                          originations will bring within the                       participant noted that many of the
                                                  servicers is not as prevalent in the auto                 Bureau’s supervisory authority about 34                  entities that would be larger participants
                                                  market as in the housing market.                          entities and their affiliated companies                  at the proposed threshold have well
                                                  Instead, most of the entities that will be                that engage in automobile financing.121                  below 1 percent market share and that
                                                  larger participants under this Final Rule                                                                          small businesses could qualify as larger
                                                  service their own loans and leases, and                      120 12 U.S.C. 5514(e); see also 12 U.S.C.
                                                                                                                                                                     participants under the proposed
                                                  the Bureau will be able to examine their                  5481(26)(A) (defining service provider).                 threshold. A law firm representing small
                                                                                                               121 The Bureau originally estimated that the
                                                  servicing activity as part of its larger-                                                                          businesses urged the Bureau either to
                                                                                                            proposed threshold would bring within the
                                                  participant examinations even if                          Bureau’s supervisory authority about 38 entities. In     increase the threshold or to explicitly
                                                  servicing activity is not part of the                     the proposal, the Bureau noted that it had               carve out small businesses as defined by
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                                                  criterion used in this Final Rule.119                     consolidated entities in some cases based on known       the Small Business Administration
                                                  Additionally, the Bureau has the                          affiliations and excluded other entities listed in the
                                                                                                            AutoCount data on the ground that they do not
                                                                                                                                                                     (SBA). The commenter indicated that
                                                  authority to supervise service providers                  engage in automobile financing activity as defined
                                                                                                            in the Proposed Rule. The Bureau’s estimates of          these changes do not affect in any significant way
                                                    118 As noted above, the Bureau prioritizes                                                                       the Bureau’s analysis or its estimates of aggregate
                                                                                                            coverage at the different thresholds considered have
                                                  supervisory activity among entities subject to its        changed slightly since the proposal stage due to the     market activity covered at each threshold.
                                                  supervisory authority on the basis of risk, taking        identification of some additional affiliations and         122 The Bureau assumes that an average consumer
                                                  into account a variety of factors.                        additional entities that should be excluded from the     only enters into one auto loan or lease in a given
                                                    119 See 77 FR 42874, 42880 (July 20, 2012).             market definition such as title lenders. However,        year.



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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                     37515

                                                  one of its clients is a small business that             annual originations. The Bureau could,                  consumer financial law and detect and
                                                  would meet the threshold.                               for example, establish supervisory                      assess risks to consumers effectively.
                                                     The Bureau is finalizing the threshold               authority over a particular company that                Because the SBA’s size standards and
                                                  as proposed because it believes that                    the Bureau has reasonable cause to                      the Bureau’s threshold are used for
                                                  10,000 aggregate annual originations is                 determine poses risks to consumers                      different purposes and targeted to
                                                  a reasonable and appropriate threshold                  pursuant to the Bureau’s risk                           different statutory objectives, the Bureau
                                                  for defining larger participants of the                 determination rule.123 The Bureau could                 does not need to conform its threshold
                                                  automobile financing market. A                          also use non-supervisory tools if                       for a particular market to the most
                                                  threshold of 10,000 aggregate annual                    appropriate, such as initiating                         applicable SBA size standard even if
                                                  originations will bring within the                      enforcement investigations;                             some small businesses will be larger
                                                  Bureau’s authority roughly 34 entities                  coordinating with State regulators, State               participants. In light of all of the
                                                  together with their affiliated companies                attorneys general, and the Federal Trade                considerations discussed above, the
                                                  that engage in automobile financing.                    Commission; and engaging in research                    Bureau is finalizing the threshold of
                                                  Each of these entities provides or                      and monitoring. In light of all these                   10,000 aggregate annual originations as
                                                  engages in hundreds of automobile                       considerations, the Final Rule does not                 proposed.
                                                  originations each week and falls in the                 include a lower threshold.
                                                  top 10 percent of nonbank entities in the                  The Bureau estimates that a higher                   108(c) Exclusion for Dealers
                                                  market according to the Bureau’s                        alternative threshold of 50,000 aggregate                  The Bureau proposed to exclude from
                                                  estimates. They can reasonably be                       annual originations would allow the                     the rule those motor vehicle dealers that
                                                  considered larger participants of the                   Bureau to supervise only the 15 very                    are excluded from the Bureau’s
                                                  market. Some entities that meet this                    largest participants in the market and                  authority by section 1029 of the Dodd-
                                                  threshold will have considerably less                   their affiliated companies, representing                Frank Act.125 The Bureau also proposed
                                                  than 1 percent market share, but that is                approximately 86 percent of market                      to exclude additional motor vehicle
                                                  due in large part to the fragmentation of               activity. At this higher threshold the                  dealers that are not subject to the
                                                  the market and does not change the fact                 Bureau would not be able to supervise                   statutory exclusion and over which the
                                                  they are ‘‘larger’’ than the vast majority              as varied a mix of nonbank larger                       Bureau has rulemaking and other
                                                  of market participants.                                 participants because some firms                         authority. Specifically, the proposal
                                                     The Bureau does not believe that the                 impacting a large portion of consumers                  excluded those motor vehicle dealers
                                                  proposed threshold is likely to have any                in important market segments, such as                   that are identified in section 1029(b)(2)
                                                  appreciable effect on the availability of               captive, subprime, and BHPH lending,                    of the Dodd-Frank Act and are
                                                  credit. As discussed in part VI.B.2.b                   would be omitted.                                       predominantly engaged in the sale and
                                                  below, the Bureau estimates that the                       The Bureau does not believe it is                    servicing of motor vehicles, the leasing
                                                  cost of supervision for an entity that                  necessary to raise the threshold in order               and servicing of motor vehicles, or
                                                  provides 10,000 aggregate annual                        to avoid capturing small businesses as                  both.126 For the reasons that follow, the
                                                  originations would be a small fraction of               defined by the SBA or to add an express                 Bureau is finalizing the exclusion for
                                                  1 percent of its total revenue from one                 exclusion for such entities. According to               dealers with no substantive changes.
                                                  year’s originations. Given the nominal                  the Bureau’s estimates, few if any                         The Bureau explained in its proposal
                                                  cost of supervision, the Bureau does not                entities that meet the proposed                         that the dealers that were excluded by
                                                  believe that entities will change the                   threshold have annual receipts at or                    proposed § 1090.108(c)(2), typically
                                                  types of loans and leases they offer                    below the relevant SBA size standard,                   BHPH dealers, can reasonably be
                                                  merely to avoid the Bureau’s                            which in recent years has increased                     considered part of a separate and
                                                  supervisory authority. Furthermore,                     from $7 million to $38.5 million.124 In                 distinct market. A trade association
                                                  should an entity that would otherwise                   setting its size standards, the SBA                     representing the used motor vehicle
                                                  meet the larger-participant test adjust its             considers a variety of factors, such as                 industry objected to the exclusion of
                                                  offerings in response to the rule, any                  eligibility for Federal small-business                  BHPH dealers from this rule and stated
                                                  effect on consumers would be mitigated                  assistance and Federal contracting                      that BHPH dealers provide the same
                                                  by the large number of remaining                        programs; startup costs, entry barriers,                financial product or service as those
                                                  nonbank entities in the market as well                  and industry competition; and                           entities that the Bureau proposed to
                                                  as depository institutions that provide                 technological change. In contrast, the                  include. No other comments related to
                                                  auto financing.                                         Bureau has established its larger-                      the exclusion under proposed
                                                     The Bureau also considered a lower or                participant thresholds by reference to                  § 1090.108(c) were received.
                                                  higher threshold. For example, a                        relative participation in the market,                      The Bureau continues to believe that
                                                  threshold of 5,000 aggregate annual                     with a view to ensuring sufficient                      it is appropriate to exclude dealers that
                                                  originations would allow the Bureau to                  coverage of the market to allow it to                   are identified in proposed
                                                  supervise approximately 50 entities and                 assess compliance with Federal                          § 1090.108(c)(2) from the market defined
                                                  their affiliated companies that engage in                                                                       in this Final Rule and is therefore
                                                  automobile financing. While lowering                      123 12  CFR part 1091.
                                                                                                                                                                    125 12  U.S.C. 5519.
                                                  the threshold would substantially                         124 See  infra note 168. As explained below, the
                                                                                                          Bureau used AutoCount data for 2013 combined              126 As  the Bureau explained in the proposal, this
                                                  increase the number of entities subject                 with public financial statements, securitization        exclusion applied to certain dealers that extend
                                                  to supervision, it would only result in                 filings, and additional market research to estimate     retail credit or leases to consumers without
                                                  a marginal increase in the percentage of                annual receipts for each of the entities that it        routinely assigning them to unaffiliated third
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                                                  overall market activity covered due to                  identified as potential larger participants meeting     parties. However, the proposed rule included those
                                                                                                          the 10,000 threshold. Based on this review, the         nonbank covered persons that meet the definition
                                                  the relatively small market share of                    Bureau believes that few if any of these entities       of ‘‘motor vehicle dealer’’ under section 1029(f)(2)
                                                  entities at the lower threshold.                        would be small businesses under the current small       but are not predominantly engaged in the sale and
                                                     The Bureau has a variety of other                    business size standard. One law firm indicated in       servicing of motor vehicles, the leasing and
                                                  tools that it can use to protect                        a comment that one of their clients is a small          servicing of motor vehicles, or both. Thus, for
                                                                                                          business that would meet the proposed threshold,        example, a captive lender that meets the definition
                                                  consumers should concerns emerge                        but did not identify the client. Assuming this is       of ‘‘motor vehicle dealer’’ under section 1029(f)(2)
                                                  regarding nonbank market participants                   accurate, the Bureau’s estimates suggest that this is   but is predominantly engaged in the financing of
                                                  that have less than 10,000 aggregate                    very much the exception to the general rule.            motor vehicles could qualify as a larger participant.



