82_FR_48904 82 FR 48703 - Supervisory Highlights: Summer 2017

82 FR 48703 - Supervisory Highlights: Summer 2017

BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION

Federal Register Volume 82, Issue 201 (October 19, 2017)

Page Range48703-48714
FR Document2017-22700

The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (Bureau or CFPB) is issuing its fifteenth edition of its Supervisory Highlights. In this issue of Supervisory Highlights, we report examination findings in the areas of auto finance lending; credit card account management; debt collection; deposits; mortgage servicing; mortgage origination; service providers; short-term, small-dollar lending; remittances; and fair lending. As in past editions, this report includes information on the Bureau's use of its supervisory and enforcement authority, recently released examination procedures, and Bureau guidance.

Federal Register, Volume 82 Issue 201 (Thursday, October 19, 2017)
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 201 (Thursday, October 19, 2017)]
[Notices]
[Pages 48703-48714]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2017-22700]


=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION


Supervisory Highlights: Summer 2017

AGENCY: Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.

ACTION: Supervisory Highlights; notice.

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

SUMMARY: The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (Bureau or CFPB) 
is issuing its fifteenth edition of its Supervisory Highlights. In this 
issue of Supervisory Highlights, we report examination findings in the 
areas of auto finance lending; credit card account management; debt 
collection; deposits; mortgage servicing; mortgage origination; service 
providers; short-term, small-dollar lending; remittances; and fair 
lending. As in past editions, this report includes information on the 
Bureau's use of its supervisory and enforcement authority, recently 
released examination procedures, and Bureau guidance.

DATES: The Bureau released this edition of the Supervisory Highlights 
on its Web site on September 12, 2017.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Adetola Adenuga, Consumer Financial 
Protection Analyst, Office of Supervision Policy, 1700 G Street NW., 
20552, (202) 435-9373.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

1. Introduction

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is committed to a consumer 
financial marketplace that is fair, transparent, and competitive, and 
that works for all consumers. The Bureau supervises both bank and 
nonbank institutions to help meet this goal. The findings reported here 
reflect information obtained from supervisory activities that were 
generally completed between January 2017 and June 2017 (unless 
otherwise stated). In some instances, not all corrective actions, 
including through enforcement, have been completed at the time of this 
report's publication.
    CFPB supervisory reviews and examinations typically involve 
assessing a supervised entity's compliance management system and 
compliance with Federal consumer financial laws. When Supervision 
determines that a supervised entity has violated a statute or 
regulation, Supervision directs the entity to undertake appropriate 
corrective measures, such as implementing new policies, changing 
written communications, improving training or monitoring, or otherwise 
changing conduct to ensure the illegal practices cease. Supervision 
also directs the entity to send refunds to consumers, pay restitution, 
credit borrower accounts, or take other remedial actions as 
appropriate.
    Recent supervisory resolutions have resulted in total restitution 
payments of approximately $14 million to more than 104,000 consumers 
during the review period. In addition to these nonpublic supervisory 
activities, the Bureau also resolves violations using public 
enforcement actions.\1\ CFPB's recent supervisory activities have 
either led to or supported two recent public enforcement actions, 
resulting in about $1.15 million in consumer remediation and an 
additional $1.75 million in civil money penalties.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ In 2016, about 70 percent of CFPB examinations did not raise 
issues that led the Bureau to consider opening an enforcement 
investigation. Instead, these matters were resolved with nonpublic 
agreements by the company to quickly fix any problems and provide 
appropriate relief to consumers. See infra pp. 37-39 (discussing 
these figures). See also https://www.consumerfinance.gov/about-us/blog/how-we-keep-you-safe-consumer-financial-marketplace/.
_____________________________________-

    Please submit any questions or comments to 
[email protected].

2. Supervisory Observations

    Recent supervisory observations are reported in the areas of 
automobile loan servicing, credit card account management, debt 
collection, deposits, mortgage origination, mortgage servicing, 
remittances, service provider program, short-term small-dollar lending, 
and fair lending.

2.1 Automobile Loan Servicing

    In the Bureau's recent auto servicing examinations, examiners 
reviewed how servicers are overseeing repossession agents and how 
repossessions are conducted. Through that work, examiners identified an 
unfair practice relating to repossession at one or more automobile 
servicers.

2.1.1 Repossessions of Borrower Vehicles After Borrowers Make Catch-Up 
Payments or Enter Agreements To Avoid Repossession

    To secure an auto loan, borrowers give creditors a security 
interest in their vehicles. When a borrower defaults, a creditor can 
exercise its rights under the contract and repossess the secured 
vehicle. Many auto servicers provide options to borrowers to avoid 
repossession once a loan is delinquent or in default. Servicers may 
have formal extension agreements that allow borrowers to forbear 
payments for a certain period of time or may cancel a repossession 
order once a borrower makes a payment.
    In one or more recent exams, examiners found that one or more 
entities were repossessing vehicles after the repossession was supposed 
to be cancelled. In these instances, the servicer(s) wrongfully coded 
the account as remaining delinquent, customer service representatives 
did not timely cancel the repossession order after borrowers made 
sufficient payments or entered an agreement with the servicer to avoid 
repossession, or repossession agents had not checked the documentation 
before repossessing and thus did not learn that the repossession had 
been cancelled.
    Bureau examiners concluded that it was an unfair practice to 
repossess vehicles where borrowers had brought the account current, 
entered an agreement with the servicer to avoid repossession, or made a 
payment sufficient to stop the repossession, where reasonably 
practicable given the timing of the borrower's action.
    Supervision directed the servicer(s) to stop the practice. In 
response to our examiners' findings, the servicer(s) informed 
Supervision that the affected consumers were refunded the

[[Page 48704]]

repossession fees. The servicer(s) also implemented a system that 
requires repossession agents to verify that the repossession order is 
still active immediately prior to repossessing the vehicle, for 
example, through a specially designed mobile application for that 
purpose.

2.2 Credit Card Account Management

    Supervision reviewed the credit card account management operations 
of one or more supervised entities over the past few months. Typically, 
examiners assess advertising and marketing, account origination, 
account servicing, payments and periodic statements, dispute 
resolution, and the marketing, sale and servicing of credit card add-on 
products. Bureau examiners found that supervised entities generally are 
complying with Federal consumer financial laws. However, in one or more 
recent examinations, examiners observed that one or more entities 
violated Regulation Z and committed the deceptive practices as 
described below.

2.2.1 Failure To Provide Required Tabular Account-Opening Disclosures

    Examiners observed that one or more credit card issuers violated 
Regulation Z by failing to provide the requisite tabular disclosures 
with the account opening materials provided to numerous cardholders.\2\ 
Specifically, the account-opening disclosures were missing the table 
set forth in Appendix G-17 of Regulation Z, resulting in consumers 
receiving incomplete disclosures.\3\ At one or more entities, 
management attributed this violation to an employee's incorrect entry 
of source code for printing disclosures, controls that were not 
appropriately structured to detect errors, and the entity's lack of an 
independent disclosure review. After acknowledging the violations with 
examiners, one or more entities initiated a review to ensure that the 
errors were limited, the root causes were further identified, and 
corrective actions were developed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \2\ 12 CFR 1026.6(b)(1)-(2).
    \3\ Appendix G to 12 CFR part 1026, Form G-17(A)--Account-
Opening Model Form.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2.2.2 Deceptive Misrepresentations to Consumers Regarding Costs and 
Availability of Pay-by-Phone Options

    During one or more examinations, credit card companies provided 
consumers with the opportunity to pay their credit card bills by mail, 
online, or in person free of charge or by using one of two pay-by-phone 
services. The first pay-by-phone service permitted consumers to make an 
expedited payment for a predetermined fee, credited the same day or the 
following business day. The second pay-by-phone service allowed 
consumers to arrange future payments options free of charge to be 
credited to the consumer's account as soon as two days after the call. 
Customer service representatives were given a call script to read to 
consumers describing both the fee-based expedited payment option and 
the free future payments option.
    A review of calls between customer service representatives and 
consumers revealed that in one or more examinations representatives did 
not follow the script in its entirety and often read the script for 
expedited payments only. Typically, customer service representatives 
did not inform consumers of any free payment options until after the 
consumer authorized the expedited phone payment and the customer 
service representatives did not inform consumers that the payment could 
be paid free of charge by phone by not expediting when the payment was 
credited. This practice resulted in consumers incurring fees for 
expedited payments that could have been avoided. Supervision found this 
practice was deceptive because these customer service representatives 
made an implied misrepresentation to consumers paying over the phone 
that all of the pay-by-phone services carried a fee.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \4\ 12 U.S.C. 5536(a)(1)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Supervision directed the entity(ies) to establish effective 
controls over communications to consumers, ensure representatives 
informed consumers of free payment options prior to authorization of an 
expedited phone payment, and reimburse fees to consumers impacted by 
the deceptive representations about the costs and availability of pay-
by-phone options.

2.2.3 Deceptive Misrepresentations to Consumers Concerning Benefits and 
Terms of Credit Card Add-On Products

    One or more entities provided its customer service representatives 
with call scripts that contained basic information about debt 
cancellation credit card add-on product(s). A review of calls by 
examiners indicated that customer service representatives often did not 
read the entire script, and in some instances, did not read the script 
at all. In one or more instances, the customer service representatives 
did not correct consumers' stated erroneous assumptions concerning the 
benefits of the product(s), misrepresented the potential fees, and 
assured consumer(s) that the product(s) would avoid the accrual of late 
fees or other penalties.
    Supervision found such practices constituted deceptive marketing 
and sales practices by misrepresenting product features, such as the 
cost and coverage of the optional debt cancellation add-on product.\5\ 
Supervision directed these entities to establish effective controls 
over marketing and sales practices for the debt cancellation credit 
card add-on products, ensure representatives make accurate disclosure 
of the add-on product's terms, conditions, and costs, and to reimburse 
the costs of the credit card add-on products to impacted consumers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \5\ 12 U.S.C. 5536(a)(1)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2.2.4 Failure To Comply With Billing Error Resolution and Unauthorized 
Transactions

    Regulation Z requires credit card issuers to follow an error 
resolution process when a cardholder submits a billing error notice and 
provides that, during resolution, the cardholder may withhold payment 
for the disputed amount and the issuer shall not report the disputed 
amount as delinquent.\6\ In addition, Regulation Z also limits the 
amount a cardholder can be held liable for any unauthorized use.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \6\ 12 CFR 1026.13.
    \7\ 12 CFR 1026.12(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    During one or more examinations, examiners observed that entities: 
(1) Failed to provide consumers with a timely written acknowledgement 
of receipt of a billing error notice; \8\ (2) generally failed to 
timely comply with the billing error resolution procedures; \9\ (3) 
failed to limit the liability of cardholders for unauthorized use to 
the lesser of $50 or the amount of money, property, labor or services 
obtained by the unauthorized use before the card issuer is notified; 
\10\ (4) before a billing error was resolved, made or threatened to 
make an adverse credit report concerning the consumer's credit 
standing, or that the amount or account was delinquent, because the 
consumer failed to pay the disputed amount or applicable related 
finance or other charges; \11\ (5) failed to timely correct billing 
errors and credit consumers' accounts with disputed amounts or related 
finance or other charges, as applicable; \12\ (6) failed to send, or 
failed to timely send, consumers a correction notice where the issuer 
concluded that the billing error occurred as asserted; \13\ (7) failed 
to conduct, or failed to timely

[[Page 48705]]

conduct, a reasonable investigation before determining that no billing 
error occurred; \14\ or (8) failed to provide, or failed to timely 
provide, consumers with a written explanation for its determination as 
to why it concluded that a billing error did not occur.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \8\ 12 CFR 1026.13(c)(1).
    \9\ 12 CFR 1026.13(c)(2).
    \10\ 12 CFR 1026.12(b)(1)(ii).
    \11\ 12 CFR 1026.13(d)(2).
    \12\ 12 CFR 1026.13(c)(2) & 1026.13(e)(1).
    \13\ 12 CFR 1026.13(c)(2) & (e)(2).
    \14\ 12 CFR 1026.13(c)(2) & (f).
    \15\ 12 CFR 1026.13(c)(2) & (f)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The root cause of these regulatory violations can, among other 
things, be attributed to weak oversight of service providers that 
handle dispute resolution for the card issuers. At one or more 
entities, management failed to perform sufficient due diligence of a 
service provider hired to perform intake of incoming phone calls from 
customers who reported billing errors and other disputes, and ceased 
doing business with the service provider because of increasing 
complaints about the service provider's customer service. One or more 
entities failed to have sufficient documentation of its monitoring of 
service providers and did not audit its oversight of service providers.
    Supervision directed one or more entities to develop a plan that 
ensures the handling of billing error disputes is corrected, identifies 
all impacted consumers, and remediates harmed consumers. One or more 
entities were directed to revise their service provider program(s) to 
require document retention relating to service provider monitoring and 
risk assessment reviews.

2.3 Debt Collection

    The Bureau's Supervision program covers certain bank and nonbank 
creditors that originate and collect their own debt, as well as 
nonbanks that are larger participants in the debt collection market. 
These reviews, among other things, evaluate the adequacy of the 
relevant entities' compliance management systems and communications 
with consumers. At one or more entities, examiners' review of these 
systems and practices included activities conducted in a foreign 
country. During recent examinations of larger participants, examiners 
identified several violations of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act 
(FDCPA),\16\ including unauthorized communications with third parties, 
false representations made to authorized credit card users regarding 
their liability for debts, false representations regarding credit 
reports, and communications with consumers at inconvenient times.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \16\ 15 U.S.C. 1692-1692p.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    At one or more entities, examiners discovered that debt collectors 
followed client instructions that led to violations of the FDCPA. 
Entities can mitigate the risk of an FDCPA violation if they determine 
whether client instructions would violate the FDCPA before following 
them.

2.3.1 Impermissible Communications With Third Parties

    Under section 805(b) of the FDCPA, a debt collector generally may 
not communicate with a person other than the consumer in connection 
with the collection of a debt without permission from the consumer. 
Examiners determined that one or more entities did not confirm that the 
correct party had been contacted prior to beginning collection 
activities. As a result, one or more entities communicated with a third 
party in connection with the collection of a debt by discussing the 
debt with an authorized user of a credit card who was not financially 
responsible for the debt (and who was not otherwise a ``consumer'' 
under section 805(b)). In response to these findings, one or more 
entities enhanced consumer verification processes to include the 
verification of first and last names, and confirmation of date of birth 
or the last four digits of Social Security number, before disclosing 
the debt or the nature of the call to the consumer. Additionally, one 
or more entities revised their processes to discuss the debt with an 
authorized user only after explicit authorization from the cardholder. 
Lastly, the entities trained their collection agents on the enhanced 
policies and procedures.

2.3.2 Deceptively Implying That Authorized Users Are Responsible for a 
Debt

    Under section 807(10) of the FDCPA, a debt collector may not use 
false representations or deceptive means to collect or attempt to 
collect any debt. Examiners determined that one or more entities 
violated the FDCPA by attempting to collect a debt directly from the 
authorized user of a credit card even though the authorized user was 
not financially responsible for the debt. The practice of soliciting 
payment from a non-obligated user in a manner that implies that the 
authorized user is personally responsible for the debt constitutes a 
deceptive means to collect a debt in violation of the FDCPA. One or 
more entities have undertaken remedial and corrective actions regarding 
these violations, which are under review by Supervision.

2.3.3 False Representations Regarding the Effect on a Consumer's Credit 
Report of Paying a Debt in Full Rather Than Settling the Debt in Full

    As noted above, a debt collector may not use false representations 
or deceptive means to collect or attempt to collect any debt under 
section 807(10) of the FDCPA. Examiners found that one or more entities 
made false representations to consumers about the effect on their 
credit score of paying a debt in full rather than settling the debt for 
less than the full amount. As the CFPB explained in a 2013 bulletin, 
representations about the impact of paying a debt on a consumer's 
credit score may be deceptive. The bulletin states that ``in light of 
the numerous factors that influence an individual consumer's credit 
score, such payments may not improve the credit score of the consumer 
to whom the representation is being made. Consequently, debt owners or 
third-party debt collectors may well deceive consumers if they make 
representations that paying debts in collection will improve a 
consumer's credit score.'' \17\ In response to these findings, one or 
more entities amended training materials to remove references to how a 
consumer's credit score may be affected by either settling the debt in 
full or paying the debt in full.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \17\ CFPB Bulletin 2013-08, Representations Regarding Effect of 
Debt Payments on Credit Reports and Scores, available at: http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201307_cfpb_bulletin_collections-consumer-credit.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2.3.4 Communicating With Consumers at a Time Known To Be Inconvenient

    Under section 805(a)(1) of the FDCPA, a debt collector may not 
communicate with a consumer in connection with the collection of any 
debt at any unusual time or place or a time or place known or which 
should be known to be inconvenient to the consumer. Examiners 
discovered that consumers were contacted by one or more entities 
outside of the hours of 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. (which, in the absence 
of knowledge to the contrary, may be assumed to be convenient) or at 
times consumers had previously informed the entities were inconvenient. 
These violations were caused by the failure to accurately update 
account notes and the use of auto dialers that based call parameters 
solely on the consumer's area code, rather than also considering the 
consumer's last known address. Supervision directed one or more 
entities to enhance compliance monitoring for dialer systems to ensure 
that they input system parameters accurately and to ensure that they

[[Page 48706]]

properly monitor collectors for inputting and adhering to account 
notations.