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                                                  37516               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  finalizing § 1090.108(c) as proposed                     ‘‘larger participant[s]’’ of a market for                automobile financing market for
                                                  with minor changes for clarity.127 As the                ‘‘automobile financing’’ described in the                compliance with Federal consumer
                                                  Bureau explained in the proposal, the                    Final Rule. Participation in this market                 financial law. The Final Rule extends
                                                  Bureau specifically has rulemaking and                   is measured on the basis of aggregate                    the Bureau’s supervisory authority over
                                                  other authority over motor vehicle                       annual originations. A nonbank covered                   larger participants of the defined
                                                  dealers that are identified in section                   person engaged in automobile financing                   automobile financing market. This
                                                  1029(b)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act.                        is a larger participant of the market for                includes the authority to supervise for
                                                  Because such dealers engage in both                      automobile financing if, together with                   compliance with the Equal Credit
                                                  selling and financing automobiles, they                  its affiliated companies, it has aggregate               Opportunity Act (ECOA), the Truth in
                                                  set the price of the automobile and other                annual originations (measured for the                    Lending Act (TILA), the Consumer
                                                  sale terms in addition to establishing the               preceding calendar year) of at least                     Leasing Act (CLA), and the prohibition
                                                  terms of the financing. Such dealers use                 10,000. As prescribed by existing                        on unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts or
                                                  a different business model and are                       § 1090.102, any nonbank covered person                   practices (UDAAP) under section 1031
                                                  typically much smaller in asset size and                 that qualifies as a larger participant will              of the Dodd-Frank Act, as well as other
                                                  activity level than the entities included                remain a larger participant until two                    Federal consumer financial laws, to the
                                                  in this rule. Therefore, it is appropriate               years after the first day of the tax year                extent applicable.
                                                  and consistent with the Bureau’s                         in which the person last met the larger-                    The Bureau notes at the outset that
                                                  authority to consider dealers that are                   participant test.129 The Final Rule also                 limited data are available with which to
                                                  identified in § 1090.108(c)(2) in a                      includes in the definition of ‘‘financial                quantify the potential benefits, costs,
                                                  separate larger-participant rulemaking,                  product[s] or service[s]’’ a new category                and impacts of the Final Rule. As
                                                  should the Bureau determine it is                        of automobile leases, as defined by the                  described above, the Bureau has utilized
                                                  appropriate to do so.                                    Final Rule, under authority granted to                   the Experian AutoCount database for
                                                                                                           the Bureau by section 1002(15)(A)(xi)(II)                quantitative information on the number
                                                  VI. Section 1022(b)(2)(A) of the Dodd-                                                                            of market participants and their number
                                                  Frank Act                                                of the Dodd-Frank Act.130
                                                                                                                                                                    and dollar volume of originations.
                                                  A. Overview                                              B. Potential Benefits and Costs to                       However, the Bureau lacks detailed
                                                                                                           Consumers and Covered Persons                            information about their rate of
                                                    The Bureau has considered potential
                                                  benefits, costs, and impacts of the Final                  This analysis considers the benefits,                  compliance with Federal consumer
                                                  Rule.128 The Bureau set forth a                          costs, and impacts of the key provisions                 financial law and about the range of,
                                                  preliminary analysis of these effects,                   of the Final Rule against a baseline that                and costs of, compliance mechanisms
                                                  and the Bureau requested and received                    includes the Bureau’s existing rules                     used by market participants.
                                                                                                           defining larger participants in certain                     In light of these data limitations, this
                                                  comments on the topic. In developing
                                                                                                           markets.131 At present, there is no                      analysis generally provides a qualitative
                                                  the Final Rule, the Bureau has consulted
                                                                                                           Federal program for supervision of                       discussion of the benefits, costs, and
                                                  with or offered to consult with the
                                                                                                           nonbank covered persons in the                           impacts of the Final Rule.132 General
                                                  Federal Trade Commission, the Board of
                                                                                                                                                                    economic principles, together with the
                                                  Governors of the Federal Reserve
                                                                                                             129 12  CFR 1090.102.                                  AutoCount data, provide insight into
                                                  System, the Federal Deposit Insurance
                                                                                                             130 The  Final Rule also clarifies how to address      these benefits, costs, and impacts.
                                                  Corporation, the Office of the
                                                                                                           aggregation of formerly affiliated companies for         Where possible, the Bureau has made
                                                  Comptroller of the Currency, and the                     purposes of assessing larger-participant status          quantitative estimates based on these
                                                  National Credit Union Administration                     under the existing Consumer Reporting and
                                                                                                                                                                    principles and data as well as its
                                                  regarding, among other things,                           Consumer Debt Collection Rules, by making
                                                                                                           changes to the definition of ‘‘annual receipts’’ in      experience of undertaking similar
                                                  consistency with any prudential,
                                                                                                           those rules. As explained above, the changes to the      supervisory activities with respect to
                                                  market, or systemic objectives                           affiliate aggregation provisions clarify the Bureau’s    depository institutions and credit
                                                  administered by such agencies.                           methodology for affiliate aggregation. The changes
                                                    The Final Rule defines a category of                                                                            unions.
                                                                                                           will provide marginal benefits for market
                                                                                                                                                                       The discussion below describes four
                                                  nonbanks that would be subject to the                    participants in the consumer reporting and
                                                                                                           consumer debt collection markets by making those         categories of potential benefits and
                                                  Bureau’s nonbank supervision program
                                                                                                           rules clearer and easier to understand. They may,        costs. First, the Final Rule authorizes
                                                  pursuant to section 1024(a)(1)(B) of the                 however, result in an additional cost to market          the Bureau to supervise certain nonbank
                                                  Dodd-Frank Act. The category includes                    participants that are seeking to assess whether they
                                                                                                           are larger participants, but only if they would not
                                                                                                                                                                    entities in the automobile financing
                                                    127 The Final Rule clarifies that the term ‘‘motor     have collected information relevant to thresholds        market. These larger participants in the
                                                  vehicle’’ is used in § 1090.108(c) as that term is       from formerly affiliated companies for the entire        market might respond to the possibility
                                                  defined in section 1029(f)(1).                           preceding calendar year when the affiliation ended       of supervision by changing their
                                                                                                           during the preceding calendar year. The Bureau
                                                    128 Specifically, 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(2)(A) calls for
                                                                                                           does not know the extent to which participants
                                                                                                                                                                    systems and conduct, and those changes
                                                  the Bureau to consider the potential benefits and                                                                 might result in costs, benefits, or other
                                                  costs of a regulation to consumers and covered           seeking to self-assess currently collect information
                                                  persons, including the potential reduction of access     relevant to thresholds from formerly affiliated          impacts. Second, if the Bureau
                                                  by consumers to consumer financial products or           companies. However participants seeking to self-         undertakes supervisory activity at
                                                  services, the impact on depository institutions and      assess could arrange to obtain information relevant      specific larger participants, those
                                                  credit unions with $10 billion or less in total assets   to the threshold in advance of ending the affiliation,
                                                                                                           and such arrangements would tend to mitigate the         companies would incur costs from
                                                  as described in 12 U.S.C. 5516, and the impact on
                                                  consumers in rural areas. In addition, 12 U.S.C.         costs of obtaining this information. Further, as         responding to supervisory activity, and
                                                  5512(b)(2)(B) directs the Bureau to consult, before      noted above, participants in these markets are not
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                                                  and during the rulemaking, with appropriate              required to engage in such self-assessments. Thus,         132 While the Final Rule differs slightly from the

                                                  prudential regulators or other Federal agencies,         both the benefits and costs of these amendments          Proposed Rule in the types of refinancings that are
                                                  regarding consistency with objectives those              will not be significant.                                 included as ‘‘annual originations’’ and the types of
                                                                                                              131 The Bureau has discretion in any rulemaking
                                                  agencies administer. The manner and extent to                                                                     asset-backed securitization transactions that are
                                                  which the provisions of 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(2) apply       to choose an appropriate scope of analysis with          excluded, the changes are intended to effectuate
                                                  to a rulemaking of this kind that does not establish     respect to potential benefits and costs and an           what the Bureau intended in its proposal, and so
                                                  standards of conduct are unclear. Nevertheless, to       appropriate baseline. The Bureau, as a matter of         should not result in any additional costs or benefits
                                                  inform this rulemaking more fully, the Bureau            discretion, has chosen to describe a broader range       beyond those discussed in the proposal.
                                                  performed the analysis and consultations described       of potential effects to inform the rulemaking more       Accordingly, the impacts of these changes are not
                                                  in those provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act.               fully.                                                   discussed here.



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                  37517

                                                  the results of the individual supervisory               market to the possibility of Bureau                    estimate of current compliance levels
                                                  activities might also produce benefits                  supervision. That the Bureau will be                   and a prediction of market participants’
                                                  and costs.133 Third, entities might incur               authorized to undertake supervisory                    behavior in response to the Final Rule.
                                                  certain costs as a result of their efforts              activities with respect to a nonbank                   The data the Bureau currently has do
                                                  to assess whether they qualify as larger                covered person that qualifies as a larger              not support a specific quantitative
                                                  participants under the Final Rule.                      participant does not necessarily mean                  estimate or prediction. But, to the extent
                                                  Fourth, including certain automobile                    the Bureau will in fact undertake such                 that nonbank entities allocate resources
                                                  leases in the Dodd-Frank Act definition                 activities with respect to that covered                to increase their compliance in response
                                                  of ‘‘financial product or service’’                     entity in the near future. Rather,                     to the Final Rule, that response would
                                                  subjects those leases to the UDAAP                      supervision of any particular larger                   result in both benefits and costs to
                                                  prohibition under section 1031 of the                   participant as a result of this rulemaking             consumers and covered persons.135
                                                  Dodd-Frank Act and to Bureau authority                  is probabilistic in nature. For example,
                                                  to prescribe certain rules applicable to                the Bureau will examine certain larger                 a. Benefits From Increased Compliance
                                                  a covered person or service provider                    participants on a periodic or occasional
                                                                                                                                                                    Increased compliance with Federal
                                                  under section 1031(b). The definition                   basis. The Bureau’s decisions about
                                                  also expands the Bureau’s supervisory                   supervision will be informed, as                       consumer financial law by larger
                                                  authority, as described below, and these                applicable, by the factors set forth in                participants in the market for
                                                  changes might also produce benefits and                 section 1024(b)(2), relating to the size               automobile financing will be beneficial
                                                  costs, although the Bureau does not                     and volume of individual participants,                 to consumers who either finance the
                                                  expect these effects to be significant.                 the risks their consumer financial                     purchase of or lease automobiles, or
                                                     In considering the costs and benefits                products and services pose to                          refinance their credit obligations related
                                                  of the Final Rule, it is important to note              consumers, the extent of State consumer                to the purchase of their automobiles.
                                                  that various products or services are                   protection oversight, and other factors                The number of individuals potentially
                                                  included in the defined automobile                      that the Bureau may determine are                      affected is significant. As noted above,
                                                  financing market. Direct lending, where                 relevant. Each entity that believes it                 data from Experian Automotive for the
                                                  the consumer applies for credit directly                qualifies as a larger participant will                 fourth quarter of 2014 show auto
                                                  to the financial institution, makes up a                know that it might be supervised and                   lenders holding outstanding auto loans
                                                  relatively small portion of the total                   might gauge, given its circumstances,                  totaling almost $900 billion.136 The
                                                  automobile loan and sales volume.                       the likelihood that the Bureau will                    market is even larger when taking into
                                                  Direct lending is currently dominated                   initiate an examination or other                       account the auto leasing market, which
                                                  by traditional depository institutions                  supervisory activity.                                  comprised an additional 14 percent of
                                                  and credit unions already regulated by                     The prospect of potential supervisory               the auto financing market in the fourth
                                                  the Bureau and other Federal agencies.                  activity could create an incentive for                 quarter of 2014.137 Increasing the rate of
                                                  Indirect lending, where a dealer—rather                 larger participants to allocate additional             compliance with Federal consumer
                                                  than the consumer—finds a lender                        resources and attention to compliance                  financial law will benefit consumers
                                                  willing to provide credit to the                        with Federal consumer financial law,                   and the consumer financial market by
                                                  consumer, comprises a significant                       potentially leading to an increase in the              providing more of the protections
                                                  portion of the automobile financing                     level of compliance. These entities                    mandated by law.
                                                  market. In addition, some consumers                     might anticipate that by doing so (and                    Several Federal consumer financial
                                                  refinance the credit obligation for their               thereby decreasing risks to consumers)                 laws offer protections to consumers who
                                                  automobile after taking out the initial                 they could decrease the likelihood of                  seek automobile financing as defined in
                                                  loan. Finally, leasing is the other                     their actually being subjected to                      the Final Rule, including, to the extent
                                                  primary way in which consumers can                      supervision. In addition, an actual                    applicable, TILA and Regulation Z, the
                                                  finance the use of a vehicle; under this                examination will likely reveal any past                Fair Credit Reporting Act and
                                                  arrangement a financial institution                     or present noncompliance, which the                    Regulation V, the CLA and Regulation
                                                  holds the title to the vehicle that the                 Bureau can seek to correct through                     M, ECOA and Regulation B, and the
                                                  consumer leases under a payment plan                    supervisory activity or, in some cases,                Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act and Regulation
                                                  that typically ends with an option to                   enforcement actions. Larger participants               P.138 More broadly, the Bureau will
                                                  purchase the vehicle.134                                might therefore judge that the prospect                examine whether larger participants of
                                                                                                          of supervision increases the potential                 the automobile financing market engage
                                                  1. Benefits and Costs of Responses to the               consequences of noncompliance with
                                                  Possibility of Supervision                              Federal consumer financial law, and                       135 Another approach to considering the benefits,
                                                     The Final Rule will subject larger                   they might seek to decrease that risk by               costs, and impacts of § 1090.108 would be to focus
                                                  participants of the automobile financing                curing or mitigating any                               almost entirely on the supervision-related costs for
                                                                                                          noncompliance. Larger participants                     larger participants and omit a broader consideration
                                                    133 Pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 5514(e), the Bureau also
                                                                                                          might thus be able to catch and address                of the benefits and costs of increased compliance.
                                                  has supervisory authority over service providers to                                                            As noted above, the Bureau has, as a matter of
                                                                                                          compliance problems at an earlier point                discretion, chosen to describe a broader range of
                                                  nonbank covered persons encompassed by 12
                                                  U.S.C. 5514(a)(1), which includes larger                when the costs of correcting them                      potential effects to inform the rulemaking more
                                                  participants. The Bureau does not have data on the      would be lower.                                        fully.
                                                  number or characteristics of service providers to the      The Bureau believes it is likely that                  136 See supra note 79.

                                                  larger participants of the automobile financing         many market participants will increase                    137 See Zabritski, supra note 33, at 16.
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                                                  market. The discussion herein of potential costs,                                                                 138 The Bureau recognizes that the nature of a
                                                  benefits, and impacts that may result from the Final
                                                                                                          compliance in response to the Bureau’s
                                                                                                                                                                 larger participant’s responsibility for compliance
                                                  Rule generally applies to service providers to larger   supervisory activities authorized by the               with these laws may vary depending on the activity
                                                  participants.                                           Final Rule. However, because the Final                 the larger participant engages in. For example,
                                                    134 According to Experian Automotive, of all new      Rule itself does not require any nonbank               under TILA, a larger participant that purchases a
                                                  and used auto financing transactions recorded in        covered person in the automobile                       credit obligation for the purchase of an automobile
                                                  the fourth quarter of 2014, approximately 14                                                                   is likely an assignee, not a ‘‘creditor’’ under TILA,
                                                  percent occurred through leasing arrangements,
                                                                                                          financing market to alter its conduct,                 and as such is generally liable only for a violation
                                                  while the remainder used loans. See Zabritski,          any estimate of the amount of increased                of TILA that is ‘‘apparent on the face of the
                                                  supra note 33, at 16.                                   compliance would require both an                       disclosure statement.’’ 15 U.S.C. 1641(a).



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                                                  37518              Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  in UDAAPs.139 Conduct that does not                     stated that this prediction does not                   compensation paid to dealers and other
                                                  violate an express prohibition of another               constitute broadly accepted economic                   entities. Whether and to what extent
                                                  Federal consumer financial law may                      theory. The Bureau disagrees and                       either change would occur depends on
                                                  nonetheless constitute a UDAAP.140 To                   believes that fixed costs will not be                  the relative elasticities of supply and
                                                  the extent that any larger participant or               directly passed through by providers.                  demand in the automobile financing
                                                  service provider is currently engaged in                Canonical economic theory states that                  market. These elasticities can vary
                                                  any UDAAP in connection with any                        sellers will set a price along the demand              across products or services covered by
                                                  transaction for or the offering of a                    curve based on the level of output                     the Final Rule and may be influenced by
                                                  consumer financial product or service,                  where marginal cost equals marginal                    the presence of substitute products or
                                                  the cessation of the unlawful act or                    revenue. Since fixed costs do not impact               services as well as the availability of
                                                  practice will benefit consumers. As the                 demand, marginal cost, or marginal                     information, which would influence the
                                                  Bureau may review a larger participant’s                revenue, economic theory states that                   perceived availability of substitute
                                                  conduct in relation to any consumer                     changes in these costs should not                      products or services. For example, larger
                                                  financial product or service during an                  impact the pricing decisions of existing               participants of the automobile financing
                                                  examination, larger participants might                  producers.141                                          market may be in competition with
                                                  improve policies and procedures                           Although these fixed costs are not                   depository institutions or credit unions
                                                  globally in response to possible                        expected to pass through to consumers                  (or affiliates thereof) that are already
                                                  supervision in order to avoid engaging                  via changes in price by current                        subject to supervision by the Bureau
                                                  in UDAAPs.                                              providers of automobile financing that                 and/or Federal prudential regulators
                                                     The possibility of supervision also                  become larger participants, consumers                  with respect to Federal consumer
                                                  may help make incentives to comply                      may be adversely affected by increases                 financial law. To the extent the Final
                                                  with Federal consumer financial law                     in costs associated with the introduction              Rule will result in an increase in the
                                                  more consistent between the likely                      of this larger-participant rule to the                 costs faced by larger participants, that
                                                  larger participants and depository                      extent these cost increases cause current              increase will be a competitive benefit to
                                                  institutions and credit unions, which                   providers to decrease volume below the                 banks and credit unions with sufficient
                                                  are already subject to Federal                          larger-participant threshold (or to exit),             liquidity to expand their financing
                                                  supervision with respect to Federal                     deter current providers from increasing                operations. Competition from banks and
                                                  consumer financial law. Introducing the                 volume, or deter entry by new providers                credit unions might reduce the ability of
                                                  possibility of Federal supervision could                in the future.142 This could result in                 larger participants to pass through cost
                                                  encourage entities that likely qualify as               consumers having more restricted                       increases to consumers, dealers, or other
                                                  larger participants to devote additional                choices than they would otherwise. In                  entities as they may instead seek
                                                  resources to compliance. It could also                  certain situations a decrease in the                   alternate sources of financing.
                                                  help ensure that the benefits of Federal                number of market participants could                    Moreover, consumers might respond to
                                                  oversight reach consumers who do not                    better enable those remaining providers                such a cost increase by reducing the
                                                  have ready access to automobile                         to exercise market power, resulting in                 amounts they are willing to pay in other
                                                  financing through depository                            higher prices for consumers or                         aspects of the automobile purchase
                                                  institutions and credit unions.                         decreased product or service quality, or               transaction. Dealers could respond to
                                                  b. Costs of Increased Compliance                        both. One commenter expressed this                     decreased levels of financing revenues
                                                                                                          concern as well, suggesting that smaller               shared with them by larger participants
                                                     The Bureau recognizes that increasing                businesses may decrease origination                    by either attempting to increase
                                                  compliance involves costs. These costs                  volume in favor of issuing larger loans,               revenues derived from other areas of the
                                                  may be fixed or ongoing. Nonbank                        thus restricting consumer choice. The                  automobile purchase transaction, such
                                                  entities in the automobile financing                    extent to which this concern could                     as the stated price of the vehicle or costs
                                                  market might need to hire or train                      come to fruition depends on the total                  of accessories, or bearing the loss of
                                                  additional personnel to effectuate any                  number of participants in the market, as               revenue.
                                                  changes in their practices that would be                well as the existing number of covered
                                                  necessary to produce the increased                                                                                In considering the Final Rule’s
                                                                                                          entities. As stated earlier, the Bureau                potential price effect, it is important to
                                                  compliance. They might need to invest                   believes that the low relative costs of
                                                  in changes to their systems to carry out                                                                       take into account the fact that nonbank
                                                                                                          additional supervision, along with the                 covered persons below the larger-
                                                  their revised procedures. In addition,                  large number of market participants in
                                                  they might need to develop or enhance                                                                          participant threshold will not be subject
                                                                                                          the market for automobile financing,                   to supervision. The costs of these
                                                  compliance management systems, to                       should minimize these concerns.
                                                  ensure awareness of any gaps in                                                                                nonbank covered persons will therefore
                                                                                                            An entity that incurs ongoing costs in               be unaffected by the definition of larger
                                                  compliance. Such changes will also                      support of increasing compliance might
                                                  require investment and might entail                                                                            participants in the Final Rule and so
                                                                                                          try to recoup these costs by attempting                their pricing should also not be affected.
                                                  increased operating costs.                              to pass those costs directly through to
                                                     In the proposal, the Bureau stated that                                                                     To the extent that nonbank larger
                                                                                                          consumers; for example, in the case of                 participants consider raising their prices
                                                  economic theory predicts that fixed
                                                                                                          the indirect channel, this could occur                 in response to this rule, nonbank
                                                  costs will be absorbed by providers,
                                                                                                          through lowering fees or other forms of                entities that are not larger participants,
                                                  here the entities that may qualify as
                                                  larger participants. One commenter                                                                             along with banks and credit unions that
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                                                                                                            141 See, e.g., N. Gregory Mankiw, Principles of
                                                                                                                                                                 already compete in the market while
                                                                                                          Microeconomics 284, 286–87 (7th ed. 2015).
                                                    139 12 U.S.C. 5531.                                     142 Alexei Alexandrov & Xiaoling Ang, Identifying    bearing the cost of supervision, could
                                                    140 The CFPB Supervision and Examination              a Suitable Control Group Based on Microeconomic        potentially offer more attractive
                                                  Manual provides further guidance on how the             Theory: The Case of Escrows in the Subprime            transaction terms relative to larger
                                                  UDAAP prohibition applies to supervised entities.       Market (Dec. 30, 2014) (finding consumers not          participants and thus deter larger
                                                  CFPB Supervision and Examination Manual (Oct. 1,        adversely affected by policy changes that
                                                  2012), available at http://                             implement a fixed cost), available at http://
                                                                                                                                                                 participants from actually increasing
                                                  files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201210_cfpb_                papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_              prices. While a shift in transactions
                                                  supervision-and-examination-manual-v2.pdf.              id=2462128.                                            from larger participants toward nonbank


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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                   37519

                                                  entities that are not larger participants               benefit entities under supervision by                  entity for an initial conference with
                                                  would mitigate some of the benefits to                  detecting compliance problems early.                   management. That initial contact is
                                                  consumers of supervision of larger                      When an entity’s noncompliance results                 often accompanied by a request for
                                                  participants, the prospect of this shift                in litigation or an enforcement action,                information or records. Based on the
                                                  might also reduce the likelihood that                   the entity must face both the costs of                 discussion with management and an
                                                  larger participants will choose to                      defending its conduct and the penalties                initial review of the information
                                                  increase their prices in response to the                for noncompliance, including potential                 received, examiners determine the
                                                  Final Rule.                                             liability for damages to private                       scope of the on-site exam. While on-site,
                                                                                                          plaintiffs. The entity must also adjust its            examiners spend some time in further
                                                  2. Benefits and Costs of Individual
                                                                                                          systems to ensure future compliance.                   conversation with management about
                                                  Supervisory Activities
                                                                                                          Changing practices that have been in                   the entity’s policies, procedures, and
                                                     In addition to the responses of market               place for long periods of time can be                  processes. The examiners also review
                                                  participants anticipating supervision,                  expected to be relatively difficult                    documents, records, and accounts to
                                                  the possible consequences of the Final                  because the practices may be severe                    assess the entity’s compliance and
                                                  Rule include the responses to and                       enough to represent a serious failing of               evaluate the entity’s compliance
                                                  effects of individual examinations or                   an entity’s systems. Supervision may                   management system. As with the
                                                  other supervisory activities that the                   detect flaws at a point when correcting                Bureau’s other examinations,
                                                  Bureau might conduct in the automobile                  them would be relatively inexpensive.                  examinations of nonbank larger
                                                  financing market.                                       Catching problems early can, in some                   participants of the automobile financing
                                                  a. Benefits of Supervisory Activities                   situations, forestall costly litigation. To            market could involve issuing
                                                                                                          the extent early correction limits the                 confidential examination reports and
                                                     Supervisory activity could provide                   amount of consumer harm caused by a
                                                  several types of benefits. For example,                                                                        compliance ratings. The Bureau’s
                                                                                                          violation, it can help limit the cost of               examination manual describes the
                                                  as a result of supervisory activity, the                redress. In short, supervision might
                                                  Bureau and an entity might uncover                                                                             supervision process and indicates what
                                                                                                          benefit larger participants by, in the                 materials and information an entity
                                                  deficiencies in the entity’s policies and               aggregate, reducing the need for other
                                                  procedures. The Bureau’s examination                                                                           could expect examiners to request and
                                                                                                          more expensive activities to achieve                   review, both before they arrive and
                                                  manual calls for the Bureau generally to                compliance.143
                                                  prepare a report of each examination, to                                                                       during their time on-site.
                                                  assess the strength of the entity’s                     b. Costs of Supervisory Activities                       The primary cost an entity will face
                                                  compliance mechanisms, and to assess                       The potential costs of actual                       in connection with an examination is
                                                  the risks the entity poses to consumers,                supervisory activities arise in two                    the cost of employees’ time to collect
                                                  among other things. The Bureau will                     categories. The first involves any costs               and provide the necessary
                                                  share examination findings with the                     to larger participants of increasing                   information.144 The frequency and
                                                  examined entity because one purpose of                  compliance in response to the Bureau’s                 duration of examinations of any
                                                  supervision is to inform the entity of                  findings during supervisory activity and               particular entity will depend on a
                                                  problems detected by examiners. Thus,                   to supervisory actions. These costs are                number of factors, including the size of
                                                  for example, an examination might find                  similar in nature to the possible                      the entity, the compliance or other risks
                                                  evidence of widespread noncompliance                    compliance costs, described above, that                identified, whether the entity has been
                                                  with Federal consumer financial law, or                 larger participants in general might                   examined previously, and the demands
                                                  it might identify specific areas where an               incur in anticipation of possible                      on the Bureau’s supervisory resources
                                                  entity has inadvertently failed to                      supervisory actions. This analysis will                imposed by other entities and markets.
                                                  comply. These examples are only                         not repeat that discussion. The second                 Nevertheless, some rough estimates may
                                                  illustrative of the kinds of information                category is the cost of supporting                     be useful to provide a sense of the
                                                  an examination might uncover.                           supervisory activity.                                  magnitude of potential staff costs that
                                                     Detecting and informing entities about                  Supervisory activity may involve                    entities might incur.
                                                  such problems should be beneficial to                   requests for information or records, on-                 The cost of supporting supervisory
                                                  consumers. When the Bureau notifies an                  site or off-site examinations, or some                 activity may be calibrated using prior
                                                  entity about risks associated with an                   combination of these activities. For                   Bureau experience in supervision. The
                                                  aspect of its activities, the entity is                 example, in an on-site examination,                    Bureau considers its auto financing
                                                  expected to adjust its practices to reduce              Bureau examiners generally contact the                 examinations at depository institutions
                                                  those risks. That response may result in                                                                       and credit unions as a reasonable proxy
                                                  increased compliance with Federal                          143 Further potential benefits to consumers,
                                                                                                                                                                 for the duration and labor intensity of
                                                  consumer financial law, with benefits                   covered persons, or both might arise from the
                                                                                                          Bureau’s gathering of information during               potential nonbank larger participant
                                                  like those described above. Or it may                   supervisory activities. The goals of supervision       examinations. This belief arises from the
                                                  avert a violation that would have                       include informing the Bureau about activities of       similar role these institutions play in
                                                  occurred had Bureau supervision not                     market participants and assessing risks to             the market for automobile financing,
                                                  detected the risk promptly. The Bureau                  consumers and to markets for consumer financial
                                                                                                          products and services. The Bureau may use this
                                                  may also inform entities about risks                    information to improve regulation of consumer            144 Some commenters suggested that the Bureau’s
                                                  posed to consumers that fall short of                   financial products and services and to improve         estimate overlooks non-labor costs that supervised
                                                  violating the law. Action to reduce those               enforcement of Federal consumer financial law, in      entities may incur in responding to examinations
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                                                  risks would also be a benefit to                        order to better serve its mission of ensuring          and other supervisory requests. The Bureau
                                                                                                          consumers’ access to fair, transparent, and            recognizes that responding to examinations and
                                                  consumers.                                              competitive markets for such products and services.    other supervisory requests will entail certain other
                                                     Given the obligations nonbank                        Benefits of this type would depend on what the         costs, such as costs of producing information
                                                  covered persons in the automobile                       Bureau learns during supervision and how it uses       electronically or in hard copy. However, such
                                                  financing market have under Federal                     that knowledge. For example, because the Bureau        expenses are generally minimal in comparison to
                                                                                                          will examine a number of covered persons in the        labor costs, and accordingly, the Bureau has
                                                  consumer financial law and the                          automobile financing market, the Bureau will build     focused on staff time in collecting and providing
                                                  existence of efforts to enforce such law,               an understanding of how effective compliance           information in order to provide an approximate
                                                  the results of supervision also may                     systems and processes function in that market.         sense of the magnitude of the key cost involved.