2.4 Deposits

    The CFPB continues to examine banks for compliance with Regulation 
E as well as review for any unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts or 
practices (UDAAPs) in connection with deposit accounts. As described in 
more detail below, CFPB examiners continue to find deceptive acts or 
practices related to deposit disclosures and representations that 
incorrectly inform consumers about fees, including conditions when 
certain fees will apply. Separately, Supervision concluded that one or 
more institutions were engaging in deceptive acts or practices by 
misrepresenting deposit overdraft protection products. Examiners also 
found unfair acts or practices related to conditions where one or more 
institutions froze deposit accounts. Finally, examiners continue to 
find issues associated with Regulation E error resolution 
investigations.
    In all cases where examiners found UDAAPs or violations of 
Regulation E, Supervision directed institutions to make appropriate 
changes to address the underlying issue(s), as well as enhance 
compliance management systems to prevent future violations and, where 
appropriate, to remediate consumers for harm they experienced.

2.4.1 Freezing of Deposit Accounts

    Examiners found that one or more institutions engaged in unfair 
acts or practices by placing hard holds on customer accounts to stop 
all activity when the institution(s) observed suspicious activity. 
These hard holds resulted in the consumers' accounts being locked, 
resulting in payments not being honored, deposits being rejected, and 
the consumer lacking access to his or her funds for as long as two 
weeks. Examiners also found that one or more institutions failed to 
clearly, consistently, and promptly communicate information about the 
nature and status of these hard holds to consumers. Examiners found 
that less drastic measures would have sufficiently addressed the 
suspicious activity concern in many instances. Even where the hard 
holds were appropriate, the failure to properly communicate with 
consumers prevented consumers from being able to take measures to 
mitigate the injury.
    Supervision directed the institution(s) to cease unnecessarily 
placing hard holds on consumer deposit accounts and to develop and 
implement policies and procedures to clearly, consistently, and 
promptly communicate with consumers with respect to hard holds placed 
on their accounts.

2.4.2 Misrepresentations About Monthly Service Fees

    Examiners found that one or more institutions engaged in deceptive 
acts or practices by representing in deposit account fee schedules that 
monthly account service fees would be waived under circumstances in 
which those fees, in fact, would be assessed. One or more institutions 
offered a deposit product that contained a monthly service fee. The 
service fee was waived if consumers met certain qualifications. One 
such qualification--as described in the fee schedules--was if the 
consumer made ten or more payments from the checking account during a 
statement cycle. In fact, only debit card purchases and debit card 
payments qualified toward the fee waiver threshold, and other payments 
from a consumer's checking account, such as ACH payments, did not 
qualify. Moreover, only payments that ``posted'' during the statement 
cycle qualified toward the waiver and payments that were initiated but 
not posted during the statement cycle did not qualify. The 
representations that the institution(s) made in the fee schedules could 
lead a reasonable consumer to believe that all checking-account 
payments initiated during the statement cycle would qualify toward the 
ten-payment fee waiver threshold, a material aspect of the product or 
service. As a result, Supervision cited the institution(s) for 
deceptive acts or practices. Supervision directed the institution(s) to 
ensure that all disclosures regarding the fee waivers include accurate 
and non-misleading information.

2.4.3 Violations of Error Resolution Requirements

    Supervision continues to find violations of Regulation E's error 
resolution requirements. As noted in the Fall 2014 edition of 
Supervisory Highlights, Regulation E, which implements the Electronic 
Fund Transfer Act, imposes specific requirements on financial 
institutions for how to resolve error allegations reported by consumers 
related to electronic fund transfers. Among other requirements, 
Regulation E requires financial institutions to promptly investigate 
error allegations, to provide timely provisional credit to consumers, 
to promptly provide consumers with notice of the findings of the 
financial institution's investigation, and to allow consumers to review 
the documentation the financial institution relied upon in the course 
of the investigation.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \18\ 12 CFR 1005.11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Examiners found that one or more institutions violated several of 
the error resolution provisions of Regulation E. Among other things, 
examiners observed that one or more entities prematurely closed 
investigations and denied claims when consumers failed to submit, or 
delayed in submitting, supplemental information beyond that which 
financial institutions may require under Regulation E.\19\ Examiners 
also found that the institution(s) failed to investigate claims and to 
provide provisional credit within 10 business days of receiving notice 
of the alleged error.\20\ Examiners further observed that one or more 
institutions refused consumers' requests to review material relied upon 
by the institution(s) in denying error claims, and incorrectly informed 
consumers that subpoenas would be required to review that material.\21\ 
With respect to these types of violations, Supervision directed the 
relevant entities to take measures to ensure compliance with the error 
resolution provisions of Regulation E.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \19\ See 12 CFR 1005.11(b).
    \20\ See 12 CFR 1005.11(c)(1) & (c)(2)(i).
    \21\ See 12 CFR 1005.11(d)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2.4.4 Deceptive Statements About Overdraft Protection Products

    In 2010, Federal rules took effect that prohibited banks and credit 
unions from charging overdraft fees on ATM and one-time debit card 
transactions unless consumers affirmatively opted in.\22\ Many 
depository institutions provide a variety of overdraft products that 
may cover consumer transactions that overdraw accounts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \22\ 74 FR 59033 (Nov. 17, 2009) (codified at 12 CFR part 
1005.17), available at https://www.thefederalregister.org/fdsys/granule/FR-2009-11-17/E9-27474.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Supervision determined that one or more institutions engaged in a 
deceptive act or practice by misrepresenting their opt-in deposit 
overdraft protection products when answering inbound telephone calls 
from consumers, including that:
    [ssquf] The overdraft protection product applied to check, 
automated clearing house (ACH), and recurring bill payment 
transactions, when the overdraft protection product did not apply to 
those transactions;
    [ssquf] The overdraft protection product would allow a consumer to 
withdraw more than the daily ATM cash withdrawal limit and be subject 
to only one overdraft fee. In actuality, a consumer would not have been 
allowed to surpass the daily ATM cash

[[Page 48707]]

withdrawal limit, regardless of enrollment in the overdraft protection 
product, and it was not possible to do so while incurring only one 
overdraft fee; and
    [ssquf] The overdraft protection product would take effect on the 
same day as enrollment, when the product would not actually take effect 
until the next day.
    Supervision determined that these representations misled or were 
likely to mislead a reasonable consumer regarding a material aspect of 
the overdraft protection product and that account opening disclosures 
or subsequent enrollment disclosures did not cure the misleading 
representations. Supervision directed one or more depository 
institutions to cease misrepresenting features of their overdraft 
protection products.

2.5 Mortgage Origination

    Supervision assessed the mortgage origination operations of one or 
more supervised entities for compliance with applicable Federal 
consumer financial laws. Examiners identified instances of regulatory 
violations and one or more instances where supervised entities engaged 
in a deceptive practice, as described below.

2.5.1 Know Before You Owe Mortgage Disclosure Rule

    Supervision has completed its first round of mortgage origination 
examinations for compliance with the Know Before You Owe mortgage 
disclosure rule. The Bureau stated that it would be sensitive to the 
progress made by supervised entities focused on making good faith 
efforts to come into compliance with the rule upon the effective date 
of October 3, 2015. Initial examination findings and observations 
conclude that, for the most part, supervised entities, both banks and 
nonbanks, were able to effectively implement and comply with the Know 
Before You Owe mortgage disclosure rule changes. However, examiners did 
find some violations. Listed below are violations found by examiners 
relating to the content and timing of Loan Estimates and Closing 
Disclosures:
    [ssquf] Amounts paid by the consumer at closing exceeded the amount 
disclosed on the Loan Estimate beyond the applicable tolerance 
threshold; \23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \23\ 12 CFR 1026.19(e)(3)(i), (ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    [ssquf] The entity(ies) failed to retain evidence of compliance 
with the requirements associated with the Loan Estimate; \24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \24\ 12 CFR 1026.25(c)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    [ssquf] The entity(ies) failed to obtain and/or document the 
consumer's intent to proceed with the transaction prior to imposing a 
fee in connection with the consumer's application; \25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \25\ 12 CFR 1026.19(e)(2)(i)(A), 1026.25(c)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    [ssquf] Waivers of the three-day review period did not contain a 
bona fide personal financial emergency; \26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \26\ 12 CFR 1026.19(f)(1)(iv).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    [ssquf] The entity(ies) failed to provide consumers with a list 
identifying at least one available settlement service provider, if the 
creditor permits the consumer to shop for a settlement service; \27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \27\ 12 CFR 1026.19(e)(1)(vi)(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    [ssquf] The entity(ies) failed to disclose the amount payable into 
an escrow account on the Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure when the 
consumer elected to escrow taxes and insurance; \28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \28\ 12 CFR 1026.37(c)(2)(iii), .38(c)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    [ssquf] Loan Estimates did not include the date and time at which 
estimated closings cost expire; \29\ and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \29\ 12 CFR 1026.37(a)(13)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    [ssquf] The entity(ies) failed to properly disclose on the Closing 
Disclosure fees the consumer paid prior to closing.\30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \30\ 12 CFR 1026.38(f)(2), (f)(5), (h)(2), (i)(2)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Examiners worked in a collaborative manner with one or more 
entities to identify the root cause of these violations and determine 
appropriate corrective actions, including reimbursement to consumers 
where tolerance violations occurred.

2.5.2 Failure To Reimburse Unused Portions of a Required Service 
Deposit Where Certain Disclosure Language Was Used Constituted an 
Unfair Practice

    At one or more entities, pursuant to certain disclosure language a 
specified service deposit was collected from consumers but unused 
portions were not reimbursed when consumers withdrew their 
applications. This would constitute unfair acts or practices in those 
cases where the loans did not proceed to closing due to the entity's 
unreasonable actions or inactions. Supervision directed each entity to 
conduct a review to identify impacted consumers. Refunds were provided 
to consumers where the loan files could not support retention of the 
service deposit.

2.5.3 Deceptive Practice Involving an Arbitration Notice on Certain 
Residential Mortgage Loan Documents

    Under Regulation Z, a contract or other agreement for a consumer 
credit transaction secured by a dwelling (including a home equity line 
of credit secured by the consumer's principal dwelling) may not include 
terms that require arbitration or any other non-judicial procedure to 
resolve any controversy or settle any claims arising out of the 
transaction.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \31\ 12 CFR 1026.36(h)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Despite this prohibition, at one or more entities examiners 
identified template language for certain residential loan document(s) 
containing a notice that the note is subject to arbitration. 
Supervision concluded that use of the arbitration-related notice 
constitutes a deceptive act or practice since it is likely to mislead a 
reasonable consumer into believing that a claim arising under the 
residential loan document must be submitted to arbitration. After 
having viewed the notice, a consumer would have been more likely to 
agree to post-dispute arbitration or to fail to pursue judicial 
remedies under the mistaken belief that arbitration was required. 
Supervision directed one or more of the entities to cease further use 
of the template.

2.6 Mortgage Servicing

2.6.1 Requirements To Help Borrowers Complete Loss Mitigation 
Applications

    Regulation X provides important process protections for borrowers 
in financial distress who apply for a foreclosure alternative. 
Specifically, it requires mortgage servicers to exercise reasonable 
diligence in obtaining documents and information to complete a loss 
mitigation application.\32\ A complete loss mitigation application 
includes all the information that the servicer requires from a borrower 
in evaluating applications for the loss mitigation options available to 
the borrower.\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \32\ 12 CFR 1024.41(b)(1).
    \33\ 12 CFR 1024.41(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    While Regulation X permits a servicer to offer a loss mitigation 
option based on a borrower's incomplete application under certain 
circumstances,\34\ the servicer still must act with reasonable 
diligence to collect the information needed to complete the 
application.\35\ For example, in the context of a short-term payment 
forbearance program offered based on an incomplete loss mitigation 
application, reasonable diligence could include notifying the borrower 
that the borrower is being offered a payment forbearance program based 
on an evaluation of an incomplete application and that the borrower 
retains the option of completing the application to receive a full 
evaluation of all loss mitigation options available to

[[Page 48708]]

the borrower.\36\ Near the end of the program, and prior to the end of 
the forbearance period, it may also be necessary for the servicer to 
contact the borrower to determine if the borrower wishes to complete 
the application and proceed with a full loss mitigation evaluation.\37\ 
Generally, the reasonable diligence requirement helps address the 
concern that borrowers offered a short-term payment forbearance program 
or short-term repayment plan may be experiencing a hardship, for which 
other, longer-term loss mitigation solutions might be more appropriate 
given their individual circumstances.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \34\ 12 CFR 1024.41(c)(2)(ii) and (iii).
    \35\ 12 CFR 1024.41(b)(1) and Comments 41(b)(1)-4.iii and 
41(c)(2)(iii)-2.
    \36\ Comment 1024.41(b)(1)-4.iii.
    \37\ Comment 1024.41(b)(1)-4.iii.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In recent exams, examiners found that one or more servicers 
received oral incomplete loss mitigation applications and pre-approved 
borrowers for short-term payment forbearance programs based on those 
applications. However, the servicer(s) did not notify borrowers of 
their right to complete the application and did not separately request 
other information needed to evaluate for all the other loss mitigation 
options offered by the owner or assignee of the loan. And near the end 
of the program, and prior to the end of the short-term payment 
forbearance period, the servicer(s) failed to conduct outreach to 
determine whether borrowers wished to complete the application and 
proceed with a full loss mitigation evaluation.
    Supervision determined that the servicer(s) violated Regulation X 
by failing to exercise reasonable diligence in obtaining documents and 
information to complete a loss mitigation application.\38\ Supervision 
directed the servicer(s) to implement policies and procedures to ensure 
that the servicer(s) exercise reasonable diligence in obtaining 
documents and information to complete a loss mitigation application for 
borrowers entering into short term payment forbearance programs based 
on incomplete applications, including by contacting the borrowers near 
the end of the program, and prior to the end of the forbearance period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \38\ 12 CFR 1024.41(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2.6.2 Broad Waivers in Short Sale and Cash-for-Keys Agreements

    Supervision previously identified broad waiver of rights clauses in 
forbearance, loan modification and other loss mitigation options as 
violating the Dodd-Frank Act's prohibition against unfair or deceptive 
acts or practices.\39\ Supervision determined such waivers to be 
deceptive where reasonable consumers could construe the waivers as 
barring them from bringing claims in court--including Federal claims--
related to their mortgages. Regulation Z states that a ``contract or 
other agreement relating to a consumer credit transaction secured by a 
dwelling . . . may not be applied or interpreted to bar a consumer from 
bringing a claim in court pursuant to any provision of law for damages 
or other relief in connection with any alleged violation of any Federal 
law.'' \40\ Supervision also determined broad waivers to be unfair 
insofar as they are offered in a ``take it or leave it'' fashion in the 
ordinary course of offering loss mitigation agreements, rather than in 
the context of resolution of a contested claim or another 
individualized analysis of the servicer's risks and the consumer's 
potential claims.\41\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \39\ 12 U.S.C. 5536(a)(1).
    \40\ 12 CFR 1026.36(h)(2).
    \41\ See Supervisory Highlights: Winter 2013, at 6, available at 
http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201401_cfpb_supervision-highlights.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Supervision continues to find broad waivers of rights in loss 
mitigation agreements. For example, in exchange for a short sale 
agreement, one or more servicers required consumers to completely 
waive, release, and relinquish any claims of any nature against the 
servicer(s) arising out of or relating to the mortgage note and any 
obligations thereunder, and to agree that they had no defenses to 
payment in full under the note. Supervision determined the waiver to be 
deceptive and required the servicer(s) to remove it from the 
agreements.
    In one or more servicing exams, Supervision also identified blanket 
waivers in cash-for-keys agreements that gave borrowers the opportunity 
to receive a payment in exchange for their commitment to vacate the 
property by a date certain, thereby avoiding eviction proceedings. The 
servicer(s) presented the waivers as take-it-or-leave-it boilerplate 
and a reasonable borrower would have construed them to broadly waive 
all claims or defenses including any in connection with the original 
credit transaction that the borrower might have asserted against the 
servicer(s). Supervision determined the waiver to be deceptive and 
unfair, and directed the servicer(s) to remove all such waivers from 
the agreements.

2.7 Remittances

    The CFPB continues to examine both large banks and nonbanks for 
compliance with the CFPB's amendments to Regulation E governing 
international money transfers (or remittances).\42\ Regulation E, 
Subpart B (or the Remittance Rule) provides protections, including 
disclosure requirements, and error resolution and cancellation rights 
to consumers who send remittance transfers to other consumers or 
businesses in a foreign country.\43\ The amendments implement statutory 
requirements set forth in the Dodd-Frank Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \42\ See 78 FR 30662 (May 22, 2013) (codified at 12 CFR part 
1005), available at http://www.thefederalregister.org/fdsys/pkg/FR-2013-05-22/pdf/2013-10604.pdf.
    \43\ Regulation E implements the Electronic Fund Transfer Act 
(EFTA).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    CFPB's examination program for both bank and nonbank remittance 
providers assesses the adequacy of each entity's CMS for remittance 
transfers. These reviews also check for providers' compliance with the 
Remittance Rule and other applicable Federal consumer financial laws. 
Supervision directed entities to make appropriate changes to compliance 
management systems to prevent future violations and, where appropriate, 
to remediate consumers for harm they experienced.