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                                                  37520               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  where they frequently coexist as direct                 tenth of 1 percent of total revenue from                the Bureau acknowledges that larger and
                                                  competitors to one another.                             originations for that year.149 This is a                lengthier exams may prove costlier than
                                                     The average duration of the on-site                  conservative estimate in several respects               the amount estimated in the Proposed
                                                  portion of Bureau bank auto financing                   because it reflects revenue only from                   Rule, it also believes that the
                                                  examinations is approximately nine                      this line of business and uses an average               experience-based analogue it uses
                                                  weeks.145 Assuming that each exam                       amount financed in combination with                     provides a better analogue than the
                                                  requires two weeks of preparation time                  the minimum number of transactions                      commenter’s general cross-industry
                                                  by a larger participant’s staff prior to the            that a larger participant could provide.                comparison because the exams
                                                  exam as well as on-site assistance by                      Some industry commenters                             considered by the Bureau more
                                                  staff throughout the duration of the                    challenged this estimate, drawing on                    accurately reflect the sort of
                                                  exam, the Bureau assumes that the                       experiences by other companies in other                 examination to which automobile
                                                  typical examination in this nonbank                     industries to suggest that exam costs for               financing entities will be subject.
                                                  market would require 11 weeks of staff                  larger participants would, in fact, range
                                                  time. The Bureau has not suggested that                 from $750,000 to $1,000,000.150 While                      A law firm that represents financial
                                                  counsel or any particular staffing level                                                                        services entities indicated that one of its
                                                  is required during an examination.                      origination data from AutoCount for all entities        clients finances an average of $3,800 per
                                                  However, for purposes of this analysis,                 with 360 or greater loans and leases on an annual       transaction, an amount approximately
                                                                                                          basis. As noted below, one commenter raised a           83 percent lower than the Bureau’s
                                                  the Bureau assumes, conservatively, that                question about the Bureau’s estimated average
                                                  an entity might dedicate the equivalent                 amount financed. To ensure that the estimate
                                                                                                                                                                  estimate, and stated as a result that the
                                                  of one full-time compliance officer and                 accurately reflects the nonbank market defined in       cost of an examination relative to total
                                                  one-tenth of a full-time attorney to the                this Final Rule, the Bureau has applied the same        revenue would be much higher than the
                                                                                                          methodology as in the proposal but has excluded         Bureau’s estimate. The Bureau
                                                  exam. The mean hourly wage of a                         entities that are not participants in the nonbank
                                                  compliance officer in a nonbank entity                  market defined in this rule, such as depository         acknowledges some entities may
                                                  that operates in activities related to                  institutions, which resulted in a very similar          participate in certain segments of the
                                                                                                          average amount financed of $22,299. These               market in a way that results in a lower
                                                  installment lending is $33.97, and the                  estimates of average amount financed per
                                                  mean hourly wage of a lawyer in the                     origination are based solely on loans in AutoCount      amount financed; however, of the over
                                                  same industry is $83.88.146 Assuming                    for which data are available on amount financed.        500 institutions in AutoCount that the
                                                  that wages account for 67.5 percent of                  The Bureau was unable to obtain data on the             Bureau considered as participants in the
                                                                                                          average amount financed in lease transactions, but
                                                  total compensation, the total labor cost                believes it is unlikely that the estimated revenue
                                                                                                                                                                  nonbank market in 2013, the amount
                                                  of an examination would be about                        from leasing transactions, including both the stream    cited by the commenter ($3,800) falls
                                                  $27,611.147 The Bureau estimates that                   of payments over the course of the lease as well as     within the lowest percentile of amount
                                                  the cost for an entity with 10,000                      the option value of the purchase or resale price of     financed. Even if this remarkably low
                                                                                                          the vehicle at the end of the lease, would differ in
                                                  aggregate annual originations per year,                 a way that materially impacts the relationship          amount financed were considered in
                                                  with an average amount financed of                      between the cost of supervision and revenues.           evaluating relative costs, for an entity
                                                  approximately $22,000 per loan                             149 In the proposal, the Bureau estimated revenue
                                                                                                                                                                  with the larger-participant minimum of
                                                  origination,148 would be less than one-                 as the sum total of payments received for loans         10,000 aggregate annual originations the
                                                                                                          originated that year, assuming zero interest rates
                                                                                                          and no defaults. The proportion of revenue was          costs would still be less than one-half of
                                                     145 This estimate was derived at the proposal
                                                                                                          thus $27,611/($21,750*10,000). A similar, more          1 percent of total revenue from the
                                                  stage using confidential supervisory Bureau data on     conservative calculation can also be done that
                                                  the duration of on-site auto financing examinations
                                                                                                                                                                  10,000 aggregate annual originations
                                                                                                          considers only revenue generated from interest for
                                                  at depository institutions and credit unions. For       an entity with 10,000 originations. Using 2013          according to the Bureau’s estimates.
                                                  purposes of this calculation, the Bureau counted its    origination data from AutoCount for which rate and         The Bureau declines to predict, at this
                                                  auto financing examinations for which the on-site       term data are available, the Bureau estimates that
                                                  portion had been completed, while excluding the         the average interest rate per vehicle originated in     point, precisely how many
                                                  shortest and longest examinations to minimize the       the nonbank market defined in the Final Rule is         examinations in the automobile
                                                  influence of outliers. Additionally, the Bureau         6.54 percent, and the average term length per           financing market it will undertake in a
                                                  counted only the on-site portion of an examination,     vehicle originated in the nonbank market defined
                                                  which included time during the on-site period of        in the Final Rule is 60.42 months. Assuming zero
                                                                                                                                                                  given year, as neither the Dodd-Frank
                                                  the examination that examiners spent off-site for       default and zero prepayment, the Bureau estimates       Act nor the Final Rule specifies a
                                                  holiday or other travel considerations. However, the    that an entity making 10,000 originations a year        particular level or frequency of
                                                  Bureau did not count time spent scoping an              would receive approximately $39 million in total        examinations. Given the Bureau’s finite
                                                  examination before the on-site portion of the           revenue from interest from a single year’s
                                                  examination or summarizing findings or preparing        originations. This is likely a low estimate because     supervisory resources, and the range of
                                                  reports of examination afterwards.                      the interest rate of 6.54 percent reflects the          industries over which it has supervisory
                                                     146 Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), Occupational   frequently-subsidized low interest rates offered by     responsibility for consumer financial
                                                                                                          the largest captive participants that typically
                                                  Employment Statistics, available at http://
                                                                                                          originate much more than 10,000 loans per year.
                                                                                                                                                                  protection, when and how often a given
                                                  data.bls.gov/oes/ (May 2013 release for North                                                                   larger participant will be supervised is
                                                  American Industry Classification System code            Under either approach to estimating revenue, the
                                                  522200 ‘‘Nondepository Credit Intermediation’’).        cost of an examination is less than one-tenth of 1      uncertain. The frequency of
                                                     147 BLS, Employer Costs for Employee
                                                                                                          percent of revenue from a year’s originations           examinations will depend on a number
                                                                                                          according to the Bureau’s estimates.
                                                  Compensation Database, Series ID                           150 These commenters suggested that an               of factors, including the Bureau’s
                                                  CMU2025220000000D, available at http://                                                                         understanding of the conduct of market
                                                                                                          examination might require the participation of a
                                                  data.bls.gov/timeseries/
                                                  CMU2025220000000D?data_tool=XGtable
                                                                                                          compliance officer with a higher salary than the        participants and the specific risks they
                                                                                                          mean hourly wage used in the Bureau’s analysis. In
                                                  (providing wage and salary percent of total             estimating that an examination might require a full-
                                                                                                                                                                  pose to consumers; the responses of
                                                  compensation in the credit intermediation and           time compliance officer for 11 weeks and using the      larger participants to prior
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                                                  related activities private industry for the second      mean hourly wage for compliance officers, the           examinations; and the demands that
                                                  quarter of 2013). Dividing the mean hourly wages        Bureau did not mean to suggest that only one mid-
                                                  by 67.5 percent yields a total mean hourly cost                                                                 other markets make on the Bureau’s
                                                                                                          level person would be involved in an examination.
                                                  (including total costs, such as salary, benefits, and   Instead, the Bureau recognizes that both junior and     supervisory resources. These factors can
                                                  taxes). Assuming that individuals are compensated       high-level staff may participate on a part-time basis   be expected to change over time, and
                                                  for 40 hour work weeks, the total labor cost of an      and that these staff may be drawn from different        the Bureau’s understanding of these
                                                  examination is calculated as follows:                   offices within the entity. The Bureau intended its
                                                  [(0.1*83.88+33.97)/0.675]*40*11.                        original estimate to represent the aggregate amount
                                                                                                                                                                  factors may change as it gathers more
                                                     148 In the proposal, the Bureau used an estimated    of labor resources a company might dedicate to          information about the market through
                                                  average amount financed of $21,750 based on 2013        responding to supervisory activity.                     its supervision and by other means.