2.7.1 International Top-Up and Bill Pay Services

    Examiners found that one or more supervised entities violated 
section 919(a)(1) \44\ of EFTA and applicable provisions of Regulation 
E by failing to treat international mobile top-up services in excess of 
$15 as a remittance transfer. An international mobile top-up service 
converts funds from consumers in the United States to airtime on a 
phone account based on the usage and rate plan selected by the owner of 
the phone residing in a foreign country. The entirety of these 
transactions occurs exclusively in currencies up until the point funds 
are received by the international cellphone carrier. The entity(ies) 
failed to provide the disclosures, cancellation, or error resolution 
rights to international top-up consumers required by EFTA and 
Regulation E.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \44\ 15 U.S.C. 1693o-1(a)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Similarly, one or more institutions violated section 919(a)(1) of 
EFTA and applicable provisions of Regulation E by failing to treat 
international bill payment services in excess of $15 as remittance 
transfers and, as a result, failed to comply with the required 
disclosure, error resolution, and cancellation requirements of the 
Remittance Rule. Supervision directed entities to make appropriate 
changes to their CMS in order to prevent future violations.

[[Page 48709]]

2.8 Service Provider Program

    The Spring 2017 edition of Supervisory Highlights described 
Supervision's service provider program, which involves the direct 
examination of service providers, particularly in the mortgage 
origination and mortgage servicing markets. Examiners are focusing on 
the structure, operations and compliance management systems of various 
service providers, as well as certain other targeted areas.

2.8.1 Deficient Mortgage Periodic Statements

    Examiners reviewed whether one or more service provider(s) 
adequately considered certain requirements of the Title XIV Final Rule 
in developing products for mortgage servicers.\45\ Examiners found that 
the service provider(s) developed a mortgage servicing information 
technology (IT) system functionality that failed to implement certain 
Regulation Z requirements for periodic statements. The service 
provider(s)' billing files failed to list the total sum of any fees or 
charges imposed, and the transaction activity that occurred since the 
last statement.\46\ Moreover, the service provider(s) did not 
adequately consider client concerns about the issue. Supervision 
concluded that these weaknesses contributed to the clients' violations 
of Regulation Z and directed the service provider(s) to implement 
policies and procedures that span systems design and application 
controls to ensure that the billing files made available through the 
mortgage servicing IT system functionality enable compliance with 
Regulation Z. In addition, Supervision directed the service provider(s) 
to ensure that when clients communicate potential regulatory issues, 
the service provider(s) analyze and implement changes as appropriate to 
enable users of the mortgage servicing IT system functionality to 
comply with Regulation Z.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \45\ Title XIV Final Rule updates effective January 10, 2014, 
with the exception of the appraisal requirements effective for 
applications received on or after January 18, 2014.
    \46\ 12 CFR 1026.41(d)(2)(ii); (d)(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2.9 Short-Term, Small-Dollar Lending

    The Bureau's Supervision program covers entities that offer or 
provide payday loans. Such entities often offer other short-term, small 
dollar (STSD) products to consumers as well such as single payment, 
installment, or auto or vehicle title loans. During the examinations of 
STSD entities, examiners identified CMS weaknesses and violations of 
Federal consumer financial law, including the Dodd-Frank Act's 
prohibition on UDAAPs. Highlighted below are some of the UDAAP findings 
in recent examinations regarding collection practices, marketing 
representations, representations regarding use of references, and 
payment practices.

2.9.1 Short-Term, Small-Dollar Debt Collection

    As noted in the Spring 2014 Supervisory Highlights, a continued 
focus of the CFPB's short-term, small-dollar lending examination 
program is how lenders collect consumer debt. Since then, we have 
learned that 11 percent of consumers who indicated that they had been 
contacted about a debt in collection reported attempts to collect on a 
payday loan.\47\ Nearly ten percent of all debt collection complaints 
handled by the CFPB are related to payday loans.\48\ Examiners have 
identified a range of illegal collections practices by small-dollar 
lenders, some of which are highlighted below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \47\ Consumer Experiences with Debt Collection (Jan. 2017) at 
19, available at http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/201701_cfpb_Debt-Collection-Survey-Report.pdf.
    \48\ Semi-annual report of the Consumer Financial Protection 
Bureaus (Fall 2016) at 31, available at https://www.consumerfinance.gov/documents/1977/122016_cfpb_SemiAnnualReport.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Workplace Collection Calls
    Examiners found that one or more entities, in the course of 
collecting their own debt, called borrowers at their places of 
employment. The entity(ies) placed repeated calls to borrowers at work 
even after borrowers asked the lenders to stop calling them at work or 
told the lenders that the borrowers' employers did not allow such 
calls. Examiners determined that this collection activity constituted 
an unfair act or practice. The practice of continuing to call borrowers 
repeatedly at the workplace after requests to stop causes or is likely 
to cause substantial injury because continued contact may result in 
negative employment consequences to the borrower. Borrowers cannot 
avoid the injury when the lenders continue to make repeated calls after 
the borrowers requested that they stop. Where the lender has been 
expressly told to stop contacting the consumer at work or that the 
employer prohibits such calls, the harm to consumers from continued 
calling outweighs any countervailing benefits to consumers and 
competition. One or more lenders have undertaken remedial and 
corrective actions regarding these violations, which are under review 
by Supervision.
Repeated Collection Calls to Third Parties
    Examiners observed one or more entities routinely making repeated 
calls to third parties, including personal and work references that 
borrowers listed on their loan applications. In some instances, one or 
more entities repeatedly requested that the third parties relay 
messages to delinquent borrowers in a manner that disclosed or risk 
disclosing the debt. The loan applications required consumers to list 
the names and numbers of third parties and, in some instances, 
disclosures provided to consumers conveyed that the individuals listed 
would be contacted by the entity(ies) only as part of the origination 
and underwriting process. The collection calls to third parties were 
not made for the purpose of locating the borrowers.
    Supervision determined that these collection activities constituted 
unfair acts or practices. Through these calls, the entity(ies) caused 
or was likely to cause substantial injury because the entity(ies) 
either disclosed or risked disclosing borrowers' default or delinquency 
to third parties. The consumer injury associated with the calls could 
not be reasonably avoided because the borrowers were not aware that the 
lenders would contact references or other third parties for debt 
collection purposes, nor were they aware that one or more lenders would 
continue to call such references after requests to stop. The benefits 
to consumers and to competition did not outweigh the injury; the 
entities had the borrower's location information and therefore had 
other ways to reach consumers without disclosing or risking disclosure 
of the borrowers' default or delinquency to third parties. One or more 
entities have undertaken remedial and corrective actions regarding 
these violations, which are under review by Supervision.
Misrepresentations in Collections
    Examiners observed one or more entities in the course of collecting 
delinquent or defaulted loans making statements to borrowers that they 
must immediately contact the lenders to avoid additional collection 
activity, including being visited at home or work. In fact, the 
entity(ies) did not actually conduct such in-person collection visits. 
Supervision concluded these representations constituted deceptive acts 
or practices. Delinquent consumers could reasonably interpret the 
entity(ies)' statements to mean that in-

[[Page 48710]]

person visits to the consumers' place of employment or home would take 
place if the consumers did not immediately contact the entity(ies). The 
representations were material to consumers because they could cause 
consumers to change their behavior to avoid the promised visits. One or 
more entities agreed to modify their collection practices to comply 
with Federal consumer financial laws.

2.9.2 Marketing Misrepresentations About Small Dollar Loan Products

No Credit Check
    Examiners observed that one or more entities advertised that 
consumers could receive loans without undergoing credit checks. 
However, these entity(ies) obtained consumer reports from specialty 
consumer reporting companies during their underwriting processes and 
sometimes denied loans to consumers based on the information in the 
reports. Supervision concluded that this conduct constituted deceptive 
acts or practices. The advertisements were deceptive because they were 
likely to mislead reasonable consumers into believing that no credit 
inquiries would be conducted and thus, they could receive a loan 
without a credit check. These misrepresentations were likely to 
influence consumers' decisions to choose to apply for the loans. 
Supervision directed the one or more entities to cease advertising that 
consumers could receive loans without credit checks.
Availability of Products and Services
    Examiners observed that one or more entities advertised products 
and services in outdoor signage that the entity(ies) did not, in fact, 
offer. They consisted of products and services that the lenders had not 
offered for several years but would be of interest to payday loan 
customers. Supervision concluded that by advertising products and 
services the entity(ies) did not, in fact, offer, the lenders engaged 
in deceptive acts or practices. A reasonable consumer could interpret 
the outdoor advertising to mean that the consumers who wished to 
purchase the advertised services could do so inside the stores. The 
representations were material because they impacted a consumer's 
conduct in terms of whether to visit the stores. Supervision directed 
the one or more entities to cease advertising products and services 
that they did not offer.
Comparisons to Competitors
    Examiners observed one or more entities advertising that many of 
their products and services had substantially lower fees than their 
competitors' products and services. The entity(ies), however, did not 
have substantiation to support these claims. The entity(ies) relied on 
out-of-date internal analyses that only covered fees for a small number 
of products and services and did not reflect current rates, products, 
or services or those of their competitors. Supervision concluded that 
by making these misleading comparisons, the entity(ies) engaged in 
deceptive acts or practices. The representations were likely to mislead 
reasonable consumers into believing that the entity(ies) had a basis 
for claiming that consumers would pay lower fees for the products and 
services identified in the advertisement. This misrepresentation was 
material because it likely influenced consumers' decisions to obtain 
these products and services from the entity(s) over other short-term, 
small-dollar lenders. Supervision directed one or more entities to 
cease advertising that their fees were lower than their competitors, 
absent adequate substantiation.
Ability To Apply Online
    Examiners observed one or more entities representing on their Web 
sites that consumers may ``apply online'' by completing lengthy online 
forms. The forms solicited all or most of the information that a 
consumer would typically submit in order to apply for a short-term, 
small-dollar loan. The forms also permitted consumers to list most 
states as their home State, suggesting that an application for an 
online loan was available to consumers nationwide. In fact, consumers 
could not apply online because the entity(ies) only originate loans at 
their physical store front locations and do not originate loans based 
on the purported online loan applications. Consumers could only receive 
a loan from the lenders if they visited storefront locations. In 
addition, the entity(ies) only extends credit in a small number of 
States where they operate, not nationwide. Supervision determined that 
the entity(ies)' representations constituted deceptive acts or 
practices. Consumers acting reasonably were likely to view the ``apply 
online'' advertisements on the lenders' Web sites and comprehensive 
online applications as invitations to apply for, and receive, loans 
online. The representations were material because had consumers 
understood that they could not obtain a loan from the entity(ies) based 
on where they lived or that would be required to visit a storefront 
location to obtain a loan, many consumers would decide not to submit 
the purported application forms with detailed contact and financial 
information, and instead seek out other loan options. Supervision 
directed the one or more entities to revise their Web sites and other 
marketing materials.

2.9.3 Misrepresentations Regarding Use of References Provided by 
Borrowers in Small Dollar Loan Applications

    Examiners observed one or more entities making false 
representations regarding the use of information provided by consumers 
in loan applications. The entity(ies) required applicants to provide 
names of references, including work colleagues, neighbors, and family 
members, on the loan applications. On its loan applications, the 
entity(ies) represented, directly and by implication, that the 
references would only be contacted to verify information and evaluate 
creditworthiness in connection with the consumers' loans. However, the 
entity(ies) also contacted the applicants' references to market loan 
products to them. Supervision concluded that the entity(ies), by 
misleading consumers about how they would use the consumers' 
references, engaged in deceptive acts or practices. A consumer acting 
reasonably under the circumstances could interpret the loan 
applications to mean that the entity(ies) would only contact references 
in connection with the consumers' loans and that the entity(ies) would 
not market their services to the individuals identified by consumers as 
references. The representations were material because they were likely 
to impact consumer behavior. For example, if borrowers were aware that 
the entity(ies) makes marketing calls to the references listed on 
applications, borrowers may provide different references or not apply 
for the loan at all. Supervision directed one or more lenders to ensure 
that all disclosures regarding the collection and use of references do 
not include any false or misleading information.
    Examiners also observed one or more entities representing, directly 
or by implication, in loan applications that the reference information 
provided by borrowers would be used only to contact references 
regarding the borrowers' loan applications. The entity(ies) indicated 
that these references would be ``checked,'' implying that they would be 
contacted only at loan origination. Instead, the entity(ies) repeatedly 
contacted the references when the borrowers' loans became delinquent. 
Supervision concluded that these representations constituted deceptive 
acts or practices.

[[Page 48711]]

The entity(ies) applications were likely to mislead consumers acting 
reasonably under the circumstances by creating the net impression that 
references would be contacted only at origination. This representation 
was material because borrowers might have supplied other names of 
references or not applied for loans at all if they had known their 
references would be contacted for debt collection purposes. Supervision 
directed one or more entities to review all disclosures regarding the 
collection and use of references, including references listed by 
borrowers on loan applications, and to ensure that the disclosures do 
not include any false or misleading information.

2.9.4 Small Dollar Lending Unauthorized Debits and Overpayments

    Examiners observed that one or more entities debited the accounts 
of borrowers who had already paid their debts. Under the applicable 
loan agreements, the entity(ies) was permitted to initiate ACH debits 
from the accounts of borrowers whose loans were past due. However, one 
or more entities sought payment through the ACH system from the 
accounts of borrowers who had already paid their loans by making cash 
payments at branch locations. Supervision concluded that failing to 
implement adequate processes to reasonably avoid unauthorized charges 
of, debits to, and overpayments by borrowers constituted unfair acts or 
practices. The failure to prevent successful and unsuccessful payment 
attempts to the accounts of borrowers who paid their debts caused 
substantial injury in the form of overpayments and fees. Consumers 
could not avoid this injury because they were not aware, regardless of 
whether they were making payments in response to collection efforts, 
that ACH debits had been initiated. The injury to consumers from 
failing to have adequate processes to avoid the unauthorized charges, 
debits and overpayments outweighs the benefits to consumers or 
competition, given that implementing such processes would not involve 
excessive costs to the entity(ies). One or more entities have 
undertaken remedial and corrective actions regarding these violations, 
which are under review by Supervision.
    One or more entities also failed to implement adequate processes to 
accurately and promptly identify and refund borrowers who paid more 
than they owed, either in person at stores or via the ACH network. 
Several consumers did not receive refunds until examiners alerted the 
entity(ies) to the overpayments, which in some cases was almost a year 
after the borrowers made the overpayments. Supervision concluded that 
by failing to implement adequate processes to accurately and promptly 
monitor, identify, correct, and refund overpayments by consumers, the 
entity(ies) engaged in unfair acts or practices. The acts or practices 
caused injury to borrowers who have paid their debts because a number 
of consumers were deprived of their funds for extended periods of time. 
They could not avoid the injury because they were unaware that the 
entity(ies) would double debit their accounts and the consumers have no 
control over the lenders' refund process. The injury to borrowers from 
failing to have adequate processes to refund borrowers outweighs the 
benefits to them or to competition, given that implementing such 
processes would not involve excessive costs to the entity(ies). One or 
more entities have undertaken remedial and corrective actions regarding 
these violations, which are under review by Supervision.

2.10 Fair Lending

2.10.1 Mortgage Servicing

    As part of its fair lending work, the Bureau seeks to ensure that 
creditworthy consumers have access to the full array of appropriate 
options when they have trouble paying their mortgages, without regard 
to any prohibited basis. Mortgage servicing, and specifically default 
servicing, may introduce fair lending risks because of the complexity 
of certain processes, the range of default servicing options, and the 
discretion that can sometimes exist in evaluating and selecting among 
available default servicing options.
    In mortgage servicing, our supervisory work has included use of the 
Mortgage Servicing Exam Procedures and the ECOA Baseline Modules, both 
of which are part of the CFPB Supervision and Examination Manual. 
Examination teams use these procedures to conduct ECOA Baseline 
Reviews, which evaluate institutions' compliance management systems 
(CMS), or ECOA Targeted Reviews, which are more in-depth reviews of 
activities that may pose heightened fair lending risks to consumers. As 
discussed in the Mortgage Servicing Special Edition of Supervisory 
Highlights,\49\ published in June 2016, these exam procedures contain 
questions about, among other things, the fair lending training of 
servicing staff, fair lending monitoring of servicing, and servicing of 
consumers with limited English proficiency.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \49\ See Supervisory Highlights Mortgage Servicing Special 
Edition 2016, at 5, available at http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/Mortgage_Servicing_Supervisory_Highlights_11_Final_web_.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In one or more ECOA targeted reviews of mortgage servicers, CFPB 
examiners found weaknesses in fair lending CMS. In general, examiners 
found deficiencies in oversight by board and senior management, 
monitoring and corrective action processes, compliance audits, and 
oversight of third-party service providers.
    In one or more examinations, data quality issues, which were 
related to a lack of complete and accurate loan servicing records, made 
certain fair lending analyses difficult or impossible to perform. 
Examiners attributed these data quality issues to significant 
weaknesses in CMS-related policies, procedures, and service provider 
oversight.
    Separately, fair lending analysis at one or more mortgage servicers 
was affected by a lack of readily-accessible information concerning a 
borrower's ethnicity, race, and sex information that had been collected 
pursuant to Regulation B or Regulation C and transferred to the 
servicer. One or more mortgage servicers acknowledged the importance of 
retaining in readily-accessible format--for the express purpose of 
performing future fair lending analyses--ethnicity, race, and sex data 
that it had received in the borrower's origination file.

3. Remedial Actions

3.1 Public Enforcement Actions

3.1.1 Fay Servicing

    On June 7, 2017, the CFPB announced an enforcement action against 
Fay Servicing for failing to provide mortgage borrowers with certain 
protections against foreclosure that are required by law.\50\ The 
Bureau found that Fay violated the CFPB's servicing rules by keeping 
borrowers in the dark about critical information about the process of 
applying for foreclosure relief. As part of the requirements for 
keeping borrowers informed, servicers generally must send an 
acknowledgement notice when they receive an application for foreclosure 
relief. The notice must state whether and what additional documents or 
information are required from the borrower to complete the application. 
After a borrower completes the application, servicers must also 
generally send an evaluation notice spelling out what foreclosure 
relief options they are offering, the deadline to

[[Page 48712]]

accept or reject the offer, and the rights borrowers have to appeal a 
servicer's decision to deny certain types of relief.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \50\ See related Consent Order, available at http://www.consumerfinance.gov/documents/4820/062017_cfpb_Fay_Servicing-consent_order.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Fay Servicing failed to send or timely send both acknowledgment and 
evaluation notices with the relevant, correct information, putting the 
onus on borrowers to try to determine what else they had to do to 
attempt to save their homes or otherwise avoid foreclosure. The Bureau 
also found instances where the servicer illegally launched or moved 
forward with the foreclosure process while borrowers were actively 
seeking help to save their homes. The CFPB has ordered Fay Servicing to 
provide timely and accurate acknowledgment and evaluation notices, to 
solicit certain consumers for available loss mitigation options and pay 
up to $1.15 million to harmed borrowers.

3.1.2 Nationstar Mortgage LLC, d/b/a Mr. Cooper

    On March 15, 2017, the Bureau announced an enforcement action 
against Nationstar Mortgage LLC, d/b/a Mr. Cooper (Nationstar) for 
violating the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) by consistently 
failing to report accurate data from 2012 through 2014, under the 
version of the HMDA rule that predates the creation of the CFPB.
    Through its supervision process, the Bureau found that Nationstar's 
HMDA compliance systems were flawed and generated mortgage lending data 
with significant, preventable errors. Nationstar also failed to 
maintain detailed HMDA data collection and validation procedures, and 
failed to implement adequate compliance procedures. It also created 
reporting discrepancies by failing to maintain consistent data 
definitions among its various lines of business.
    Nationstar has a history of HMDA non-compliance. In 2011, the 
Commonwealth of Massachusetts Division of Banks reached a settlement 
with Nationstar to address HMDA compliance deficiencies. The loan file 
samples reviewed by the Bureau showed substantial error rates in three 
consecutive reporting years, even after the settlement with the 
Massachusetts Division of Banks. In the samples reviewed, the Bureau 
found error rates of 13 percent in 2012, 33 percent in 2013, and 21 
percent in 2014.
    The Bureau's consent order requires Nationstar to pay a $1.75 
million penalty to the Bureau's Civil Penalty Fund. Nationstar must 
also review, correct, and make available its corrected HMDA data from 
2012-14. In addition, Nationstar must assess and undertake any 
necessary improvements to its HMDA compliance management system to 
prevent future violations. The action includes the largest HMDA civil 
penalty imposed by the Bureau to date, which stems from Nationstar's 
market size, the substantial magnitude of its errors, and its history 
of previous violations.

3.2 Non-Public Supervisory Actions

    In addition to the public enforcement actions above, recent 
supervisory activities have resulted in approximately $14 million in 
restitution to more than 104,000 consumers. These nonpublic supervisory 
actions generally have been the product of CFPB supervision and 
examinations, often involving either examiner findings or self-reported 
violations of Federal consumer financial law during the course of an 
examination. Recent nonpublic resolutions were reached in auto finance 
origination matters.

4. Supervision Program Developments

4.1 Use of Enforcement and Supervisory Authority

    In the Summer 2015 edition of Supervisory Highlights, the Bureau 
provided information on its Potential Action and Request for Response 
(PARR) letter process and the Action Review Committee (ARC) process. 
The ARC process is used by senior executives in the Bureau's Division 
of Supervision, Enforcement, and Fair Lending to determine through a 
deliberative and rigorous process whether matters that originate from 
examinations will be resolved through confidential supervisory action 
or be further investigated for possible public enforcement action.\51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \51\ See Supervisory Highlights: Summer 2015, at 27, available 
at http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201506_cfpb_supervisory-highlights.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In June 2017, the Bureau released a blog which noted that in fiscal 
year 2016, about one-third of those examinations that were considered 
through the ARC process were determined appropriate for further 
investigation for possible public enforcement action. This equated to 
approximately 10 percent of all examinations in fiscal year 2016.\52\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \52\ For more information regarding the evaluation factors, see 
CFPB blog titled ``How we keep you safe in the consumer financial 
market place'' available at https://www.consumerfinance.gov/about-us/blog/how-we-keep-you-safe-consumer-financial-marketplace/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    More detailed information on the number of ARC decisions is 
presented in Table 1 below. This table reflects the total number of ARC 
decisions and their outcomes for the fiscal years 2012 through 2016. 
The numbers in the table do not reflect all supervisory examinations or 
all enforcement investigations in any given year. Instead, they show 
the ARC decisions made on the subset of matters that go through the ARC 
process, which are generally those examinations in which the exam team 
found evidence of significant violations of Federal consumer financial 
law. These numbers are also reflective in part of the Bureau's risk-
based approach to supervision. Pursuant to that approach, the Bureau 
concentrates its efforts on institutions and product lines that it 
determines through its analytical prioritization process pose the 
greatest risk to consumers.
    As reflected in the table, since 2014, the number of matters 
raising issues that trigger the ARC process and the number of those 
matters that are determined appropriate for further investigation for 
possible public enforcement action moving to enforcement--in whole or 
in part--have remained somewhat consistent. Taken together, about a 
third of the ARC decisions in fiscal years 2014 to 2016 were determined 
appropriate for further investigation for possible public enforcement 
action. Any violations identified in the remaining matters were 
determined appropriate to be resolved through confidential supervisory 
action.

                                                         Table 1--ARC Decisions Through FY 2016
                                                                  [September 30, 2016]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           Outcome                               FY 12 *       FY 13        FY 14        FY 15        FY 16        Total      % of total
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Determined appropriate for further investigation for possible            7           10           11            9            8           45        24.59
 public enforcement action...................................
Determined appropriate for resolution through confidential               7            6           32           41           31          117        63.93
 supervisory action..........................................

[[Page 48713]]

 
Determined appropriate, in part for further investigation for            0            1            8            5            7           21        11.48
 possible public enforcement, and in part for resolution
 through confidential supervisory action **..................
                                                              ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total....................................................           14           17           51           55           46          183       100.00
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Reflects part of the Fiscal Year; the ARC process was first implemented partway through FY 2012.
** With respect to some exams, some findings are referred to supervision and some findings are referred to enforcement. Either Enforcement or
  Supervision will exclusively consider each finding.

    The Bureau commits to publishing ARC data going forward at the 
conclusion of each fiscal year, beginning with the data for fiscal year 
2017 in the next edition of Supervisory

4.2 Fair Lending Developments

4.2.1 HMDA Data Collection and Reporting Reminders for 2017

    As reported in previous editions of Supervisory Highlights, 
beginning with Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) data collected in 
2017 and submitted in 2018, responsibility to receive and process HMDA 
data will transfer from the Federal Reserve Board (FRB) to the 
CFPB.\53\ The HMDA agencies have agreed that a covered institution 
filing HMDA data collected in or after 2017 with the CFPB will be 
deemed to have submitted the HMDA data to the appropriate Federal 
agency.\54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \53\ For additional information regarding HMDA data collection 
and reporting reminders for 2017, see Supervisory Highlights, Fall 
2016, available at http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/Supervisory_Highlights_Issue_13__Final_10.31.16.pdf.
    \54\ The ``HMDA agencies'' refers collectively to the CFPB, the 
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the Federal Deposit 
Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the FRB, the National Credit Union 
Administration (NCUA) and the Department of Housing and Urban 
Development (HUD).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The effective date of the change in the Federal agency that 
receives and processes the HMDA data does not coincide with the 
effective date for the new HMDA data to be collected and reported under 
the Final Rule amending Regulation C published in the Federal Register 
on October 28, 2015. The Final Rule's new data requirements will apply 
to data collected beginning on January 1, 2018. The data fields for 
data collected in 2017 have not changed.
    Additional information about HMDA, the HMDA Filing Instructions 
Guide (FIG) and other data submission resources are located at: http://www.consumerfinance.gov/data-research/hmda/.

4.2.2 HMDA Data Reviews and the Adequacy of HMDA Compliance Programs

    As part of its supervision of very large banks and nonbank mortgage 
lenders, the CFPB reviews the accuracy of HMDA data and the adequacy of 
HMDA compliance programs. In 2013, the CFPB issued a bulletin reminding 
mortgage lenders about the importance of submitting correct mortgage 
loan data. The CFPB has conducted HMDA reviews at dozens of bank and 
nonbank mortgage lenders, and has found that many lenders have adequate 
compliance systems and produce HMDA data with few errors. Moreover, 
while some lenders have been required to resubmit their HMDA data 
because their errors exceeded the relevant resubmission thresholds, 
most of those matters have been addressed through a supervisory 
resolution.
    As noted above, the 2015 Final Rule's new data requirements will 
apply to data collected beginning on January 1, 2018. Given the recent 
updates to the rule, the Bureau's current principal focus is on 
providing regulatory implementation support to financial institutions, 
to assist them in operationally implementing the recent changes to the 
HMDA requirements. After the rule takes effect, consistent with our 
approach to the implementation of other Bureau rules requiring 
significant systems and operational changes, our approach will 
generally be diagnostic and corrective, not punitive. In our initial 
examinations for compliance with the rule, we intend to consider 
whether companies have made good faith efforts to come into compliance 
with the rule in a timely manner. Specifically, we will be evaluating a 
company's overall efforts to come into compliance, including assessing 
the compliance management system and conducting transaction testing. If 
errors are identified, we will work with the institution to determine 
the root cause of the issue and determine what corrective actions, if 
any, are necessary.

4.2.3 FFIEC Releases Updates to HMDA Examiner Transaction Testing 
Guidelines

    In August 2017, the FFIEC, of which the Bureau is a member agency, 
released the FFIEC HMDA Examiner Transaction Testing Guidelines 
(Guidelines).\55\ For HMDA data collected by financial institutions in 
or after 2018, these new FFIEC Guidelines replace the Bureau's HMDA 
Resubmission Schedule and Guidelines which was released in October 
2013.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \55\ See the related Guidelines, available at https://s3.amazonaws.com/files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/201708_cfpb_ffiec-hmda-examiner-transaction-testing-guidelines.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Guidelines Will Help Ensure Accurate Data and Address Reporting 
Burden Concerns
    When examining financial institutions, federal supervisory agencies 
may check the accuracy of HMDA data within a sample of reported 
transactions. If examiners find that the number of errors in the sample 
exceeds certain thresholds, the lender is directed to correct and 
resubmit its HMDA data.
    In light of the new data fields that will be required beginning in 
2018, the new Guidelines:
    [ssquf] Eliminate the file error resubmission threshold under which 
a financial institution would be directed to correct and resubmit its 
entire Loan Application Register (LAR) if the total number of sample 
files with one or more errors equaled or exceeded a certain threshold.
    [ssquf] Establish, for the purpose of counting errors toward the 
field error resubmission threshold, allowable tolerances for certain 
data fields.
    [ssquf] Provide a more lenient 10 percent field error resubmission 
threshold for financial institutions with LAR counts of 100 or less, 
many of which are community banks and credit unions.

[[Page 48714]]

    At the same time, the Guidelines ensure HMDA data integrity by 
maintaining field error resubmission thresholds that safeguard the 
accuracy of each data field, and thus all data, reported under HMDA. 
Furthermore, under the Guidelines, examiners may direct financial 
institutions to change their policies, procedures, audit processes, or 
other aspects of its compliance management system to prevent the 
reoccurrence of errors.
All Federal HMDA Supervisory Agencies Will Use the Same Guidelines
    The Guidelines represent a joint effort by the Bureau, the FRB, the 
OCC, the FDIC, and the NCUA to provide--for the first time--uniform 
guidelines across all Federal HMDA supervisory agencies. This 
collaboration began with the Bureau issuing a Request for Information 
\56\ and holding outreach meetings in which the other supervisory 
agencies participated. The agencies then worked together to develop the 
Guidelines.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \56\ See the related Request for Information, available at 
http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201601_cfpb_request-for-information-regarding-home-mortgage-disclosure-act-resubmission.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Information about HMDA and other data submission resources are 
located at http://www.consumerfinance.gov/adata-research/hmda/.

4.3 Examination Procedures

4.3.1 Updates to the Compliance Management Review Examination 
Procedures

    On August 30, 2017, the CFPB released revised Compliance Management 
Review examination procedures. The procedures were updated in order to 
reflect changes to the FFIEC Interagency Consumer Compliance Ratings 
System (CC Ratings System), which became effective March 31, 2017. 
These procedures do not reflect any new or additional expectations of 
institutions regarding their CMS, nor do they change the examiner's 
assessment from that which examiners have been conducting in the past: 
They only reorganize the procedures to align with the CC Ratings System 
and formalize current CMS review processes.
    As revised, the CMS examination procedures are divided into five 
Modules:

[ssquf] Module 1: Board and Management Oversight
[ssquf] Module 2: Compliance Program
[ssquf] Module 3: Service Provider Oversight
[ssquf] Module 4: Violations of Law and Consumer Harm
[ssquf] Module 5: Examiner Conclusions and Wrap-Up

    In general, all CFPB reviews will include Modules 1, 2, 3, and 5. 
Module 4 will generally be included in targeted reviews of individual 
product lines, as well as examinations that will result in the 
institution receiving a consumer compliance rating. The CMS review for 
target reviews will generally be limited to reviewing aspects of CMS 
pertaining to the product line under review. To the extent that CMS for 
a particular product line or a specific institution has been previously 
reviewed, CFPB examiners may evaluate CMS by reviewing previous 
conclusions and assessing only the changes to the current CMS program.

4.4 Recent CFPB Guidance

    The CFPB is committed to providing guidance on its supervisory 
priorities to industry and members of the public.

4.4.1 Phone Pay Fees Bulletin

    On July 31, 2017, the Bureau released Bulletin 2017-01,\57\ which 
provides guidance to covered persons and service providers regarding 
fee assessments for pay-by-phone services. The bulletin provides 
examples of conduct observed during supervisory examinations and 
enforcement investigations that may violate the Dodd-Frank Act 
prohibition on engaging in UDAAPs, as well as the FDCPA. The bulletin 
clarifies that the Bureau is not mandating specific pay-by-phone 
disclosure requirements, but states that the Bureau expects supervised 
entities to review their practices on charging phone pay fees for 
potential risks of violating Federal consumer financial laws. To that 
end, the bulletin offers a number of suggestions for entities assessing 
whether their practices violate these laws and further recommends 
having in place a corrective action program to address any violations 
identified and reimburse consumers when appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \57\ See Compliance Bulletin 2017-01, available at https://www.consumerfinance.gov/policy-compliance/guidance/implementation-guidance/bulletin-phone-pay-fees/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

5. Conclusion

    The Bureau recognizes the value of communicating its program 
findings to CFPB-supervised entities to help them comply with Federal 
consumer financial law, and to other stakeholders to foster a better 
understanding of the CFPB's work.
    To this end, the Bureau remains committed to publishing its 
Supervisory Highlights report periodically to share information about 
general supervisory and examination findings (without identifying 
specific institutions, except in the case of public enforcement 
actions), to communicate operational changes to the program, and to 
provide a convenient and easily accessible resource for information on 
the Bureau's guidance documents.