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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                    37521

                                                  3. Costs of Assessing Larger-Participant                4. Benefits and Costs of Adding Certain                Dodd-Frank Act in connection with
                                                  Status                                                  Automobile Leases to the Definition of                 transactions involving these leases.
                                                                                                          ‘‘Financial Product or Service’’                          Section 1001.2 also has the potential
                                                     The larger-participant rule does not                                                                        to expand supervisory activities in two
                                                  require nonbank entities to assess                         Finally, in § 1001.2, the Bureau is                 distinct ways. First, § 1001.2, as
                                                  whether they are larger participants.                   defining the term ‘‘financial product or               incorporated into the final larger-
                                                  However, the Bureau acknowledges that                   service’’ to include automobile leases                 participant rule, could bring certain
                                                  in some cases they might decide to                      that (1) meet the requirements of leases               nonbank entities under Bureau
                                                  incur costs in assessing whether they                   authorized under section 108 of CEBA,                  supervision by expanding the activities
                                                  qualify as larger participants and                      as implemented by 12 CFR part 23, and                  counted in determining whether
                                                  potentially disputing their status.                     are thus permissible for national banks                participants of the automobile financing
                                                                                                          to offer or provide; and (2) are not                   market qualify as larger participants and
                                                     Larger-participant status depends on a                                                                      are thus subject to supervision under
                                                                                                          currently defined as a financial product
                                                  nonbank’s aggregate annual originations                                                                        the Final Rule. To the extent that
                                                                                                          or service under section 1002(15)(A)(ii)
                                                  as defined in the Final Rule. An                                                                               nonbank entities in the automobile
                                                                                                          of the Dodd-Frank Act. As explained
                                                  estimate of this number should be                                                                              financing market are brought under
                                                                                                          below, the Bureau believes that the
                                                  readily extractible from company                                                                               supervision as a result of § 1001.2, both
                                                                                                          benefits, costs, and impacts to
                                                  records, as market participants likely                  consumers and covered persons of                       consumers and covered persons will
                                                  evaluate the components of aggregate                    § 1001.2 will likely be small. First,                  benefit. The nature of these benefits,
                                                  annual originations as part of their                    § 1001.2 will not extensively alter the                including from both the possibility of
                                                  regular business practices. In addition,                substantive obligations of covered                     supervision and actual individual
                                                  information on originations can be                      persons. Second, § 1001.2 will not                     supervisory activities, are discussed
                                                  derived from title records that market                  substantially expand the number of                     above.
                                                  participants maintain and publicly                                                                                Second, § 1001.2 could affect the
                                                                                                          market participants brought under
                                                  record.                                                                                                        scope of supervision for other nonbank
                                                                                                          supervision as a result of the Final Rule,
                                                                                                                                                                 entities and certain banks and credit
                                                     To the extent that some nonbank                      or for entities already subject to                     unions and their affiliates.152 For
                                                  covered persons in the automobile                       supervision, the scope of supervisory                  nonbank entities in the automobile
                                                  financing market do not already know                    examinations. The Bureau lacks data                    financing market that will be subject to
                                                  whether their aggregate annual                          about the range of, and costs of,                      supervision as a larger participant even
                                                  originations exceed the threshold, such                 compliance mechanisms used by banks                    absent § 1001.2, § 1001.2 will not
                                                  entities might, in response to the Final                or nonbank entities in the automobile                  expand the leasing activities of such
                                                  Rule, develop new systems to count                      financing market. In light of these data               entities that will be subject to
                                                  their aggregate annual originations in                  limitations, the Bureau’s analysis                     supervision. However, § 1001.2 will
                                                  accordance with the definition in the                   generally provides a qualitative                       expand the scope of supervision for
                                                  Final Rule. The data the Bureau                         discussion of the benefits, costs, and                 leasing covered by § 1001.2 to include
                                                  currently has do not support a detailed                 impacts of § 1001.2.                                   compliance with section 1031 of the
                                                  estimate of how many nonbank entities                   a. Benefits of § 1001.2                                Dodd-Frank Act.
                                                  will engage in such development or how                                                                            With respect to banks and credit
                                                  much they might spend. Regardless,                         Benefits of § 1001.2 will stem from                 unions, the Bureau has supervisory
                                                  nonbank entities will be unlikely to                    enhanced consumer protections relating                 authority over insured depository
                                                  spend significantly more on specialized                 to automobile leases that will fall under              institutions and credit unions with total
                                                  systems to count aggregate annual                       the definition. As financial products or               assets of more than $10 billion (and
                                                                                                          services under title X of the Dodd-Frank               their affiliates) for compliance with
                                                  originations than it would cost them to
                                                                                                          Act, such leases will become subject to                Federal consumer financial laws, and
                                                  be supervised by the Bureau as larger
                                                                                                          the UDAAP prohibition under section                    the prudential regulators exercise
                                                  participants. It bears emphasizing that                                                                        primary supervisory authority over
                                                  even if expenditures on an accounting                   1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act. These
                                                                                                          leases are already subject to a similar                other insured depository institutions
                                                  system successfully proved that a                                                                              and credit unions with total assets of
                                                  nonbank covered person in the                           prohibition against unfair or deceptive
                                                                                                          acts or practices (UDAP) in or affecting               $10 billion or less for compliance with
                                                  automobile financing market was not a                                                                          Federal consumer financial laws. As
                                                  larger participant, it does not                         commerce under section 5 of the
                                                                                                                                                                 noted above, although § 1001.2 will not
                                                  necessarily follow that this entity could               Federal Trade Commission Act (FTC
                                                                                                                                                                 expand the scope of leasing activities of
                                                  not be supervised. The Bureau can                       Act). 151 The prohibitions set forth in
                                                                                                                                                                 depository institutions and credit
                                                  supervise a nonbank entity whose                        section 5 of the FTC Act and section                   unions that are subject to supervision,
                                                                                                          1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act, however,                   for leasing covered under § 1001.2, it
                                                  conduct the Bureau determines,
                                                                                                          are not precisely co-extensive. Most                   will expand the scope of that
                                                  pursuant to section 1024(a)(1)(C), poses
                                                                                                          notably, section 5 of the FTC Act does                 supervision to include compliance with
                                                  risks to consumers. Thus, a nonbank
                                                                                                          not include a prohibition on abusive                   section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
                                                  entity choosing to spend significant
                                                                                                          acts or practices similar to that under
                                                  amounts on an accounting system                         section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act.                      152 With respect to nonbanks, the Bureau
                                                  directed toward the larger-participant
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                                                                                                          Accordingly, consumers will benefit                    currently supervises mortgage companies, payday
                                                  test could not be sure it will not be                   from the expanded scope of consumer                    lenders, and private student lenders, as well as
                                                  subject to Bureau supervision                           protection under section 1031 of the                   larger participants of the consumer reporting,
                                                  notwithstanding those expenses. The                                                                            consumer debt collection, student loan servicing,
                                                                                                                                                                 and international money transfer markets. The
                                                  Bureau therefore believes it is unlikely                  151 15 U.S.C. 45. This prohibition is enforced by    Bureau is not aware of any significant automobile
                                                  that any but a very few nonbank entities                the Federal Trade Commission with respect to           leasing activity by these entities. Thus, the Bureau
                                                  will undertake such expenditures.                       nonbanks under section 5 and by the prudential         believes that § 1001.2 in itself will have at most a
                                                                                                          regulators with respect to banks under section 8 of    marginal impact on the scope of examinations for
                                                                                                          the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C. 1818.     these entities.



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                                                  37522                Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  Again, the benefits to consumers of that                  leases that would fall under § 1001.2.                     Regarding supervision, § 1001.2, as
                                                  expanded supervision authority will be                    The Bureau would consider the benefits,                 incorporated into the final larger-
                                                  similar to the general benefits of                        costs, and impacts of any such                          participant rule, could also bring certain
                                                  supervision discussed above.                              rulemaking as part of its analysis under                nonbank entities under Bureau
                                                     Although the Bureau has identified                     section 1022(b)(2) for that rulemaking.                 supervision and will affect the scope of
                                                  the above potential consumer benefits                     The Bureau notes that any such                          supervision for other nonbank entities,
                                                  from the expanded supervision                             rulemaking would likely aim to provide                  banks, and credit unions. With respect
                                                  authority that could result from                          consumers and covered persons with                      to nonbanks, § 1001.2 will, as discussed
                                                  § 1001.2, the Bureau believes such                        additional clarity in regard to                         above, expand the activities counted in
                                                  benefits will be limited in extent. Most                  identifying UDAAPs. It is not possible,                 determining whether participants of the
                                                  significantly, as discussed above, the                    however, to identify with any greater                   automobile financing market qualify as
                                                  Bureau believes that most automobile                      specificity here the potential benefits to              larger participants and are thus subject
                                                  leases currently qualify as a financial                   consumers or covered persons from                       to supervision under the Final Rule. To
                                                  product or service under section                          § 1001.2 as a result of an unspecified                  the extent that larger participants in the
                                                  1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-Frank Act.                    future rulemaking.155                                   automobile financing market are
                                                  Thus, the Bureau believes that few, if                                                                            brought under supervision as a result of
                                                                                                            b. Costs of § 1001.2
                                                  any, nonbank participants in the                                                                                  § 1001.2, such entities will incur costs.
                                                  automobile financing market will be                          Section 1001.2 will impose                           The nature of these costs, including
                                                  subject to the Bureau’s supervision                       compliance costs on covered persons by                  from the possibility of supervision as
                                                  under the Final Rule as a result of                       subjecting leasing activities that fall                 well as from actual individual
                                                  § 1001.2.153 Further, for bank and                        under § 1001.2 to the UDAAP                             supervisory activities, are discussed
                                                  nonbank entities that will be subject to                  prohibition in section 1031 of the Dodd-                above. For participants of the
                                                  supervision even absent § 1001.2, the                     Frank Act. Those entities will incur                    automobile financing market that would
                                                  Bureau believes that § 1001.2 will                        some cost of compliance because, as                     be subject to supervision under the
                                                  expand only the scope of supervision of                   laid out above, the prohibitions under                  larger-participant rule even absent
                                                  the leasing activities of such entities.                  section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act and                  § 1001.2, § 1001.2 will impose costs by
                                                  Notably, even absent § 1001.2, all                        section 5 of the FTC Act are not co-                    expanding the leasing activities of such
                                                  leasing activities of such entities will be               extensive: in particular, section 5 of the              entities subject to supervision for
                                                  subject to supervision by the Bureau or                   FTC Act does not include a prohibition                  compliance with section 1031 of the
                                                  the prudential regulators for compliance                  on abusive acts or practices similar to                 Dodd-Frank Act. With respect to banks
                                                  with the ‘‘enumerated consumer laws’’                     that under section 1031 of the Dodd-                    and credit unions, by expanding the
                                                  as defined in section 1002(12) of the                     Frank Act. However, given the fact that,                leasing activities subject to the section
                                                  Dodd-Frank Act, including the CLA.154                     as interpreted by the Bureau, section                   1031 UDAAP prohibition, as discussed
                                                  And under the existing regulatory                         1002(15)(A)(ii) covers most automobile                  above, § 1001.2 will correspondingly
                                                  framework, the prudential regulators are                  leases and the substantial overlap of the               expand the activities subject to
                                                  authorized to supervise banks for                         prohibited conduct under section 1031                   supervision by either the Bureau or the
                                                  compliance with section 5 of the FTC                      of the Dodd-Frank Act and section 5 of                  prudential regulators, as applicable, for
                                                  Act. Thus, for entities that will be                      the FTC Act, in the Bureau’s judgment,                  compliance with that prohibition.
                                                  subject to supervision even absent                        the compliance costs to covered persons                    For both banks and nonbanks, the
                                                  § 1001.2, the expanded supervision                        of this new prohibition will be limited                 Bureau believes that the increased costs
                                                  resulting from § 1001.2 will be focused                   in extent.                                              of supervision identified above will be
                                                  on the entity’s compliance with section                                                                           small. As discussed above, the Bureau
                                                                                                               155 Section 1001.2 will also benefit consumers by
                                                  1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act in                                                                                     believes that most auto leases currently
                                                                                                            expanding the scope of certain other Bureau
                                                  connection with the activities covered                    authorities under title X of the Dodd-Frank Act.
                                                                                                                                                                    qualify as a financial product or service
                                                  by § 1001.2.                                              Perhaps most significantly, § 1001.2 will expand the    under section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the
                                                     Finally, under section 1031(b), the                    Bureau’s rulemaking authority under section 1032        Dodd-Frank Act, and, as discussed
                                                  Bureau has authority to prescribe rules                   of the Dodd-Frank Act, which authorizes the             above, the Bureau believes that few, if
                                                                                                            Bureau to prescribe rules to ensure that the features
                                                  applicable to a covered person or                         of any consumer financial product or service are
                                                                                                                                                                    any, nonbank participants in the
                                                  service provider identifying as unlawful                  fully, accurately, and effectively disclosed to         automobile financing market will be
                                                  UDAAPs in connection with any                             consumers in a manner that permits consumers to         brought under Bureau supervision
                                                  transaction with a consumer for a                         understand the costs, benefits, and risks associated    under the Final Rule as a result of
                                                                                                            with the product or service. In addition, § 1001.2
                                                  consumer financial product or service,                    will expand the scope of the Bureau’s authority
                                                                                                                                                                    § 1001.2.156 Similarly, for banks and
                                                  or the offering of a consumer financial                   under section 1022(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act to          nonbank entities that will be subject to
                                                  product or service. Thus, the Bureau                      ‘‘monitor for risks to consumers in the offering or     supervision even absent § 1001.2, the
                                                  could promulgate such rules in                            provision of consumer financial products or             Bureau believes that § 1001.2 will only
                                                                                                            services, including developments in markets for
                                                  connection with transactions for the                      such products or services,’’ and the scope of the
                                                                                                                                                                    subject the leasing activities of such
                                                                                                            Bureau’s authority under section 1033 of the Dodd-      entities to slightly expanded
                                                     153 As discussed above, some commenters have
                                                                                                            Frank Act to prescribe rules for covered persons        supervision. Notably, even absent
                                                  argued that § 1001.2 will actually cover most, if not     with respect to consumer rights to access               § 1001.2, all leasing activities of such
                                                  all, automobile leases. Even assuming this were the       information concerning consumer financial
                                                  case, the Bureau estimates that very few entities         products or services that the consumer receives
                                                                                                                                                                    entities would be subject to supervision
                                                                                                                                                                    by the Bureau or the prudential
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                                                  will exceed the larger-participant aggregate annual       from such persons. As with respect to section
                                                  origination threshold solely as a result of their total   1031(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act, it is not possible for   regulators for compliance with the
                                                  leasing volume. Thus, even if § 1001.2 were to cover      the Bureau to identify with specificity here the        enumerated consumer laws, including
                                                  all leasing, it would not have a significant effect on    benefits to consumers that might result from the
                                                  which entities are considered larger participants.        Bureau’s potential future exercise of these
                                                                                                                                                                    the CLA.157 And under the existing
                                                     154 With respect to the enumerated consumer            authorities. The Bureau, however, notes that it
                                                                                                                                                                      156 See supra note 153.
                                                  laws, the scope of the Bureau’s authority is defined      would consider the benefits, costs, and impacts of
                                                  by the scope of those laws, not by the activities         any rulemakings under sections 1032 or 1033 of the        157 With respect to the enumerated consumer
                                                  listed under section 1002(15)(A) of the Dodd-Frank        Dodd-Frank Act as part of the section 1022(b)(2)        laws, the scope of the Bureau’s authority is defined
                                                  Act.                                                      analysis for such rulemakings.                          by the scope of those laws, not by the activities



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                37523

                                                  regulatory framework, the prudential                    5. Consideration of Alternatives                        not depend on which criterion the
                                                  regulators are authorized to supervise                     The Bureau considered different                      Bureau uses.
                                                  banks for compliance with section 5 of                  thresholds for larger-participant status                C. Potential Specific Impacts of the
                                                  the FTC Act. Thus, for entities that                    in the market for automobile financing.                 Final Rule
                                                  would be subject to supervision even                    One alternative the Bureau considered
                                                  absent the Final Rule, the scope of                     is a larger threshold of, for example,                  1. Depository Institutions and Credit
                                                  expanded supervision for the limited                    50,000 aggregate annual originations.                   Unions With $10 Billion or Less in Total
                                                  activities that will fall under § 1001.2                Under such an alternative, the benefits                 Assets, as Described in Section 1026 of
                                                  will be further limited to compliance                   of supervision to both consumers and                    the Dodd-Frank Act
                                                  with section 1031 of the Dodd-Frank                     covered persons would likely be                            No depository institutions or credit
                                                  Act. The Bureau believes that the                       substantially reduced because some                      unions of any size will become larger
                                                  additional cost to entities already                     firms impacting a large portion of                      participants in the market for
                                                  subject to supervision of being                         consumers in important market                           automobile financing under the Final
                                                  supervised for compliance with section                  segments, such as captive, subprime,                    Rule. Further, as explained above, the
                                                  1031 of the Dodd-Frank Act will be                      and BHPH lending, would be omitted.                     Final Rule’s definition of certain leasing
                                                  minimal.                                                On the other hand, the overall potential                activity as a financial product or service
                                                    Finally, under section 1031(b) of the                 costs across all nonbank covered                        will not in itself have any significant
                                                  Dodd-Frank Act, the Bureau has                          persons would be reduced if fewer firms                 effect on depository institutions and
                                                  authority to prescribe rules applicable to              were defined as larger participants and                 credit unions with $10 billion or less in
                                                  a covered person or service provider                    thus fewer were subject to the Bureau’s                 total assets. Nevertheless, the Final Rule
                                                  identifying as unlawful UDAAPs in                       supervision authority on that basis.                    might, as discussed above, have some
                                                  connection with any transaction with a                  Similarly, the Bureau also considered                   impact on depository institutions or
                                                  consumer for a consumer financial                       lower thresholds, such as 5,000                         credit unions that provide financing for
                                                  product or service, or the offering of a                aggregate annual originations, but                      automobile transactions. The Final Rule
                                                  consumer financial product or service.                  believes these would only marginally                    might therefore alter market dynamics
                                                  Thus, under § 1001.2, the Bureau may                    increase the proportion of market                       in a market in which some depository
                                                  promulgate such rules in connection                     activity that the Bureau could supervise                institutions and credit unions with less
                                                  with transactions for the leases that fall              while potentially exposing a greater                    than $10 billion in assets may be active.
                                                  under § 1001.2. Such a rule may impose                  number of nonbank covered persons to                    For example, if nonbanks’ price of credit
                                                  costs on covered persons or service                     the costs listed above. However, the                    for loan acquisitions or leases were to
                                                  providers. It is not possible to identify               total direct costs for actual supervisory               increase, or similarly were the
                                                  with any greater specificity here the                   activity might not change substantially                 compensation for selling those same
                                                  potential costs to covered persons or                   because the Bureau conducts exams                       products to decrease due to increased
                                                  service providers of any such                           based on risk and would not necessarily                 costs related to supervision, then
                                                  hypothetical future rulemaking. The                     examine more or fewer entities if the                   depository institutions or credit unions
                                                  Bureau notes, however, that it would                    rule’s coverage were broader or                         of any size might benefit by the relative
                                                  consider the benefits, costs, and impacts               narrower.159                                            change in competitors’ costs.
                                                  of any such rulemaking as part of its                      The Bureau also considered various
                                                  analysis under section 1022(b)(2) for                   other criteria for assessing larger-                    2. Impact of the Provisions on Consumer
                                                  that rulemaking.158                                     participant status, including dollar                    Access to Credit and on Consumers in
                                                                                                          volume of originations and total unpaid                 Rural Areas
                                                  listed under section 1002(15)(A) of the Dodd-Frank                                                                 Because the rule applies uniformly to
                                                  Act.
                                                                                                          principal balances. Calculating either of
                                                     158 Section 1001.2 would also impose costs on        these metrics might be more involved                    automobile financing transactions of
                                                  covered persons by expanding the scope of certain       than calculating the number of                          both rural and non-rural consumers, the
                                                  other Bureau authorities under title X of the Dodd-     originations for a given nonbank entity.                rule should not have a unique impact on
                                                  Frank Act. Specifically, § 1001.2 will expand the       If so, then a given entity might face                   rural consumers. The Bureau is not
                                                  Bureau’s rulemaking authority under section 1032
                                                  of the Dodd-Frank Act, which authorizes the             greater costs for evaluating or disputing               aware of any evidence suggesting that
                                                  Bureau to prescribe rules to ensure that the features   whether it qualified as a larger                        rural consumers have been
                                                  of any consumer financial product or service are        participant should the occasion to do so                disproportionately harmed by nonbank
                                                  fully, accurately, and effectively disclosed to
                                                  consumers in a manner that permits consumers to
                                                                                                          arise. Additionally, as some nonbank                    entities’ failure to comply with Federal
                                                  understand the costs, benefits, and risks associated    entities might, for example, specialize in              consumer financial law. The Bureau
                                                  with the product or service. In addition, § 1001.2      sectors featuring higher average loan                   requested comments that provide
                                                  will expand the scope of the Bureau’s authority         amounts or different prepayment and                     information related to how automobile
                                                  under section 1022(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act to
                                                  ‘‘monitor for risks to consumers in the offering or     default rates than others, using aggregate              financing transactions affect rural
                                                  provision of consumer financial products or             annual originations more directly                       consumers, but did not receive any.
                                                  services, including developments in markets for         captures the number of consumers
                                                  such products or services,’’ and the scope of the                                                               VII. Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                                                                                          impacted by the Final Rule. For each
                                                  Bureau’s authority under section 1033 of the Dodd-
                                                  Frank Act, to prescribe rules for covered persons       criterion, the Bureau expects that it                     The Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                                  with respect to consumer rights to access               could choose a suitable threshold for                   (RFA),160 as amended by the Small
                                                  information concerning consumer financial               which the set of larger participants,                   Business Regulatory Enforcement
                                                  products or services that the consumer receives                                                                 Fairness Act of 1996,161 requires each
                                                                                                          among those entities participating in the
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                                                  from such persons. As with respect to section
                                                  1031(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act, it is not possible for   market today, would be similar to those                 agency to consider the potential impact
                                                  the Bureau to identify with specificity here the        expected to qualify under the Final                     of its regulations on small entities,
                                                  costs to covered persons that may result from the       Rule. Consequently, the costs, benefits,                including small businesses, small
                                                  Bureau’s potential future exercise of these                                                                     governmental units, and small not-for-
                                                  authorities. The Bureau, however, notes that it
                                                                                                          and impacts of this Final Rule should
                                                  would consider the benefits, costs, and impacts of
                                                                                                            159 Further discussion of comments on the               160 Public
                                                                                                                                                                             Law 96–354, 94 Stat. 1164 (1980).
                                                  any rulemakings under sections 1032 or 1033 of the
                                                  Dodd-Frank Act as part of the section 1022(b)(2)        threshold level is provided in the section-by-section     161 Public
                                                                                                                                                                             Law 104–121, section 241, 110 Stat.
                                                  analysis for such rulemakings.                          analysis of § 1090.108(b) above.                        847, 864–65 (1996).