    Dated: September 7, 2017.
Richard Cordray,
Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.
[FR Doc. 2017-22700 Filed 10-18-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-AM-P



                                                                           Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 201 / Thursday, October 19, 2017 / Notices                                             48703

                                                 Estimated Total Annual Burden                         Protection Analyst, Office of                          2. Supervisory Observations
                                               Hours: 85.                                              Supervision Policy, 1700 G Street NW.,                   Recent supervisory observations are
                                                 Estimated Total Annual Cost to                        20552, (202) 435–9373.                                 reported in the areas of automobile loan
                                               Public: $152 in recordkeeping/reporting                 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                             servicing, credit card account
                                               costs.
                                                                                                       1. Introduction                                        management, debt collection, deposits,
                                               IV. Request for Comments                                                                                       mortgage origination, mortgage
                                                                                                          The Consumer Financial Protection                   servicing, remittances, service provider
                                                  Comments are invited on: (a) Whether                 Bureau is committed to a consumer
                                               the proposed collection of information                                                                         program, short-term small-dollar
                                                                                                       financial marketplace that is fair,                    lending, and fair lending.
                                               is necessary for the proper performance                 transparent, and competitive, and that
                                               of the functions of the agency, including               works for all consumers. The Bureau                    2.1     Automobile Loan Servicing
                                               whether the information shall have                      supervises both bank and nonbank                         In the Bureau’s recent auto servicing
                                               practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the              institutions to help meet this goal. The               examinations, examiners reviewed how
                                               agency’s estimate of the burden                         findings reported here reflect                         servicers are overseeing repossession
                                               (including hours and cost) of the                       information obtained from supervisory                  agents and how repossessions are
                                               proposed collection of information; (c)                 activities that were generally completed               conducted. Through that work,
                                               ways to enhance the quality, utility, and               between January 2017 and June 2017                     examiners identified an unfair practice
                                               clarity of the information to be                        (unless otherwise stated). In some                     relating to repossession at one or more
                                               collected; and (d) ways to minimize the                 instances, not all corrective actions,                 automobile servicers.
                                               burden of the collection of information                 including through enforcement, have
                                               on respondents, including through the                   been completed at the time of this                     2.1.1 Repossessions of Borrower
                                               use of automated collection techniques                  report’s publication.                                  Vehicles After Borrowers Make Catch-
                                               or other forms of information                              CFPB supervisory reviews and                        Up Payments or Enter Agreements To
                                               technology.                                             examinations typically involve                         Avoid Repossession
                                                  Comments submitted in response to                    assessing a supervised entity’s                           To secure an auto loan, borrowers
                                               this notice will be summarized and/or                   compliance management system and                       give creditors a security interest in their
                                               included in the request for OMB                         compliance with Federal consumer                       vehicles. When a borrower defaults, a
                                               approval of this information collection;                financial laws. When Supervision                       creditor can exercise its rights under the
                                               they also will become a matter of public                determines that a supervised entity has                contract and repossess the secured
                                               record.                                                 violated a statute or regulation,                      vehicle. Many auto servicers provide
                                                 Dated: October 13, 2017.                              Supervision directs the entity to                      options to borrowers to avoid
                                               Sarah Brabson,                                          undertake appropriate corrective                       repossession once a loan is delinquent
                                               NOAA PRA Clearance Officer.                             measures, such as implementing new                     or in default. Servicers may have formal
                                               [FR Doc. 2017–22648 Filed 10–18–17; 8:45 am]            policies, changing written                             extension agreements that allow
                                               BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
                                                                                                       communications, improving training or                  borrowers to forbear payments for a
                                                                                                       monitoring, or otherwise changing                      certain period of time or may cancel a
                                                                                                       conduct to ensure the illegal practices                repossession order once a borrower
                                               BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL                            cease. Supervision also directs the                    makes a payment.
                                               PROTECTION                                              entity to send refunds to consumers, pay                  In one or more recent exams,
                                                                                                       restitution, credit borrower accounts, or              examiners found that one or more
                                               Supervisory Highlights: Summer 2017                     take other remedial actions as                         entities were repossessing vehicles after
                                                                                                       appropriate.                                           the repossession was supposed to be
                                               AGENCY:  Bureau of Consumer Financial                      Recent supervisory resolutions have                 cancelled. In these instances, the
                                               Protection.                                             resulted in total restitution payments of              servicer(s) wrongfully coded the
                                               ACTION: Supervisory Highlights; notice.                 approximately $14 million to more than                 account as remaining delinquent,
                                                                                                       104,000 consumers during the review                    customer service representatives did not
                                               SUMMARY:   The Bureau of Consumer                       period. In addition to these nonpublic                 timely cancel the repossession order
                                               Financial Protection (Bureau or CFPB) is                supervisory activities, the Bureau also                after borrowers made sufficient
                                               issuing its fifteenth edition of its                    resolves violations using public                       payments or entered an agreement with
                                               Supervisory Highlights. In this issue of                enforcement actions.1 CFPB’s recent                    the servicer to avoid repossession, or
                                               Supervisory Highlights, we report                       supervisory activities have either led to              repossession agents had not checked the
                                               examination findings in the areas of                    or supported two recent public                         documentation before repossessing and
                                               auto finance lending; credit card                       enforcement actions, resulting in about                thus did not learn that the repossession
                                               account management; debt collection;                    $1.15 million in consumer remediation                  had been cancelled.
                                               deposits; mortgage servicing; mortgage                  and an additional $1.75 million in civil                  Bureau examiners concluded that it
                                               origination; service providers; short-                  money penalties.                                       was an unfair practice to repossess
                                               term, small-dollar lending; remittances;                   Please submit any questions or                      vehicles where borrowers had brought
                                               and fair lending. As in past editions,                  comments to CFPB_Supervision@                          the account current, entered an
                                               this report includes information on the                 cfpb.gov.                                              agreement with the servicer to avoid
                                               Bureau’s use of its supervisory and
                                                                                                                                                              repossession, or made a payment
                                               enforcement authority, recently released                   1 In 2016, about 70 percent of CFPB examinations
                                                                                                                                                              sufficient to stop the repossession,
rmajette on DSKBCKNHB2PROD with NOTICES




                                               examination procedures, and Bureau                      did not raise issues that led the Bureau to consider
                                                                                                                                                              where reasonably practicable given the
                                               guidance.                                               opening an enforcement investigation. Instead,
                                                                                                       these matters were resolved with nonpublic             timing of the borrower’s action.
                                               DATES:  The Bureau released this edition                agreements by the company to quickly fix any              Supervision directed the servicer(s) to
                                               of the Supervisory Highlights on its Web                problems and provide appropriate relief to             stop the practice. In response to our
                                               site on September 12, 2017.                             consumers. See infra pp. 37–39 (discussing these
                                                                                                       figures). See also https://
                                                                                                                                                              examiners’ findings, the servicer(s)
                                               FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                        www.consumerfinance.gov/about-us/blog/how-we-          informed Supervision that the affected
                                               Adetola Adenuga, Consumer Financial                     keep-you-safe-consumer-financial-marketplace/.         consumers were refunded the


                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:13 Oct 18, 2017   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00025   Fmt 4703   Sfmt 4703   E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM    19OCN1


                                               48704                       Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 201 / Thursday, October 19, 2017 / Notices

                                               repossession fees. The servicer(s) also                 payment for a predetermined fee,                            Supervision found such practices
                                               implemented a system that requires                      credited the same day or the following                    constituted deceptive marketing and
                                               repossession agents to verify that the                  business day. The second pay-by-phone                     sales practices by misrepresenting
                                               repossession order is still active                      service allowed consumers to arrange                      product features, such as the cost and
                                               immediately prior to repossessing the                   future payments options free of charge                    coverage of the optional debt
                                               vehicle, for example, through a specially               to be credited to the consumer’s account                  cancellation add-on product.5
                                               designed mobile application for that                    as soon as two days after the call.                       Supervision directed these entities to
                                               purpose.                                                Customer service representatives were                     establish effective controls over
                                                                                                       given a call script to read to consumers                  marketing and sales practices for the
                                               2.2 Credit Card Account Management                      describing both the fee-based expedited                   debt cancellation credit card add-on
                                                 Supervision reviewed the credit card                  payment option and the free future                        products, ensure representatives make
                                               account management operations of one                    payments option.                                          accurate disclosure of the add-on
                                               or more supervised entities over the past                  A review of calls between customer                     product’s terms, conditions, and costs,
                                               few months. Typically, examiners assess                 service representatives and consumers                     and to reimburse the costs of the credit
                                               advertising and marketing, account                      revealed that in one or more                              card add-on products to impacted
                                               origination, account servicing, payments                examinations representatives did not                      consumers.
                                               and periodic statements, dispute                        follow the script in its entirety and often
                                                                                                       read the script for expedited payments                    2.2.4 Failure To Comply With Billing
                                               resolution, and the marketing, sale and
                                                                                                       only. Typically, customer service                         Error Resolution and Unauthorized
                                               servicing of credit card add-on products.
                                                                                                       representatives did not inform                            Transactions
                                               Bureau examiners found that supervised
                                               entities generally are complying with                   consumers of any free payment options                        Regulation Z requires credit card
                                               Federal consumer financial laws.                        until after the consumer authorized the                   issuers to follow an error resolution
                                               However, in one or more recent                          expedited phone payment and the                           process when a cardholder submits a
                                               examinations, examiners observed that                   customer service representatives did not                  billing error notice and provides that,
                                               one or more entities violated Regulation                inform consumers that the payment                         during resolution, the cardholder may
                                               Z and committed the deceptive                           could be paid free of charge by phone                     withhold payment for the disputed
                                               practices as described below.                           by not expediting when the payment                        amount and the issuer shall not report
                                                                                                       was credited. This practice resulted in                   the disputed amount as delinquent.6 In
                                               2.2.1 Failure To Provide Required                       consumers incurring fees for expedited                    addition, Regulation Z also limits the
                                               Tabular Account-Opening Disclosures                     payments that could have been avoided.                    amount a cardholder can be held liable
                                                  Examiners observed that one or more                  Supervision found this practice was                       for any unauthorized use.7
                                               credit card issuers violated Regulation Z               deceptive because these customer                             During one or more examinations,
                                               by failing to provide the requisite                     service representatives made an implied                   examiners observed that entities: (1)
                                               tabular disclosures with the account                    misrepresentation to consumers paying                     Failed to provide consumers with a
                                               opening materials provided to                           over the phone that all of the pay-by-                    timely written acknowledgement of
                                               numerous cardholders.2 Specifically,                    phone services carried a fee.4                            receipt of a billing error notice; 8 (2)
                                               the account-opening disclosures were                       Supervision directed the entity(ies) to                generally failed to timely comply with
                                               missing the table set forth in Appendix                 establish effective controls over                         the billing error resolution procedures; 9
                                               G–17 of Regulation Z, resulting in                      communications to consumers, ensure                       (3) failed to limit the liability of
                                               consumers receiving incomplete                          representatives informed consumers of                     cardholders for unauthorized use to the
                                               disclosures.3 At one or more entities,                  free payment options prior to                             lesser of $50 or the amount of money,
                                               management attributed this violation to                 authorization of an expedited phone                       property, labor or services obtained by
                                               an employee’s incorrect entry of source                 payment, and reimburse fees to                            the unauthorized use before the card
                                               code for printing disclosures, controls                 consumers impacted by the deceptive                       issuer is notified; 10 (4) before a billing
                                               that were not appropriately structured                  representations about the costs and                       error was resolved, made or threatened
                                               to detect errors, and the entity’s lack of              availability of pay-by-phone options.                     to make an adverse credit report
                                               an independent disclosure review. After                                                                           concerning the consumer’s credit
                                                                                                       2.2.3 Deceptive Misrepresentations to                     standing, or that the amount or account
                                               acknowledging the violations with                       Consumers Concerning Benefits and
                                               examiners, one or more entities initiated                                                                         was delinquent, because the consumer
                                                                                                       Terms of Credit Card Add-On Products                      failed to pay the disputed amount or
                                               a review to ensure that the errors were
                                               limited, the root causes were further                      One or more entities provided its                      applicable related finance or other
                                               identified, and corrective actions were                 customer service representatives with                     charges; 11 (5) failed to timely correct
                                                                                                       call scripts that contained basic                         billing errors and credit consumers’
                                               developed.
                                                                                                       information about debt cancellation                       accounts with disputed amounts or
                                               2.2.2 Deceptive Misrepresentations to                   credit card add-on product(s). A review                   related finance or other charges, as
                                               Consumers Regarding Costs and                           of calls by examiners indicated that                      applicable; 12 (6) failed to send, or failed
                                               Availability of Pay-by-Phone Options                    customer service representatives often                    to timely send, consumers a correction
                                                 During one or more examinations,                      did not read the entire script, and in                    notice where the issuer concluded that
                                               credit card companies provided                          some instances, did not read the script                   the billing error occurred as asserted; 13
                                               consumers with the opportunity to pay                   at all. In one or more instances, the                     (7) failed to conduct, or failed to timely
                                               their credit card bills by mail, online, or             customer service representatives did not
                                                                                                       correct consumers’ stated erroneous                         5 12 U.S.C. 5536(a)(1)(B).
rmajette on DSKBCKNHB2PROD with NOTICES




                                               in person free of charge or by using one                                                                            6 12 CFR 1026.13.
                                               of two pay-by-phone services. The first                 assumptions concerning the benefits of                      7 12 CFR 1026.12(b).
                                               pay-by-phone service permitted                          the product(s), misrepresented the                          8 12 CFR 1026.13(c)(1).

                                               consumers to make an expedited                          potential fees, and assured consumer(s)                     9 12 CFR 1026.13(c)(2).
                                                                                                       that the product(s) would avoid the                         10 12 CFR 1026.12(b)(1)(ii).

                                                 2 12
                                                    CFR 1026.6(b)(1)–(2).                              accrual of late fees or other penalties.                    11 12 CFR 1026.13(d)(2).

                                                 3 Appendix                                                                                                        12 12 CFR 1026.13(c)(2) & 1026.13(e)(1).
                                                          G to 12 CFR part 1026, Form G–
                                               17(A)—Account-Opening Model Form.                         4 12   U.S.C. 5536(a)(1)(B).                              13 12 CFR 1026.13(c)(2) & (e)(2).




                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:13 Oct 18, 2017   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00026    Fmt 4703      Sfmt 4703   E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM   19OCN1


                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 201 / Thursday, October 19, 2017 / Notices                                               48705

                                               conduct, a reasonable investigation                     risk of an FDCPA violation if they                    2.3.3 False Representations Regarding
                                               before determining that no billing error                determine whether client instructions                 the Effect on a Consumer’s Credit
                                               occurred; 14 or (8) failed to provide, or               would violate the FDCPA before                        Report of Paying a Debt in Full Rather
                                               failed to timely provide, consumers                     following them.                                       Than Settling the Debt in Full
                                               with a written explanation for its                                                                               As noted above, a debt collector may
                                               determination as to why it concluded                    2.3.1 Impermissible Communications
                                                                                                                                                             not use false representations or
                                               that a billing error did not occur.15                   With Third Parties
                                                                                                                                                             deceptive means to collect or attempt to
                                                  The root cause of these regulatory                                                                         collect any debt under section 807(10)
                                               violations can, among other things, be                     Under section 805(b) of the FDCPA, a
                                                                                                       debt collector generally may not                      of the FDCPA. Examiners found that one
                                               attributed to weak oversight of service                                                                       or more entities made false
                                               providers that handle dispute resolution                communicate with a person other than
                                                                                                       the consumer in connection with the                   representations to consumers about the
                                               for the card issuers. At one or more                                                                          effect on their credit score of paying a
                                               entities, management failed to perform                  collection of a debt without permission
                                                                                                       from the consumer. Examiners                          debt in full rather than settling the debt
                                               sufficient due diligence of a service                                                                         for less than the full amount. As the
                                               provider hired to perform intake of                     determined that one or more entities did
                                                                                                                                                             CFPB explained in a 2013 bulletin,
                                               incoming phone calls from customers                     not confirm that the correct party had
                                                                                                                                                             representations about the impact of
                                               who reported billing errors and other                   been contacted prior to beginning
                                                                                                                                                             paying a debt on a consumer’s credit
                                               disputes, and ceased doing business                     collection activities. As a result, one or            score may be deceptive. The bulletin
                                               with the service provider because of                    more entities communicated with a                     states that ‘‘in light of the numerous
                                               increasing complaints about the service                 third party in connection with the                    factors that influence an individual
                                               provider’s customer service. One or                     collection of a debt by discussing the                consumer’s credit score, such payments
                                               more entities failed to have sufficient                 debt with an authorized user of a credit              may not improve the credit score of the
                                               documentation of its monitoring of                      card who was not financially                          consumer to whom the representation is
                                               service providers and did not audit its                 responsible for the debt (and who was                 being made. Consequently, debt owners
                                               oversight of service providers.                         not otherwise a ‘‘consumer’’ under                    or third-party debt collectors may well
                                                  Supervision directed one or more                     section 805(b)). In response to these                 deceive consumers if they make
                                               entities to develop a plan that ensures                 findings, one or more entities enhanced               representations that paying debts in
                                               the handling of billing error disputes is
                                                                                                       consumer verification processes to                    collection will improve a consumer’s
                                               corrected, identifies all impacted
                                                                                                       include the verification of first and last            credit score.’’ 17 In response to these
                                               consumers, and remediates harmed
                                                                                                       names, and confirmation of date of birth              findings, one or more entities amended
                                               consumers. One or more entities were
                                                                                                       or the last four digits of Social Security            training materials to remove references
                                               directed to revise their service provider
                                                                                                       number, before disclosing the debt or                 to how a consumer’s credit score may be
                                               program(s) to require document
                                                                                                       the nature of the call to the consumer.               affected by either settling the debt in
                                               retention relating to service provider
                                                                                                       Additionally, one or more entities                    full or paying the debt in full.
                                               monitoring and risk assessment reviews.
                                                                                                       revised their processes to discuss the                2.3.4 Communicating With Consumers
                                               2.3 Debt Collection                                     debt with an authorized user only after               at a Time Known To Be Inconvenient
                                                  The Bureau’s Supervision program                     explicit authorization from the
                                                                                                                                                               Under section 805(a)(1) of the FDCPA,
                                               covers certain bank and nonbank                         cardholder. Lastly, the entities trained              a debt collector may not communicate
                                               creditors that originate and collect their              their collection agents on the enhanced               with a consumer in connection with the
                                               own debt, as well as nonbanks that are                  policies and procedures.                              collection of any debt at any unusual
                                               larger participants in the debt collection
                                                                                                       2.3.2 Deceptively Implying That                       time or place or a time or place known
                                               market. These reviews, among other
                                                                                                       Authorized Users Are Responsible for a                or which should be known to be
                                               things, evaluate the adequacy of the
                                                                                                       Debt                                                  inconvenient to the consumer.
                                               relevant entities’ compliance
                                                                                                                                                             Examiners discovered that consumers
                                               management systems and
                                                                                                          Under section 807(10) of the FDCPA,                were contacted by one or more entities
                                               communications with consumers. At
                                                                                                       a debt collector may not use false                    outside of the hours of 8:00 a.m. to 9:00
                                               one or more entities, examiners’ review
                                                                                                       representations or deceptive means to                 p.m. (which, in the absence of
                                               of these systems and practices included
                                                                                                       collect or attempt to collect any debt.               knowledge to the contrary, may be
                                               activities conducted in a foreign
                                                                                                       Examiners determined that one or more                 assumed to be convenient) or at times
                                               country. During recent examinations of
                                                                                                       entities violated the FDCPA by                        consumers had previously informed the
                                               larger participants, examiners identified
                                                                                                       attempting to collect a debt directly                 entities were inconvenient. These
                                               several violations of the Fair Debt
                                                                                                       from the authorized user of a credit card             violations were caused by the failure to
                                               Collection Practices Act (FDCPA),16
                                                                                                       even though the authorized user was not               accurately update account notes and the
                                               including unauthorized
                                                                                                       financially responsible for the debt. The             use of auto dialers that based call
                                               communications with third parties, false
                                                                                                       practice of soliciting payment from a                 parameters solely on the consumer’s
                                               representations made to authorized
                                                                                                                                                             area code, rather than also considering
                                               credit card users regarding their liability             non-obligated user in a manner that
                                                                                                                                                             the consumer’s last known address.
                                               for debts, false representations regarding              implies that the authorized user is
                                                                                                                                                             Supervision directed one or more
                                               credit reports, and communications                      personally responsible for the debt
                                                                                                                                                             entities to enhance compliance
                                               with consumers at inconvenient times.                   constitutes a deceptive means to collect
                                                  At one or more entities, examiners                                                                         monitoring for dialer systems to ensure
rmajette on DSKBCKNHB2PROD with NOTICES




                                                                                                       a debt in violation of the FDCPA. One                 that they input system parameters
                                               discovered that debt collectors followed                or more entities have undertaken
                                               client instructions that led to violations                                                                    accurately and to ensure that they
                                                                                                       remedial and corrective actions
                                               of the FDCPA. Entities can mitigate the                 regarding these violations, which are                    17 CFPB Bulletin 2013–08, Representations


                                                 14 12
                                                                                                       under review by Supervision.                          Regarding Effect of Debt Payments on Credit
                                                       CFR 1026.13(c)(2) & (f).                                                                              Reports and Scores, available at: http://
                                                 15 12 CFR 1026.13(c)(2) & (f)(1).                                                                           files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201307_cfpb_bulletin_
                                                 16 15 U.S.C. 1692–1692p.                                                                                    collections-consumer-credit.pdf.



                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:13 Oct 18, 2017   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00027   Fmt 4703   Sfmt 4703   E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM   19OCN1


                                               48706                       Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 201 / Thursday, October 19, 2017 / Notices

                                               properly monitor collectors for                         consumers with respect to hard holds                  the financial institution relied upon in
                                               inputting and adhering to account                       placed on their accounts.                             the course of the investigation.18
                                               notations.                                                                                                      Examiners found that one or more
                                                                                                       2.4.2 Misrepresentations About                        institutions violated several of the error
                                               2.4 Deposits                                            Monthly Service Fees                                  resolution provisions of Regulation E.
                                                  The CFPB continues to examine banks                                                                        Among other things, examiners
                                                                                                          Examiners found that one or more
                                               for compliance with Regulation E as                                                                           observed that one or more entities
                                               well as review for any unfair, deceptive,               institutions engaged in deceptive acts or
                                                                                                                                                             prematurely closed investigations and
                                               or abusive acts or practices (UDAAPs) in                practices by representing in deposit
                                                                                                                                                             denied claims when consumers failed to
                                               connection with deposit accounts. As                    account fee schedules that monthly
                                                                                                                                                             submit, or delayed in submitting,
                                               described in more detail below, CFPB                    account service fees would be waived
                                                                                                                                                             supplemental information beyond that
                                               examiners continue to find deceptive                    under circumstances in which those
                                                                                                                                                             which financial institutions may require
                                               acts or practices related to deposit                    fees, in fact, would be assessed. One or              under Regulation E.19 Examiners also
                                               disclosures and representations that                    more institutions offered a deposit                   found that the institution(s) failed to
                                               incorrectly inform consumers about                      product that contained a monthly                      investigate claims and to provide
                                               fees, including conditions when certain                 service fee. The service fee was waived               provisional credit within 10 business
                                               fees will apply. Separately, Supervision                if consumers met certain qualifications.              days of receiving notice of the alleged
                                               concluded that one or more institutions                 One such qualification—as described in                error.20 Examiners further observed that
                                               were engaging in deceptive acts or                      the fee schedules—was if the consumer                 one or more institutions refused
                                               practices by misrepresenting deposit                    made ten or more payments from the                    consumers’ requests to review material
                                               overdraft protection products.                          checking account during a statement                   relied upon by the institution(s) in
                                               Examiners also found unfair acts or                     cycle. In fact, only debit card purchases             denying error claims, and incorrectly
                                               practices related to conditions where                   and debit card payments qualified                     informed consumers that subpoenas
                                               one or more institutions froze deposit                  toward the fee waiver threshold, and                  would be required to review that
                                               accounts. Finally, examiners continue to                other payments from a consumer’s                      material.21 With respect to these types
                                               find issues associated with Regulation E                checking account, such as ACH                         of violations, Supervision directed the
                                               error resolution investigations.                        payments, did not qualify. Moreover,                  relevant entities to take measures to
                                                  In all cases where examiners found                   only payments that ‘‘posted’’ during the              ensure compliance with the error
                                               UDAAPs or violations of Regulation E,                   statement cycle qualified toward the                  resolution provisions of Regulation E.
                                               Supervision directed institutions to                    waiver and payments that were initiated
                                               make appropriate changes to address the                 but not posted during the statement                   2.4.4 Deceptive Statements About
                                               underlying issue(s), as well as enhance                 cycle did not qualify. The                            Overdraft Protection Products
                                               compliance management systems to                        representations that the institution(s)                  In 2010, Federal rules took effect that
                                               prevent future violations and, where                    made in the fee schedules could lead a                prohibited banks and credit unions from
                                               appropriate, to remediate consumers for                 reasonable consumer to believe that all               charging overdraft fees on ATM and
                                               harm they experienced.                                  checking-account payments initiated                   one-time debit card transactions unless
                                                                                                       during the statement cycle would                      consumers affirmatively opted in.22
                                               2.4.1 Freezing of Deposit Accounts
                                                                                                       qualify toward the ten-payment fee                    Many depository institutions provide a
                                                 Examiners found that one or more                      waiver threshold, a material aspect of                variety of overdraft products that may
                                               institutions engaged in unfair acts or                  the product or service. As a result,                  cover consumer transactions that
                                               practices by placing hard holds on                      Supervision cited the institution(s) for              overdraw accounts.
                                               customer accounts to stop all activity                  deceptive acts or practices. Supervision                 Supervision determined that one or
                                               when the institution(s) observed                        directed the institution(s) to ensure that            more institutions engaged in a deceptive
                                               suspicious activity. These hard holds                   all disclosures regarding the fee waivers             act or practice by misrepresenting their
                                               resulted in the consumers’ accounts                     include accurate and non-misleading                   opt-in deposit overdraft protection
                                               being locked, resulting in payments not                 information.                                          products when answering inbound
                                               being honored, deposits being rejected,                                                                       telephone calls from consumers,
                                               and the consumer lacking access to his                  2.4.3 Violations of Error Resolution                  including that:
                                               or her funds for as long as two weeks.                  Requirements                                             D The overdraft protection product
                                               Examiners also found that one or more                                                                         applied to check, automated clearing
                                               institutions failed to clearly,                            Supervision continues to find                      house (ACH), and recurring bill
                                               consistently, and promptly                              violations of Regulation E’s error                    payment transactions, when the
                                               communicate information about the                       resolution requirements. As noted in the              overdraft protection product did not
                                               nature and status of these hard holds to                Fall 2014 edition of Supervisory                      apply to those transactions;
                                               consumers. Examiners found that less                    Highlights, Regulation E, which                          D The overdraft protection product
                                               drastic measures would have                             implements the Electronic Fund                        would allow a consumer to withdraw
                                               sufficiently addressed the suspicious                   Transfer Act, imposes specific                        more than the daily ATM cash
                                               activity concern in many instances.                     requirements on financial institutions                withdrawal limit and be subject to only
                                               Even where the hard holds were                          for how to resolve error allegations                  one overdraft fee. In actuality, a
                                               appropriate, the failure to properly                    reported by consumers related to                      consumer would not have been allowed
                                               communicate with consumers                              electronic fund transfers. Among other                to surpass the daily ATM cash
                                               prevented consumers from being able to                  requirements, Regulation E requires
rmajette on DSKBCKNHB2PROD with NOTICES




                                               take measures to mitigate the injury.                   financial institutions to promptly                      18 12 CFR 1005.11.
                                                 Supervision directed the institution(s)               investigate error allegations, to provide               19 See 12 CFR 1005.11(b).
                                               to cease unnecessarily placing hard                     timely provisional credit to consumers,                 20 See 12 CFR 1005.11(c)(1) & (c)(2)(i).


                                               holds on consumer deposit accounts                      to promptly provide consumers with                      21 See 12 CFR 1005.11(d)(1).
                                                                                                                                                               22 74 FR 59033 (Nov. 17, 2009) (codified at 12
                                               and to develop and implement policies                   notice of the findings of the financial
                                                                                                                                                             CFR part 1005.17), available at https://
                                               and procedures to clearly, consistently,                institution’s investigation, and to allow             www.gpo.gov/fdsys/granule/FR-2009-11-17/E9-
                                               and promptly communicate with                           consumers to review the documentation                 27474.



                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:13 Oct 18, 2017   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00028   Fmt 4703   Sfmt 4703   E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM     19OCN1


                                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 201 / Thursday, October 19, 2017 / Notices                                                  48707

                                               withdrawal limit, regardless of                              D The entity(ies) failed to obtain and/                dwelling) may not include terms that
                                               enrollment in the overdraft protection                     or document the consumer’s intent to                     require arbitration or any other non-
                                               product, and it was not possible to do                     proceed with the transaction prior to                    judicial procedure to resolve any
                                               so while incurring only one overdraft                      imposing a fee in connection with the                    controversy or settle any claims arising
                                               fee; and                                                   consumer’s application; 25                               out of the transaction.31
                                                 D The overdraft protection product                         D Waivers of the three-day review                         Despite this prohibition, at one or
                                               would take effect on the same day as                       period did not contain a bona fide                       more entities examiners identified
                                               enrollment, when the product would                         personal financial emergency; 26                         template language for certain residential
                                               not actually take effect until the next                      D The entity(ies) failed to provide                    loan document(s) containing a notice
                                               day.                                                       consumers with a list identifying at least               that the note is subject to arbitration.
                                                 Supervision determined that these                        one available settlement service                         Supervision concluded that use of the
                                               representations misled or were likely to                   provider, if the creditor permits the                    arbitration-related notice constitutes a
                                               mislead a reasonable consumer                              consumer to shop for a settlement                        deceptive act or practice since it is
                                               regarding a material aspect of the                         service; 27                                              likely to mislead a reasonable consumer
                                               overdraft protection product and that                        D The entity(ies) failed to disclose the               into believing that a claim arising under
                                               account opening disclosures or                             amount payable into an escrow account                    the residential loan document must be
                                               subsequent enrollment disclosures did                      on the Loan Estimate and Closing                         submitted to arbitration. After having
                                               not cure the misleading representations.                   Disclosure when the consumer elected                     viewed the notice, a consumer would
                                               Supervision directed one or more                           to escrow taxes and insurance; 28                        have been more likely to agree to post-
                                               depository institutions to cease                             D Loan Estimates did not include the                   dispute arbitration or to fail to pursue
                                               misrepresenting features of their                          date and time at which estimated                         judicial remedies under the mistaken
                                               overdraft protection products.                             closings cost expire; 29 and                             belief that arbitration was required.
                                                                                                            D The entity(ies) failed to properly                   Supervision directed one or more of the
                                               2.5   Mortgage Origination                                 disclose on the Closing Disclosure fees                  entities to cease further use of the
                                                 Supervision assessed the mortgage                        the consumer paid prior to closing.30                    template.
                                               origination operations of one or more                        Examiners worked in a collaborative                    2.6      Mortgage Servicing
                                               supervised entities for compliance with                    manner with one or more entities to
                                                                                                          identify the root cause of these                         2.6.1 Requirements To Help Borrowers
                                               applicable Federal consumer financial
                                                                                                          violations and determine appropriate                     Complete Loss Mitigation Applications
                                               laws. Examiners identified instances of
                                               regulatory violations and one or more                      corrective actions, including                               Regulation X provides important
                                               instances where supervised entities                        reimbursement to consumers where                         process protections for borrowers in
                                               engaged in a deceptive practice, as                        tolerance violations occurred.                           financial distress who apply for a
                                               described below.                                                                                                    foreclosure alternative. Specifically, it
                                                                                                          2.5.2 Failure To Reimburse Unused                        requires mortgage servicers to exercise
                                               2.5.1 Know Before You Owe Mortgage                         Portions of a Required Service Deposit                   reasonable diligence in obtaining
                                               Disclosure Rule                                            Where Certain Disclosure Language Was                    documents and information to complete
                                                                                                          Used Constituted an Unfair Practice                      a loss mitigation application.32 A
                                                  Supervision has completed its first
                                               round of mortgage origination                                At one or more entities, pursuant to                   complete loss mitigation application
                                               examinations for compliance with the                       certain disclosure language a specified                  includes all the information that the
                                               Know Before You Owe mortgage                               service deposit was collected from                       servicer requires from a borrower in
                                               disclosure rule. The Bureau stated that                    consumers but unused portions were                       evaluating applications for the loss
                                               it would be sensitive to the progress                      not reimbursed when consumers                            mitigation options available to the
                                               made by supervised entities focused on                     withdrew their applications. This would                  borrower.33
                                               making good faith efforts to come into                     constitute unfair acts or practices in                      While Regulation X permits a servicer
                                               compliance with the rule upon the                          those cases where the loans did not                      to offer a loss mitigation option based
                                               effective date of October 3, 2015. Initial                 proceed to closing due to the entity’s                   on a borrower’s incomplete application
                                               examination findings and observations                      unreasonable actions or inactions.                       under certain circumstances,34 the
                                               conclude that, for the most part,                          Supervision directed each entity to                      servicer still must act with reasonable
                                               supervised entities, both banks and                        conduct a review to identify impacted                    diligence to collect the information
                                               nonbanks, were able to effectively                         consumers. Refunds were provided to                      needed to complete the application.35
                                               implement and comply with the Know                         consumers where the loan files could                     For example, in the context of a short-
                                               Before You Owe mortgage disclosure                         not support retention of the service                     term payment forbearance program
                                               rule changes. However, examiners did                       deposit.                                                 offered based on an incomplete loss
                                               find some violations. Listed below are                                                                              mitigation application, reasonable
                                                                                                          2.5.3 Deceptive Practice Involving an
                                               violations found by examiners relating                                                                              diligence could include notifying the
                                                                                                          Arbitration Notice on Certain
                                               to the content and timing of Loan                                                                                   borrower that the borrower is being
                                                                                                          Residential Mortgage Loan Documents
                                               Estimates and Closing Disclosures:                                                                                  offered a payment forbearance program
                                                  D Amounts paid by the consumer at                          Under Regulation Z, a contract or                     based on an evaluation of an incomplete
                                               closing exceeded the amount disclosed                      other agreement for a consumer credit                    application and that the borrower
                                               on the Loan Estimate beyond the                            transaction secured by a dwelling                        retains the option of completing the
                                               applicable tolerance threshold; 23                         (including a home equity line of credit                  application to receive a full evaluation
rmajette on DSKBCKNHB2PROD with NOTICES




                                                  D The entity(ies) failed to retain                      secured by the consumer’s principal                      of all loss mitigation options available to
                                               evidence of compliance with the                              25 12 CFR 1026.19(e)(2)(i)(A), 1026.25(c)(1).            31 12 CFR 1026.36(h)(1).
                                               requirements associated with the Loan                        26 12 CFR 1026.19(f)(1)(iv).                             32 12 CFR 1024.41(b)(1).
                                               Estimate; 24                                                 27 12 CFR 1026.19(e)(1)(vi)(c).                          33 12 CFR 1024.41(b)(1).
                                                                                                            28 12 CFR 1026.37(c)(2)(iii), .38(c)(1).                 34 12 CFR 1024.41(c)(2)(ii) and (iii).
                                                 23 12   CFR 1026.19(e)(3)(i), (ii).                        29 12 CFR 1026.37(a)(13)(ii).                            35 12 CFR 1024.41(b)(1) and Comments 41(b)(1)–
                                                 24 12   CFR 1026.25(c)(1).                                 30 12 CFR 1026.38(f)(2), (f)(5), (h)(2), (i)(2)(ii).   4.iii and 41(c)(2)(iii)–2.