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                                                  37524               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  profit organizations.162 The RFA defines                businesses only if their assets are below               securitization filings, and additional
                                                  a ‘‘small business’’ as a business that                 $550 million.166 The final definition of                market research to estimate annual
                                                  meets the size standard developed by                    larger participants of the automobile                   receipts for each of the potential larger
                                                  the Small Business Administration                       financing market applies only to                        participants.169 Based on this review, it
                                                  (SBA) pursuant to the Small Business                    nonbank entities, so it will have no                    appears that few, if any, of the potential
                                                  Act.163                                                 significant impact on depository                        larger participants identified by the
                                                     The RFA generally requires an agency                 institutions or credit unions of any size.              Bureau’s analysis meet the small
                                                  to conduct an initial regulatory                        The final definition of the term financial              business threshold classification.170
                                                  flexibility analysis (IRFA) of any                      product or service to include certain                      Considering the limited public
                                                  proposed rule subject to notice-and-                    automobile leases will have little impact               information available for several of the
                                                  comment rulemaking requirements,                        on compliance and supervision costs for                 smallest potential larger participants,
                                                  unless the agency certifies that the                    insured depositories and credit unions.                 the Bureau requested comment on the
                                                  proposed rule would not have a                          The leasing activities covered under                    impact of the Proposed Rule on small
                                                  significant economic impact on a                        § 1001.2 will become subject to the                     nonbank entities and solicited data that
                                                  substantial number of small entities.164                UDAAP prohibition under section 1031                    may be relevant to this analysis. A law
                                                  The Bureau also is subject to certain                   of the Dodd-Frank Act. Although the                     firm that represents financial services
                                                  additional procedures under the RFA                     two are not co-extensive, as discussed                  entities stated that one of its clients,
                                                  involving the convening of a panel to                   above, a similar prohibition on UDAP in                 which the law firm did not name, had
                                                  consult with small entity                               or affecting commerce under section 5                   approximately $30 million in total
                                                  representatives prior to proposing a rule               of the FTC Act already applies to these                 receipts during fiscal year 2014, while
                                                  for which an IRFA is required.165                       activities. Similarly, small banks are                  generating sufficient origination volume
                                                     The undersigned certified that the                   already subject to supervision for                      to constitute a larger participant under
                                                  Proposed Rule, if adopted, would not                    compliance with section 5 of the FTC                    the Proposed Rule. The Bureau
                                                  have a significant economic impact on                   Act, as well as with the enumerated                     acknowledges that it is possible that a
                                                  a substantial number of small entities                  consumer laws. In addition, most small                  few firms that qualify as a small
                                                  and that an IRFA was therefore not                      banks have a very low share of leases                   business could also meet the threshold
                                                  required. The Final Rule adopts the                     relative to loans, and most of this                     as a larger participant due to small loan
                                                  Proposed Rule with some modifications                   leasing activity already qualifies as a                 amounts, short term lengths, or other
                                                  that do not lead to a different                         financial product or service under                      factors. However, the Bureau’s analysis
                                                  conclusion. Therefore, a final regulatory               section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-                    indicates that this will not be the case
                                                  flexibility analysis is not required.                   Frank Act. Accordingly, the Bureau                      for a substantial number of small
                                                     The Final Rule defines a class of                    estimates that very few, if any, small                  entities. In order to qualify as a small
                                                  nonbank covered persons as larger                       banks will experience a significant                     business and a larger participant
                                                  participants of the automobile financing                impact due to the Final Rule’s change to                according to the Bureau’s estimates, an
                                                  market and thereby authorizes the                       the definition of a financial product or
                                                  Bureau to undertake supervisory                         service.                                                   169 To generate these estimates, the Bureau first

                                                  activities with respect to those nonbank                   Regarding nonbank entities, the Final                calculated an estimate of the average stream of
                                                  covered persons. The Final Rule also                                                                            interest income the 34 potential larger participants
                                                                                                          Rule adopts a threshold for larger-                     identified by the Bureau would receive over a 12-
                                                  defines the term ‘‘financial product[s] or              participant status of at least 10,000                   month period for all loans originated in 2013, as
                                                  service[s]’’ to include automobile leases               aggregate annual originations.167 Under                 well as the income each entity would receive
                                                  that (1) meet the requirements of leases                the size standard for the most relevant                 during the same period for loans made in previous
                                                  authorized under section 108 of CEBA,                                                                           years if the number of originations were identical
                                                                                                          SBA classification, i.e., North American                to 2013 levels. This initial calculation excludes
                                                  as implemented by 12 CFR part 23, and                   Industry Classification System (NAICS)                  leases that also generate income. It also assumes no
                                                  are thus permissible for national banks                 code 522220, an entity engaged in                       prepayment, which would increase receipts; no
                                                  to offer or provide; and (2) are not                    automobile financing is a small business                defaults, which would decrease receipts; and no
                                                  currently defined as a financial product                                                                        other income generated from any other sources. The
                                                                                                          if its annual receipts are at or below                  Bureau then analyzed public financial statements to
                                                  or service under section 1002(15)(A)(ii)                $38.5 million.168 The Bureau solicited                  verify any potential outliers. Using this
                                                  of the Dodd-Frank Act. The Final Rule                   comments on whether NAICS code                          methodology, the Bureau found five potential larger
                                                  will not affect a substantial number of                 522220 or any other NAICS code is                       participants with receipts from loans in 2013 that
                                                  small businesses.                                                                                               it estimated would fall below the current $38.5
                                                                                                          more appropriate for this market, but                   million SBA size standard. Further market research
                                                     Regarding insured depositories and                   did not receive any. The Bureau used                    indicated that four of these five remaining entities
                                                  credit unions, these entities are small                 AutoCount data for 2013 combined with                   likely had sufficient additional revenue from leases,
                                                                                                          public financial statements,                            affiliate activity, or other sources such that their
                                                     162 5 U.S.C. 601–12. The term ‘‘‘small                                                                       2013 annual receipts also exceed the relevant size
                                                  organization’ means any not-for-profit enterprise                                                               standard. Upon further review of information
                                                                                                            166 13  CFR 121.201.
                                                  which is independently owned and operated and is                                                                considered at the proposal stage and additional
                                                                                                            167 As  noted above, if a nonbank covered person      market research, the Bureau was not able to
                                                  not dominant in its field, unless an agency
                                                  establishes [an alternative definition after notice     meets the larger-participant test, it would remain a    determine whether the final remaining entity would
                                                  and comment].’’ 5 U.S.C. 601(4). The term ‘‘ ‘small     larger participant until two years from the first day   have met the relevant size standard in 2013.
                                                  governmental jurisdiction’ means governments of         of the tax year in which it last met the larger-           170 The Bureau’s analysis concluding that few, if

                                                  cities, counties, towns, townships, villages, school    participant test. 12 CFR 1090.102.                      any, potential larger participants meet the relevant
                                                  districts, or special districts, with a population of      168 13 CFR 121.201 (NAICS code 522220) (as           size standard is described in note 169 above. The
                                                  less than fifty thousand, unless an agency              amended by 79 FR 33647, 33655 (June 12, 2014)).         Bureau also believes that it is unlikely that any
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                                                  establishes [an alternative definition after notice     The Bureau believes that larger participants in the     small entities would be rendered larger participants
                                                  and comment].’’ Id. at 601(5). The Bureau is not        nonbank automobile financing market are likely to       of the consumer reporting or consumer debt
                                                  currently aware of any small governmental units or      be classified under NAICS code 522220, sales            collection markets by the Final Rule’s technical
                                                  small not-for-profit organizations to which the Final   financing. NAICS lists ‘‘automobile financing’’ and     amendments to §§ 1090.104(a) and 1090.105(a),
                                                  Rule would apply.                                       ‘‘automobile finance leasing companies’’ as index       since very few entities in those markets are likely
                                                     163 5 U.S.C. 601(3). The Bureau may establish an
                                                                                                          entries corresponding to this code. See U.S. Census     to have annual receipts that are so close to the
                                                  alternative definition after consultation with SBA      Bureau, North American Industry Classification          larger-participant threshold that inclusion of
                                                  and an opportunity for public comment. Id.              System, 2012 NAICS Definition 522220 Sales              additional receipts from a formerly affiliated
                                                     164 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
                                                                                                          Financing, available at http://www.census.gov/cgi-      company would affect their larger-participant
                                                     165 5 U.S.C. 609.                                    bin/sssd/naics/naicsrch.                                status.



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                    37525

                                                  entity would need to maintain a                         compliance with the enumerated                          supervise service providers to nonbank
                                                  portfolio featuring a total number of                   consumer laws, including the CLA.173                    covered persons encompassed by
                                                  originations at or close to the threshold,                 Additionally, if a larger participant                section 1024(a)(1), which includes
                                                  with the typical loan featuring some                    qualifies as a small business under the                 larger participants. Because the Final
                                                  combination of below average rate, term                 $38.5 million SBA size standard, the                    Rule does not specifically address
                                                  length, and amount financed.171 The                     Final Rule will not result in a                         service providers, effects on service
                                                  Bureau therefore maintains its estimate                 ‘‘significant impact’’ on the entity. The               providers need not be discussed for
                                                  that very few, if any, small businesses                 Final Rule will not itself impose any                   purposes of this RFA analysis. Even
                                                                                                          business conduct obligations beyond                     were such effects relevant, the Bureau
                                                  will be classified as larger participants
                                                                                                          those described above regarding the                     believes that it would be very unlikely
                                                  of the automobile financing market
                                                                                                          automobile leases defined under the                     that any supervisory activities with
                                                  under the Final Rule.172
                                                                                                          Final Rule as financial products or                     respect to the service providers to the
                                                     Section 1001.2(a) will have little                   services. Furthermore, the Bureau’s                     potential larger participants of the
                                                  impact on small nonbank entities                        supervisory activity will have very little              market for automobile financing would
                                                  engaged in automobile leasing. As                       economic impact on a supervised entity.                 result in a significant economic impact
                                                  mentioned above, the vast majority of                   When and how often the Bureau will in                   on a substantial number of small
                                                  automobile leases likely already qualify                fact engage in supervisory activity, such               entities.176
                                                  as a financial product or service under                 as an examination, with respect to a                      Accordingly, the undersigned certifies
                                                  section 1002(15)(A)(ii) of the Dodd-                    larger participant (and, if so, the extent              that the Final Rule will not have a
                                                  Frank Act, and so the change in                         of such activity) will depend on a                      significant economic impact on a
                                                  definition is unlikely to affect the larger-            number of considerations, including the                 substantial number of small entities.
                                                  participant status of any small business.               Bureau’s allocation of resources and the
                                                                                                                                                                  VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act
                                                  With respect to costs related to                        application of the statutory factors set
                                                                                                          forth in section 1024(b)(2) of the Dodd-                  The Bureau has determined that this
                                                  compliance, under § 1001.2 small
                                                                                                          Frank Act. Given the Bureau’s finite                    Final Rule does not impose any new
                                                  nonbanks will have to comply with the
                                                                                                          supervisory resources, and the range of                 recordkeeping, reporting, or disclosure
                                                  UDAAP prohibition under section 1031                                                                            requirements on covered entities or
                                                  of the Dodd-Frank Act when providing                    industries over which it has supervisory
                                                                                                          responsibility for consumer financial                   members of the public that would
                                                  automobile leases covered under                                                                                 constitute collections of information
                                                                                                          protection, when and how often a given
                                                  § 1001.2. However, as with small banks,                                                                         requiring approval under the Paperwork
                                                                                                          a larger participant will be supervised is
                                                  small nonbanks that provide automobile                  uncertain. Moreover, if supervisory                     Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq.
                                                  leases must already comply with similar                 activity occurs, the costs that will result
                                                  UDAP prohibitions under section 5 of                                                                            List of Subjects in 12 CFR Parts 1001
                                                                                                          from such activity are expected to be                   and 1090
                                                  the FTC Act as well as the applicable                   minimal in relation to the overall
                                                  enumerated consumer laws, such as the                   activities of a larger participant.174                    Consumer protection, Credit.
                                                  CLA. Additionally, as explained above,                  Hence, the Final Rule will not have a                   Authority and Issuance
                                                  there are likely to be few, if any, small               significant economic impact on a
                                                  nonbank businesses in the automobile                                                                              For the reasons set forth in the
                                                                                                          substantial number of small entities
                                                  financing market that will be subject to                                                                        preamble, the Bureau adds 12 CFR part
                                                                                                          because the Final Rule will not impose
                                                  supervision irrespective of § 1001.2. To                                                                        1001 and amends 12 CFR part 1090, to
                                                                                                          any significant business conduct
                                                                                                                                                                  read as follows:
                                                  the extent that any small nonbanks are                  obligations on the defined class of larger
                                                  larger participants under the Final Rule,               participants and the cost of supervisory                   176 As noted above, according to the 2007
                                                  the Bureau believes that § 1001.2 will                  activities will be nominal in relation to               Economic Census, more than 2,000 small firms are
                                                  expand the scope of leasing activities of               the revenue of a larger participant                     encompassed under NAICS code 522220, and the
                                                  such entities subject to supervision for                whose annual revenue fell at or below                   number of those firms that are service providers for
                                                                                                                                                                  the approximately 34 potential larger participants
                                                  compliance with section 1031. The                       the $38.5 million SBA size standard.175                 and their affiliated companies will be only a small
                                                  economic impact of this expansion in                       Finally, section 1024(e) of the Dodd-                fraction of that number. Other service providers
                                                  scope will not be significant. Notably,                 Frank Act authorizes the Bureau to                      may be classified under NAICS code 522320 for
                                                                                                                                                                  financial transactions processing, reserve, and
                                                  even absent § 1001.2, all leasing                          173 As noted above, with respect to the              clearing house activities, which also includes more
                                                  activities of such entities would be                    enumerated consumer laws, the scope of the              than 2,000 small firms. U.S. Census Bureau,
                                                  subject to supervision by the Bureau for                Bureau’s authority is defined by the scope of those     American FactFinder Database, Estab and Firm
                                                                                                          laws, not by the activities listed under section        Size: Summary Statistics by Revenue Size of
                                                                                                          1002(15)(A) of the Dodd-Frank Act.                      Establishments for the United States: 2007,
                                                    171 For example, an institution with exactly
                                                                                                             174 As noted in part VI.B.2.b above, the Bureau      available at http://factfinder2.census.gov/bkmk/
                                                  10,000 aggregate annual originations at an interest                                                             table/1.0/en/ECN/2007_US/52SSSZ4//naics∼
                                                                                                          estimates that the cost of participation in an
                                                  rate and amount financed at the median among            examination would be less than one-tenth of 1           522320. Still other service providers are likely to be
                                                  nonbank participants in 2013, along with a loan         percent of the total revenue generated from one         considered in other NAICS codes corresponding to
                                                  term in the fifteenth percentile, would still be        year’s originations for an entity at the threshold of   the service provider’s primary business activities.
                                                  estimated to generate receipts above the current        10,000 aggregate annual originations. Even if the       As noted above with respect to larger participants
                                                  $38.5 million SBA size standard.                        unusually low amount financed suggested by a            themselves, the frequency and duration of
                                                    172 According to the 2007 Economic Census, more                                                               examinations that would be conducted at any
                                                                                                          commenter is used in the analysis, the Bureau’s
                                                  than 2,000 small firms are encompassed under the        estimates suggest that an examination would still       particular service provider would depend on a
                                                  most applicable NAICS code (522220). U.S. Census        require less than one-half of 1 percent of total        variety of factors. However, it is implausible that in
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                                                  Bureau, American FactFinder Database, Estab and         revenue from one year’s originations for an entity      any given year the Bureau would conduct
                                                  Firm Size: Summary Statistics by Revenue Size of        at the threshold of 10,000 aggregate annual             examinations of a substantial number of the more
                                                  Establishments for the United States: 2007,             originations.                                           than 4,000 small firms in NAICS code 522220 and
                                                  available at http://factfinder2.census.gov/faces/          175 Because the Final Rule aggregates the            522320, or the small firm service providers that
                                                  tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?pid=          activities of affiliated companies in part by adding    happen to be in any other NAICS code. Moreover,
                                                  ECN_2007_US_52SSSZ4&prodType=table. Thus,               together annual originations, two companies that        the impact of supervisory activities, including
                                                  even if a few small firms were classified as larger     are small businesses might, together, have aggregate    examinations, at such small firm service providers
                                                  participants, they would constitute less than 1         annual originations of 10,000 or more. The Bureau       can be expected to be less, given the Bureau’s
                                                  percent of the small firms in the industry under that   anticipates no more than a very few such cases, if      exercise of its discretion in supervision, than at the
                                                  NAICS code.                                             any, in the automobile financing market.                larger participants themselves.