                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014      15:13 Oct 18, 2017   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00029   Fmt 4703     Sfmt 4703    E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM    19OCN1


                                               48708                       Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 201 / Thursday, October 19, 2017 / Notices

                                               the borrower.36 Near the end of the                     could construe the waivers as barring                 remittances).42 Regulation E, Subpart B
                                               program, and prior to the end of the                    them from bringing claims in court—                   (or the Remittance Rule) provides
                                               forbearance period, it may also be                      including Federal claims—related to                   protections, including disclosure
                                               necessary for the servicer to contact the               their mortgages. Regulation Z states that             requirements, and error resolution and
                                               borrower to determine if the borrower                   a ‘‘contract or other agreement relating              cancellation rights to consumers who
                                               wishes to complete the application and                  to a consumer credit transaction secured              send remittance transfers to other
                                               proceed with a full loss mitigation                     by a dwelling . . . may not be applied                consumers or businesses in a foreign
                                               evaluation.37 Generally, the reasonable                 or interpreted to bar a consumer from                 country.43 The amendments implement
                                               diligence requirement helps address the                 bringing a claim in court pursuant to                 statutory requirements set forth in the
                                               concern that borrowers offered a short-                 any provision of law for damages or                   Dodd-Frank Act.
                                               term payment forbearance program or                     other relief in connection with any
                                               short-term repayment plan may be                                                                                 CFPB’s examination program for both
                                                                                                       alleged violation of any Federal law.’’ 40            bank and nonbank remittance providers
                                               experiencing a hardship, for which                      Supervision also determined broad
                                               other, longer-term loss mitigation                                                                            assesses the adequacy of each entity’s
                                                                                                       waivers to be unfair insofar as they are              CMS for remittance transfers. These
                                               solutions might be more appropriate                     offered in a ‘‘take it or leave it’’ fashion
                                               given their individual circumstances.                                                                         reviews also check for providers’
                                                                                                       in the ordinary course of offering loss               compliance with the Remittance Rule
                                                  In recent exams, examiners found that                mitigation agreements, rather than in
                                               one or more servicers received oral                                                                           and other applicable Federal consumer
                                                                                                       the context of resolution of a contested              financial laws. Supervision directed
                                               incomplete loss mitigation applications                 claim or another individualized analysis
                                               and pre-approved borrowers for short-                                                                         entities to make appropriate changes to
                                                                                                       of the servicer’s risks and the                       compliance management systems to
                                               term payment forbearance programs
                                                                                                       consumer’s potential claims.41                        prevent future violations and, where
                                               based on those applications. However,
                                               the servicer(s) did not notify borrowers                   Supervision continues to find broad                appropriate, to remediate consumers for
                                               of their right to complete the application              waivers of rights in loss mitigation                  harm they experienced.
                                               and did not separately request other                    agreements. For example, in exchange
                                                                                                       for a short sale agreement, one or more               2.7.1 International Top-Up and Bill
                                               information needed to evaluate for all
                                                                                                       servicers required consumers to                       Pay Services
                                               the other loss mitigation options offered
                                               by the owner or assignee of the loan.                   completely waive, release, and                           Examiners found that one or more
                                               And near the end of the program, and                    relinquish any claims of any nature                   supervised entities violated section
                                               prior to the end of the short-term                      against the servicer(s) arising out of or             919(a)(1) 44 of EFTA and applicable
                                               payment forbearance period, the                         relating to the mortgage note and any                 provisions of Regulation E by failing to
                                               servicer(s) failed to conduct outreach to               obligations thereunder, and to agree that             treat international mobile top-up
                                               determine whether borrowers wished to                   they had no defenses to payment in full               services in excess of $15 as a remittance
                                               complete the application and proceed                    under the note. Supervision determined
                                                                                                                                                             transfer. An international mobile top-up
                                               with a full loss mitigation evaluation.                 the waiver to be deceptive and required
                                                                                                                                                             service converts funds from consumers
                                                  Supervision determined that the                      the servicer(s) to remove it from the
                                                                                                                                                             in the United States to airtime on a
                                               servicer(s) violated Regulation X by                    agreements.
                                                                                                                                                             phone account based on the usage and
                                               failing to exercise reasonable diligence                   In one or more servicing exams,                    rate plan selected by the owner of the
                                               in obtaining documents and information                  Supervision also identified blanket                   phone residing in a foreign country. The
                                               to complete a loss mitigation                           waivers in cash-for-keys agreements that
                                               application.38 Supervision directed the                                                                       entirety of these transactions occurs
                                                                                                       gave borrowers the opportunity to                     exclusively in currencies up until the
                                               servicer(s) to implement policies and                   receive a payment in exchange for their
                                               procedures to ensure that the servicer(s)                                                                     point funds are received by the
                                                                                                       commitment to vacate the property by a                international cellphone carrier. The
                                               exercise reasonable diligence in                        date certain, thereby avoiding eviction
                                               obtaining documents and information to                                                                        entity(ies) failed to provide the
                                                                                                       proceedings. The servicer(s) presented                disclosures, cancellation, or error
                                               complete a loss mitigation application                  the waivers as take-it-or-leave-it
                                               for borrowers entering into short term                                                                        resolution rights to international top-up
                                                                                                       boilerplate and a reasonable borrower                 consumers required by EFTA and
                                               payment forbearance programs based on                   would have construed them to broadly
                                               incomplete applications, including by                                                                         Regulation E.
                                                                                                       waive all claims or defenses including
                                               contacting the borrowers near the end of                any in connection with the original                      Similarly, one or more institutions
                                               the program, and prior to the end of the                                                                      violated section 919(a)(1) of EFTA and
                                                                                                       credit transaction that the borrower
                                               forbearance period.                                                                                           applicable provisions of Regulation E by
                                                                                                       might have asserted against the
                                               2.6.2 Broad Waivers in Short Sale and                   servicer(s). Supervision determined the               failing to treat international bill
                                               Cash-for-Keys Agreements                                waiver to be deceptive and unfair, and                payment services in excess of $15 as
                                                                                                       directed the servicer(s) to remove all                remittance transfers and, as a result,
                                                 Supervision previously identified                                                                           failed to comply with the required
                                               broad waiver of rights clauses in                       such waivers from the agreements.
                                                                                                                                                             disclosure, error resolution, and
                                               forbearance, loan modification and                      2.7    Remittances                                    cancellation requirements of the
                                               other loss mitigation options as                                                                              Remittance Rule. Supervision directed
                                               violating the Dodd-Frank Act’s                            The CFPB continues to examine both                  entities to make appropriate changes to
                                               prohibition against unfair or deceptive                 large banks and nonbanks for                          their CMS in order to prevent future
rmajette on DSKBCKNHB2PROD with NOTICES




                                               acts or practices.39 Supervision                        compliance with the CFPB’s                            violations.
                                               determined such waivers to be                           amendments to Regulation E governing
                                               deceptive where reasonable consumers                    international money transfers (or                       42 See 78 FR 30662 (May 22, 2013) (codified at 12

                                                                                                                                                             CFR part 1005), available at http://www.gpo.gov/
                                                 36 Comment   1024.41(b)(1)–4.iii.                       40 12CFR 1026.36(h)(2).                             fdsys/pkg/FR-2013-05-22/pdf/2013-10604.pdf.
                                                 37 Comment   1024.41(b)(1)–4.iii.                       41 See                                                43 Regulation E implements the Electronic Fund
                                                                                                               Supervisory Highlights: Winter 2013, at 6,
                                                 38 12 CFR 1024.41(b)(1).                                                                                    Transfer Act (EFTA).
                                                                                                       available at http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/
                                                 39 12 U.S.C. 5536(a)(1).                              201401_cfpb_supervision-highlights.pdf.                 44 15 U.S.C. 1693o–1(a)(1).




                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:13 Oct 18, 2017   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00030   Fmt 4703   Sfmt 4703   E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM   19OCN1


                                                                           Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 201 / Thursday, October 19, 2017 / Notices                                          48709

                                               2.8 Service Provider Program                            and violations of Federal consumer                    violations, which are under review by
                                                 The Spring 2017 edition of                            financial law, including the Dodd-Frank               Supervision.
                                               Supervisory Highlights described                        Act’s prohibition on UDAAPs.
                                                                                                                                                             Repeated Collection Calls to Third
                                               Supervision’s service provider program,                 Highlighted below are some of the
                                                                                                                                                             Parties
                                               which involves the direct examination                   UDAAP findings in recent examinations
                                                                                                       regarding collection practices,                          Examiners observed one or more
                                               of service providers, particularly in the                                                                     entities routinely making repeated calls
                                               mortgage origination and mortgage                       marketing representations,
                                                                                                       representations regarding use of                      to third parties, including personal and
                                               servicing markets. Examiners are                                                                              work references that borrowers listed on
                                               focusing on the structure, operations                   references, and payment practices.
                                                                                                                                                             their loan applications. In some
                                               and compliance management systems of                    2.9.1 Short-Term, Small-Dollar Debt                   instances, one or more entities
                                               various service providers, as well as                   Collection                                            repeatedly requested that the third
                                               certain other targeted areas.                                                                                 parties relay messages to delinquent
                                                                                                         As noted in the Spring 2014
                                               2.8.1 Deficient Mortgage Periodic                                                                             borrowers in a manner that disclosed or
                                                                                                       Supervisory Highlights, a continued
                                               Statements                                                                                                    risk disclosing the debt. The loan
                                                                                                       focus of the CFPB’s short-term, small-
                                                                                                                                                             applications required consumers to list
                                                  Examiners reviewed whether one or                    dollar lending examination program is
                                                                                                                                                             the names and numbers of third parties
                                               more service provider(s) adequately                     how lenders collect consumer debt.
                                                                                                                                                             and, in some instances, disclosures
                                               considered certain requirements of the                  Since then, we have learned that 11
                                                                                                                                                             provided to consumers conveyed that
                                               Title XIV Final Rule in developing                      percent of consumers who indicated                    the individuals listed would be
                                               products for mortgage servicers.45                      that they had been contacted about a                  contacted by the entity(ies) only as part
                                               Examiners found that the service                        debt in collection reported attempts to               of the origination and underwriting
                                               provider(s) developed a mortgage                        collect on a payday loan.47 Nearly ten                process. The collection calls to third
                                               servicing information technology (IT)                   percent of all debt collection complaints             parties were not made for the purpose
                                               system functionality that failed to                     handled by the CFPB are related to                    of locating the borrowers.
                                               implement certain Regulation Z                          payday loans.48 Examiners have                           Supervision determined that these
                                               requirements for periodic statements.                   identified a range of illegal collections             collection activities constituted unfair
                                               The service provider(s)’ billing files                  practices by small-dollar lenders, some               acts or practices. Through these calls,
                                               failed to list the total sum of any fees or             of which are highlighted below.                       the entity(ies) caused or was likely to
                                               charges imposed, and the transaction                                                                          cause substantial injury because the
                                               activity that occurred since the last                   Workplace Collection Calls
                                                                                                                                                             entity(ies) either disclosed or risked
                                               statement.46 Moreover, the service                         Examiners found that one or more                   disclosing borrowers’ default or
                                               provider(s) did not adequately consider                 entities, in the course of collecting their           delinquency to third parties. The
                                               client concerns about the issue.                        own debt, called borrowers at their                   consumer injury associated with the
                                               Supervision concluded that these                        places of employment. The entity(ies)                 calls could not be reasonably avoided
                                               weaknesses contributed to the clients’                  placed repeated calls to borrowers at                 because the borrowers were not aware
                                               violations of Regulation Z and directed                 work even after borrowers asked the                   that the lenders would contact
                                               the service provider(s) to implement                    lenders to stop calling them at work or               references or other third parties for debt
                                               policies and procedures that span                       told the lenders that the borrowers’                  collection purposes, nor were they
                                               systems design and application controls                 employers did not allow such calls.                   aware that one or more lenders would
                                               to ensure that the billing files made                   Examiners determined that this                        continue to call such references after
                                               available through the mortgage servicing                collection activity constituted an unfair             requests to stop. The benefits to
                                               IT system functionality enable                          act or practice. The practice of                      consumers and to competition did not
                                               compliance with Regulation Z. In                        continuing to call borrowers repeatedly               outweigh the injury; the entities had the
                                               addition, Supervision directed the                      at the workplace after requests to stop               borrower’s location information and
                                               service provider(s) to ensure that when                 causes or is likely to cause substantial              therefore had other ways to reach
                                               clients communicate potential                           injury because continued contact may                  consumers without disclosing or risking
                                               regulatory issues, the service provider(s)              result in negative employment                         disclosure of the borrowers’ default or
                                               analyze and implement changes as                        consequences to the borrower.                         delinquency to third parties. One or
                                               appropriate to enable users of the                      Borrowers cannot avoid the injury when                more entities have undertaken remedial
                                               mortgage servicing IT system                            the lenders continue to make repeated                 and corrective actions regarding these
                                               functionality to comply with Regulation                 calls after the borrowers requested that              violations, which are under review by
                                               Z.                                                      they stop. Where the lender has been                  Supervision.
                                               2.9 Short-Term, Small-Dollar Lending                    expressly told to stop contacting the
                                                                                                                                                             Misrepresentations in Collections
                                                                                                       consumer at work or that the employer
                                                 The Bureau’s Supervision program                      prohibits such calls, the harm to                       Examiners observed one or more
                                               covers entities that offer or provide                   consumers from continued calling                      entities in the course of collecting
                                               payday loans. Such entities often offer                 outweighs any countervailing benefits to              delinquent or defaulted loans making
                                               other short-term, small dollar (STSD)                   consumers and competition. One or                     statements to borrowers that they must
                                               products to consumers as well such as                   more lenders have undertaken remedial                 immediately contact the lenders to
                                               single payment, installment, or auto or                 and corrective actions regarding these                avoid additional collection activity,
                                               vehicle title loans. During the                                                                               including being visited at home or work.
rmajette on DSKBCKNHB2PROD with NOTICES




                                               examinations of STSD entities,                             47 Consumer Experiences with Debt Collection       In fact, the entity(ies) did not actually
                                               examiners identified CMS weaknesses                     (Jan. 2017) at 19, available at http://               conduct such in-person collection visits.
                                                                                                       files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/201701_         Supervision concluded these
                                                 45 Title XIV Final Rule updates effective January     cfpb_Debt-Collection-Survey-Report.pdf.               representations constituted deceptive
                                               10, 2014, with the exception of the appraisal              48 Semi-annual report of the Consumer Financial
                                               requirements effective for applications received on     Protection Bureaus (Fall 2016) at 31, available at
                                                                                                                                                             acts or practices. Delinquent consumers
                                               or after January 18, 2014.                              https://www.consumerfinance.gov/documents/            could reasonably interpret the
                                                 46 12 CFR 1026.41(d)(2)(ii); (d)(4).                  1977/122016_cfpb_SemiAnnualReport.pdf.                entity(ies)’ statements to mean that in-


                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:13 Oct 18, 2017   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00031   Fmt 4703   Sfmt 4703   E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM   19OCN1


                                               48710                       Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 201 / Thursday, October 19, 2017 / Notices

                                               person visits to the consumers’ place of                lower fees than their competitors’                    financial information, and instead seek
                                               employment or home would take place                     products and services. The entity(ies),               out other loan options. Supervision
                                               if the consumers did not immediately                    however, did not have substantiation to               directed the one or more entities to
                                               contact the entity(ies). The                            support these claims. The entity(ies)                 revise their Web sites and other
                                               representations were material to                        relied on out-of-date internal analyses               marketing materials.
                                               consumers because they could cause                      that only covered fees for a small
                                                                                                                                                             2.9.3 Misrepresentations Regarding
                                               consumers to change their behavior to                   number of products and services and
                                                                                                                                                             Use of References Provided by
                                               avoid the promised visits. One or more                  did not reflect current rates, products, or
                                                                                                                                                             Borrowers in Small Dollar Loan
                                               entities agreed to modify their collection              services or those of their competitors.
                                                                                                                                                             Applications
                                               practices to comply with Federal                        Supervision concluded that by making
                                               consumer financial laws.                                these misleading comparisons, the                        Examiners observed one or more
                                                                                                       entity(ies) engaged in deceptive acts or              entities making false representations
                                               2.9.2 Marketing Misrepresentations                      practices. The representations were                   regarding the use of information
                                               About Small Dollar Loan Products                        likely to mislead reasonable consumers                provided by consumers in loan
                                               No Credit Check                                         into believing that the entity(ies) had a             applications. The entity(ies) required
                                                                                                       basis for claiming that consumers would               applicants to provide names of
                                                 Examiners observed that one or more                   pay lower fees for the products and                   references, including work colleagues,
                                               entities advertised that consumers could                services identified in the advertisement.             neighbors, and family members, on the
                                               receive loans without undergoing credit                 This misrepresentation was material                   loan applications. On its loan
                                               checks. However, these entity(ies)                      because it likely influenced consumers’               applications, the entity(ies) represented,
                                               obtained consumer reports from                          decisions to obtain these products and                directly and by implication, that the
                                               specialty consumer reporting companies                  services from the entity(s) over other                references would only be contacted to
                                               during their underwriting processes and                 short-term, small-dollar lenders.                     verify information and evaluate
                                               sometimes denied loans to consumers                     Supervision directed one or more                      creditworthiness in connection with the
                                               based on the information in the reports.                entities to cease advertising that their              consumers’ loans. However, the
                                               Supervision concluded that this                         fees were lower than their competitors,               entity(ies) also contacted the applicants’
                                               conduct constituted deceptive acts or                   absent adequate substantiation.                       references to market loan products to
                                               practices. The advertisements were                                                                            them. Supervision concluded that the
                                               deceptive because they were likely to                   Ability To Apply Online                               entity(ies), by misleading consumers
                                               mislead reasonable consumers into                         Examiners observed one or more                      about how they would use the
                                               believing that no credit inquiries would                entities representing on their Web sites              consumers’ references, engaged in
                                               be conducted and thus, they could                       that consumers may ‘‘apply online’’ by                deceptive acts or practices. A consumer
                                               receive a loan without a credit check.                  completing lengthy online forms. The                  acting reasonably under the
                                               These misrepresentations were likely to                 forms solicited all or most of the                    circumstances could interpret the loan
                                               influence consumers’ decisions to                       information that a consumer would                     applications to mean that the entity(ies)
                                               choose to apply for the loans.                          typically submit in order to apply for a              would only contact references in
                                               Supervision directed the one or more                    short-term, small-dollar loan. The forms              connection with the consumers’ loans
                                               entities to cease advertising that                      also permitted consumers to list most                 and that the entity(ies) would not
                                               consumers could receive loans without                   states as their home State, suggesting                market their services to the individuals
                                               credit checks.                                          that an application for an online loan                identified by consumers as references.
                                                                                                       was available to consumers nationwide.                The representations were material
                                               Availability of Products and Services
                                                                                                       In fact, consumers could not apply                    because they were likely to impact
                                                 Examiners observed that one or more                   online because the entity(ies) only                   consumer behavior. For example, if
                                               entities advertised products and                        originate loans at their physical store               borrowers were aware that the
                                               services in outdoor signage that the                    front locations and do not originate                  entity(ies) makes marketing calls to the
                                               entity(ies) did not, in fact, offer. They               loans based on the purported online                   references listed on applications,
                                               consisted of products and services that                 loan applications. Consumers could                    borrowers may provide different
                                               the lenders had not offered for several                 only receive a loan from the lenders if               references or not apply for the loan at
                                               years but would be of interest to payday                they visited storefront locations. In                 all. Supervision directed one or more
                                               loan customers. Supervision concluded                   addition, the entity(ies) only extends                lenders to ensure that all disclosures
                                               that by advertising products and                        credit in a small number of States where              regarding the collection and use of
                                               services the entity(ies) did not, in fact,              they operate, not nationwide.                         references do not include any false or
                                               offer, the lenders engaged in deceptive                 Supervision determined that the                       misleading information.
                                               acts or practices. A reasonable consumer                entity(ies)’ representations constituted                 Examiners also observed one or more
                                               could interpret the outdoor advertising                 deceptive acts or practices. Consumers                entities representing, directly or by
                                               to mean that the consumers who wished                   acting reasonably were likely to view                 implication, in loan applications that
                                               to purchase the advertised services                     the ‘‘apply online’’ advertisements on                the reference information provided by
                                               could do so inside the stores. The                      the lenders’ Web sites and                            borrowers would be used only to
                                               representations were material because                   comprehensive online applications as                  contact references regarding the
                                               they impacted a consumer’s conduct in                   invitations to apply for, and receive,                borrowers’ loan applications. The
                                               terms of whether to visit the stores.                   loans online. The representations were                entity(ies) indicated that these
                                               Supervision directed the one or more                    material because had consumers                        references would be ‘‘checked,’’
rmajette on DSKBCKNHB2PROD with NOTICES