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                                                  37526                Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  ■   1. Add part 1001 to read as follows:                  Subpart B—Markets                                         (A) Annual originations means the
                                                                                                                                                                   sum of the following transactions for the
                                                  PART 1001—FINANCIAL PRODUCTS                              ■ 4. Section 1090.104 is amended by                    preceding calendar year:
                                                  OR SERVICES                                               revising paragraph (iii)(D) of the                        (1) Credit granted for the purpose of
                                                                                                            definition of ‘‘Annual receipts’’ to read              purchasing an automobile;
                                                  Sec.
                                                  1001.1     Authority and purpose.                         as follows:                                               (2) Automobile leases;
                                                  1001.2     Definitions.
                                                                                                                                                                      (3) Refinancings of obligations
                                                                                                            § 1090.104    Consumer reporting market.               described in (i)(A)(1) of this definition
                                                    Authority: 12 U.S.C. 5481(15)(A)(xi); and                  (a) * * *                                           that are secured by an automobile, and
                                                  12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(1).                                                                                            any subsequent refinancings thereof that
                                                                                                               Annual receipts* * *
                                                  § 1001.1    Authority and purpose.                           (iii) * * *                                         are secured by an automobile; and
                                                                                                               (D) The annual receipts of a formerly                  (4) Purchases or acquisitions of
                                                     Under 12 U.S.C. 5481(15)(A)(xi), the
                                                                                                            affiliated company are not included in                 obligations described in (i)(A)(1), (2), or
                                                  Bureau is authorized to define certain
                                                                                                            the annual receipts of a nonbank                       (3) of this definition.
                                                  financial products or services for
                                                                                                                                                                      (B) The term annual originations does
                                                  purposes of title X of the Dodd-Frank                     covered person for purposes of this
                                                                                                                                                                   not include:
                                                  Act, Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376                   section, if the affiliation ceased before
                                                                                                                                                                      (1) Investments in asset-backed
                                                  (2010) (Title X) in addition to those                     the applicable period of measurement as
                                                                                                                                                                   securities; and
                                                  defined in 12 U.S.C. 5481(15)(A)(i)–(x).                  set forth in paragraph (ii) of this                       (2) Purchases or acquisitions of
                                                  The purpose of this part is to implement                  definition. The annual receipts of a                   obligations by a special purpose entity
                                                  that authority.                                           nonbank covered person and its                         established for the purpose of
                                                                                                            formerly affiliated company are                        facilitating asset-backed securities
                                                  § 1001.2    Definitions.                                  aggregated for the entire period of
                                                     Except as otherwise provided in Title                                                                         transactions if the purchases or
                                                                                                            measurement if the affiliation ceased                  acquisitions are made for the purpose of
                                                  X, in addition to the definitions set forth               during the applicable period of
                                                  in 12 U.S.C. 5481(15)(A)(i)–(x), the term                                                                        facilitating an asset-backed securities
                                                                                                            measurement as set forth in paragraph                  transaction.
                                                  ‘‘financial product or service’’ means,                   (ii) of this definition.                                  (ii) Aggregating the annual
                                                  for purposes of Title X:                                  *       *     *    *      *                            originations of affiliated companies.
                                                     (a) Extending or brokering leases of an
                                                                                                            ■ 5. Section 1090.105 is amended by                    The annual originations of a nonbank
                                                  automobile, as automobile is defined by
                                                                                                            revising paragraph (iii)(D) of the                     covered person must be aggregated with
                                                  12 CFR 1090.108(a), where the lease:
                                                                                                            definition of ‘‘Annual receipts’’ to read              the annual originations of any person
                                                     (1) Qualifies as a full-payout lease and
                                                                                                            as follows:                                            (other than an entity described in
                                                  a net lease, as provided by 12 CFR
                                                                                                                                                                   paragraph (c) of this section) that was an
                                                  23.3(a), and has an initial term of not                   § 1090.105    Consumer debt collection                 affiliated company of the nonbank
                                                  less than 90 days, as provided by 12                      market.                                                covered person at any time during the
                                                  CFR 23.11; and
                                                                                                               (a) * * *                                           preceding calendar year. The annual
                                                     (2) Is not a financial product or
                                                                                                               Annual receipts* * *                                originations of a nonbank covered
                                                  service under 12 U.S.C. 5481(15)(A)(ii).
                                                                                                               (iii) * * *                                         person and its affiliated companies are
                                                  PART 1090—DEFINING LARGER                                    (D) The annual receipts of a formerly               aggregated for the entire preceding
                                                  PARTICIPANTS OF CERTAIN                                   affiliated company are not included in                 calendar year, even if the affiliation did
                                                  CONSUMER FINANCIAL PRODUCT                                the annual receipts of a nonbank                       not exist for the entire calendar year.
                                                  AND SERVICE MARKETS                                       covered person for purposes of this                       Automobile means any self-propelled
                                                                                                            section if the affiliation ceased before               vehicle primarily used for personal,
                                                  ■ 2. The authority citation for part 1090                 the applicable period of measurement as                family, or household purposes for on-
                                                  continues to read as follows:                             set forth in paragraph (ii) of this                    road transportation. The term does not
                                                    Authority: 12 U.S.C. 5514(a)(1)(B); 12                  definition. The annual receipts of a                   include motor homes, recreational
                                                  U.S.C. 5514(a)(2); 12 U.S.C. 5514(b)(7)(A);               nonbank covered person and its                         vehicles (RVs), golf carts, and motor
                                                  and 12 U.S.C. 5512(b)(1).                                 formerly affiliated company are                        scooters.
                                                                                                            aggregated for the entire period of                       Automobile financing means
                                                  Subpart A—General                                         measurement if the affiliation ceased                  providing or engaging in the
                                                                                                            during the applicable period of                        transactions identified under the term
                                                  ■ 3. Section 1090.101 is amended by                       measurement as set forth in paragraph                  ‘‘Annual originations’’ as defined in this
                                                  revising the definition of ‘‘Nonbank                      (ii) of this definition.                               section.
                                                  covered person’’ to read as follows:                                                                                Automobile lease means a lease that is
                                                                                                            *       *     *    *     *                             for the use of an automobile, as defined
                                                  § 1090.101       Definitions.                             ■ 6. Add § 1090.108 to subpart B to read               in this section, and that meets the
                                                  *      *    *      *     *                                as follows:                                            requirements of 12 U.S.C.
                                                     Nonbank covered person means,                                                                                 5481(15)(A)(ii) or 12 CFR 1001.2(a).
                                                  except for persons described in 12                        § 1090.108    Automobile financing market.
                                                                                                                                                                      Refinancing has the same meaning as
                                                  U.S.C. 5515(a) and 5516(a):                                 (a) Market-related definitions. As used              in 12 CFR 1026.20(a), except that the
                                                     (1) Any person that engages in                         in this section:                                       nonbank covered person need not be the
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                                                  offering or providing a consumer                            Aggregate annual originations means                  original creditor or a holder or servicer
                                                  financial product or service; and                         the sum of the number of annual                        of the original obligation.
                                                     (2) Any affiliate of a person that                     originations of a nonbank covered                         (b) Test to define larger participants.
                                                  engages in offering or providing a                        person and the number of annual                        Except as provided in paragraph (c) of
                                                  consumer financial product or service if                  originations of each of the nonbank                    this section, a nonbank covered person
                                                  such affiliate acts as a service provider                 covered person’s affiliated companies,                 that engages in automobile financing is
                                                  to such person.                                           calculated as follows:                                 a larger participant of the automobile
                                                  *      *    *      *     *                                  (i) Annual Originations.                             financing market if the person has at


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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 125 / Tuesday, June 30, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                                37527

                                                  least 10,000 aggregate annual                              (2) Persons who meet the definition in                Dated: June 5, 2015.
                                                  originations.                                           12 U.S.C. 5519(f)(2); are identified in 12             Richard Cordray,
                                                    (c) Exclusion for dealers. The                        U.S.C. 5519(b)(2); and are                             Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial
                                                  following entities do not qualify as                    predominantly engaged in the sale and                  Protection.
                                                  larger participants under this section:                 servicing of motor vehicles (as that term              [FR Doc. 2015–14630 Filed 6–29–15; 8:45 am]
                                                    (1) Persons excluded from the                         is defined in 12 U.S.C. 5519(f)(1)), the               BILLING CODE 4810–AM–P
                                                  Bureau’s authority by 12 U.S.C. 5519;                   leasing and servicing of motor vehicles,
                                                  and                                                     or both.
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Document Created: 2018-02-22 11:17:16
Document Modified: 2018-02-22 11:17:16
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesEffective August 31, 2015.
ContactDania Ayoubi or Jolina Cuaresma, Counsels; or Amanda Quester, Senior Counsel, Office of Regulations, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552, at (202) 435-7700.
FR Citation80 FR 37496 
RIN Number3170-AA46
CFR Citation12 CFR 1001
12 CFR 1090
CFR AssociatedConsumer Protection and Credit

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