                                               entities to cease advertising products                  understood that they could not obtain a               implying that they would be contacted
                                               and services that they did not offer.                   loan from the entity(ies) based on where              only at loan origination. Instead, the
                                                                                                       they lived or that would be required to               entity(ies) repeatedly contacted the
                                               Comparisons to Competitors                              visit a storefront location to obtain a               references when the borrowers’ loans
                                                 Examiners observed one or more                        loan, many consumers would decide not                 became delinquent. Supervision
                                               entities advertising that many of their                 to submit the purported application                   concluded that these representations
                                               products and services had substantially                 forms with detailed contact and                       constituted deceptive acts or practices.


                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:13 Oct 18, 2017   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00032   Fmt 4703   Sfmt 4703   E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM   19OCN1


                                                                           Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 201 / Thursday, October 19, 2017 / Notices                                                    48711

                                               The entity(ies) applications were likely                almost a year after the borrowers made                servicing staff, fair lending monitoring
                                               to mislead consumers acting reasonably                  the overpayments. Supervision                         of servicing, and servicing of consumers
                                               under the circumstances by creating the                 concluded that by failing to implement                with limited English proficiency.
                                               net impression that references would be                 adequate processes to accurately and                     In one or more ECOA targeted reviews
                                               contacted only at origination. This                     promptly monitor, identify, correct, and              of mortgage servicers, CFPB examiners
                                               representation was material because                     refund overpayments by consumers, the                 found weaknesses in fair lending CMS.
                                               borrowers might have supplied other                     entity(ies) engaged in unfair acts or                 In general, examiners found deficiencies
                                               names of references or not applied for                  practices. The acts or practices caused               in oversight by board and senior
                                               loans at all if they had known their                    injury to borrowers who have paid their               management, monitoring and corrective
                                               references would be contacted for debt                  debts because a number of consumers                   action processes, compliance audits,
                                               collection purposes. Supervision                        were deprived of their funds for                      and oversight of third-party service
                                               directed one or more entities to review                 extended periods of time. They could                  providers.
                                               all disclosures regarding the collection                not avoid the injury because they were                   In one or more examinations, data
                                               and use of references, including                        unaware that the entity(ies) would                    quality issues, which were related to a
                                               references listed by borrowers on loan                  double debit their accounts and the                   lack of complete and accurate loan
                                               applications, and to ensure that the                    consumers have no control over the                    servicing records, made certain fair
                                               disclosures do not include any false or                 lenders’ refund process. The injury to                lending analyses difficult or impossible
                                               misleading information.                                 borrowers from failing to have adequate               to perform. Examiners attributed these
                                               2.9.4 Small Dollar Lending                              processes to refund borrowers                         data quality issues to significant
                                               Unauthorized Debits and Overpayments                    outweighs the benefits to them or to                  weaknesses in CMS-related policies,
                                                                                                       competition, given that implementing                  procedures, and service provider
                                                 Examiners observed that one or more                   such processes would not involve                      oversight.
                                               entities debited the accounts of                        excessive costs to the entity(ies). One or               Separately, fair lending analysis at
                                               borrowers who had already paid their                    more entities have undertaken remedial                one or more mortgage servicers was
                                               debts. Under the applicable loan                        and corrective actions regarding these                affected by a lack of readily-accessible
                                               agreements, the entity(ies) was                         violations, which are under review by                 information concerning a borrower’s
                                               permitted to initiate ACH debits from                   Supervision.                                          ethnicity, race, and sex information that
                                               the accounts of borrowers whose loans                                                                         had been collected pursuant to
                                               were past due. However, one or more                     2.10     Fair Lending
                                                                                                                                                             Regulation B or Regulation C and
                                               entities sought payment through the                     2.10.1 Mortgage Servicing                             transferred to the servicer. One or more
                                               ACH system from the accounts of
                                                                                                         As part of its fair lending work, the               mortgage servicers acknowledged the
                                               borrowers who had already paid their
                                                                                                       Bureau seeks to ensure that                           importance of retaining in readily-
                                               loans by making cash payments at
                                                                                                       creditworthy consumers have access to                 accessible format—for the express
                                               branch locations. Supervision
                                                                                                       the full array of appropriate options                 purpose of performing future fair
                                               concluded that failing to implement
                                                                                                       when they have trouble paying their                   lending analyses—ethnicity, race, and
                                               adequate processes to reasonably avoid
                                                                                                       mortgages, without regard to any                      sex data that it had received in the
                                               unauthorized charges of, debits to, and
                                                                                                       prohibited basis. Mortgage servicing,                 borrower’s origination file.
                                               overpayments by borrowers constituted
                                               unfair acts or practices. The failure to                and specifically default servicing, may               3. Remedial Actions
                                               prevent successful and unsuccessful                     introduce fair lending risks because of
                                                                                                       the complexity of certain processes, the              3.1      Public Enforcement Actions
                                               payment attempts to the accounts of
                                               borrowers who paid their debts caused                   range of default servicing options, and               3.1.1     Fay Servicing
                                               substantial injury in the form of                       the discretion that can sometimes exist
                                                                                                       in evaluating and selecting among                       On June 7, 2017, the CFPB announced
                                               overpayments and fees. Consumers                                                                              an enforcement action against Fay
                                               could not avoid this injury because they                available default servicing options.
                                                                                                         In mortgage servicing, our supervisory              Servicing for failing to provide mortgage
                                               were not aware, regardless of whether                                                                         borrowers with certain protections
                                               they were making payments in response                   work has included use of the Mortgage
                                                                                                       Servicing Exam Procedures and the                     against foreclosure that are required by
                                               to collection efforts, that ACH debits                                                                        law.50 The Bureau found that Fay
                                               had been initiated. The injury to                       ECOA Baseline Modules, both of which
                                                                                                       are part of the CFPB Supervision and                  violated the CFPB’s servicing rules by
                                               consumers from failing to have adequate                                                                       keeping borrowers in the dark about
                                               processes to avoid the unauthorized                     Examination Manual. Examination
                                                                                                       teams use these procedures to conduct                 critical information about the process of
                                               charges, debits and overpayments                                                                              applying for foreclosure relief. As part
                                               outweighs the benefits to consumers or                  ECOA Baseline Reviews, which evaluate
                                                                                                       institutions’ compliance management                   of the requirements for keeping
                                               competition, given that implementing                                                                          borrowers informed, servicers generally
                                               such processes would not involve                        systems (CMS), or ECOA Targeted
                                                                                                       Reviews, which are more in-depth                      must send an acknowledgement notice
                                               excessive costs to the entity(ies). One or                                                                    when they receive an application for
                                               more entities have undertaken remedial                  reviews of activities that may pose
                                                                                                       heightened fair lending risks to                      foreclosure relief. The notice must state
                                               and corrective actions regarding these                                                                        whether and what additional documents
                                               violations, which are under review by                   consumers. As discussed in the
                                                                                                       Mortgage Servicing Special Edition of                 or information are required from the
                                               Supervision.                                                                                                  borrower to complete the application.
                                                 One or more entities also failed to                   Supervisory Highlights,49 published in
                                                                                                       June 2016, these exam procedures                      After a borrower completes the
                                               implement adequate processes to
rmajette on DSKBCKNHB2PROD with NOTICES




                                                                                                       contain questions about, among other                  application, servicers must also
                                               accurately and promptly identify and
                                                                                                       things, the fair lending training of                  generally send an evaluation notice
                                               refund borrowers who paid more than
                                                                                                                                                             spelling out what foreclosure relief
                                               they owed, either in person at stores or
                                                                                                          49 See Supervisory Highlights Mortgage Servicing   options they are offering, the deadline to
                                               via the ACH network. Several
                                                                                                       Special Edition 2016, at 5, available at http://
                                               consumers did not receive refunds until                 files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/Mortgage_         50 See related Consent Order, available at http://
                                               examiners alerted the entity(ies) to the                Servicing_Supervisory_Highlights_11_Final_web_        www.consumerfinance.gov/documents/4820/
                                               overpayments, which in some cases was                   .pdf.                                                 062017_cfpb_Fay_Servicing-consent_order.pdf.



                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:09 Oct 18, 2017   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00033   Fmt 4703   Sfmt 4703   E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM    19OCN1


                                               48712                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 201 / Thursday, October 19, 2017 / Notices

                                               accept or reject the offer, and the rights                           consecutive reporting years, even after                 confidential supervisory action or be
                                               borrowers have to appeal a servicer’s                                the settlement with the Massachusetts                   further investigated for possible public
                                               decision to deny certain types of relief.                            Division of Banks. In the samples                       enforcement action.51
                                                 Fay Servicing failed to send or timely                             reviewed, the Bureau found error rates                     In June 2017, the Bureau released a
                                               send both acknowledgment and                                         of 13 percent in 2012, 33 percent in                    blog which noted that in fiscal year
                                               evaluation notices with the relevant,                                2013, and 21 percent in 2014.                           2016, about one-third of those
                                               correct information, putting the onus on                                The Bureau’s consent order requires                  examinations that were considered
                                               borrowers to try to determine what else                              Nationstar to pay a $1.75 million                       through the ARC process were
                                               they had to do to attempt to save their                              penalty to the Bureau’s Civil Penalty                   determined appropriate for further
                                               homes or otherwise avoid foreclosure.                                Fund. Nationstar must also review,                      investigation for possible public
                                               The Bureau also found instances where                                correct, and make available its corrected               enforcement action. This equated to
                                               the servicer illegally launched or moved                             HMDA data from 2012–14. In addition,                    approximately 10 percent of all
                                               forward with the foreclosure process                                 Nationstar must assess and undertake                    examinations in fiscal year 2016.52
                                               while borrowers were actively seeking                                any necessary improvements to its                          More detailed information on the
                                               help to save their homes. The CFPB has                               HMDA compliance management system                       number of ARC decisions is presented
                                               ordered Fay Servicing to provide timely                              to prevent future violations. The action                in Table 1 below. This table reflects the
                                               and accurate acknowledgment and                                      includes the largest HMDA civil penalty                 total number of ARC decisions and their
                                               evaluation notices, to solicit certain                               imposed by the Bureau to date, which                    outcomes for the fiscal years 2012
                                               consumers for available loss mitigation                              stems from Nationstar’s market size, the                through 2016. The numbers in the table
                                               options and pay up to $1.15 million to                               substantial magnitude of its errors, and                do not reflect all supervisory
                                               harmed borrowers.                                                    its history of previous violations.                     examinations or all enforcement
                                                                                                                    3.2 Non-Public Supervisory Actions                      investigations in any given year.
                                               3.1.2 Nationstar Mortgage LLC, d/b/a
                                                                                                                                                                            Instead, they show the ARC decisions
                                               Mr. Cooper                                                             In addition to the public enforcement                 made on the subset of matters that go
                                                 On March 15, 2017, the Bureau                                      actions above, recent supervisory                       through the ARC process, which are
                                               announced an enforcement action                                      activities have resulted in                             generally those examinations in which
                                               against Nationstar Mortgage LLC, d/b/a                               approximately $14 million in restitution                the exam team found evidence of
                                               Mr. Cooper (Nationstar) for violating the                            to more than 104,000 consumers. These                   significant violations of Federal
                                               Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA)                                  nonpublic supervisory actions generally                 consumer financial law. These numbers
                                               by consistently failing to report accurate                           have been the product of CFPB                           are also reflective in part of the Bureau’s
                                               data from 2012 through 2014, under the                               supervision and examinations, often                     risk-based approach to supervision.
                                               version of the HMDA rule that predates                               involving either examiner findings or                   Pursuant to that approach, the Bureau
                                               the creation of the CFPB.                                            self-reported violations of Federal                     concentrates its efforts on institutions
                                                 Through its supervision process, the                               consumer financial law during the                       and product lines that it determines
                                               Bureau found that Nationstar’s HMDA                                  course of an examination. Recent                        through its analytical prioritization
                                               compliance systems were flawed and                                   nonpublic resolutions were reached in                   process pose the greatest risk to
                                               generated mortgage lending data with                                 auto finance origination matters.                       consumers.
                                               significant, preventable errors.                                     4. Supervision Program Developments                        As reflected in the table, since 2014,
                                               Nationstar also failed to maintain                                                                                           the number of matters raising issues that
                                               detailed HMDA data collection and                                    4.1 Use of Enforcement and                              trigger the ARC process and the number
                                               validation procedures, and failed to                                 Supervisory Authority                                   of those matters that are determined
                                               implement adequate compliance                                          In the Summer 2015 edition of                         appropriate for further investigation for
                                               procedures. It also created reporting                                Supervisory Highlights, the Bureau                      possible public enforcement action
                                               discrepancies by failing to maintain                                 provided information on its Potential                   moving to enforcement—in whole or in
                                               consistent data definitions among its                                Action and Request for Response                         part—have remained somewhat
                                               various lines of business.                                           (PARR) letter process and the Action                    consistent. Taken together, about a third
                                                 Nationstar has a history of HMDA                                   Review Committee (ARC) process. The                     of the ARC decisions in fiscal years
                                               non-compliance. In 2011, the                                         ARC process is used by senior                           2014 to 2016 were determined
                                               Commonwealth of Massachusetts                                        executives in the Bureau’s Division of                  appropriate for further investigation for
                                               Division of Banks reached a settlement                               Supervision, Enforcement, and Fair                      possible public enforcement action. Any
                                               with Nationstar to address HMDA                                      Lending to determine through a                          violations identified in the remaining
                                               compliance deficiencies. The loan file                               deliberative and rigorous process                       matters were determined appropriate to
                                               samples reviewed by the Bureau                                       whether matters that originate from                     be resolved through confidential
                                               showed substantial error rates in three                              examinations will be resolved through                   supervisory action.

                                                                                                               TABLE 1—ARC DECISIONS THROUGH FY 2016
                                                                                                                                  [September 30, 2016]

                                                                      Outcome                                    FY 12 *          FY 13             FY 14           FY 15           FY 16           Total         % of total

                                               Determined appropriate for further inves-
rmajette on DSKBCKNHB2PROD with NOTICES




                                                 tigation for possible public enforcement
                                                 action ....................................................               7              10                 11              9               8              45         24.59
                                               Determined appropriate for resolution
                                                 through confidential supervisory action                                   7               6                 32             41              31              117        63.93

                                                 51 See Supervisory Highlights: Summer 2015, at                       52 For more information regarding the evaluation      at https://www.consumerfinance.gov/about-us/blog/
                                               27, available at http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/                 factors, see CFPB blog titled ‘‘How we keep you safe    how-we-keep-you-safe-consumer-financial-
                                               201506_cfpb_supervisory-highlights.pdf.                              in the consumer financial market place’’ available      marketplace/.



                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014        15:13 Oct 18, 2017        Jkt 244001      PO 00000   Frm 00034   Fmt 4703   Sfmt 4703   E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM   19OCN1


                                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 201 / Thursday, October 19, 2017 / Notices                                                            48713

                                                                                                     TABLE 1—ARC DECISIONS THROUGH FY 2016—Continued
                                                                                                                                   [September 30, 2016]

                                                                       Outcome                                    FY 12 *          FY 13             FY 14           FY 15            FY 16             Total          % of total

                                               Determined appropriate, in part for fur-
                                                 ther investigation for possible public
                                                 enforcement, and in part for resolution
                                                 through confidential supervisory ac-
                                                 tion ** ....................................................               0               1                  8              5                 7               21            11.48

                                                     Total ..................................................               14             17                 51             55               46                183         100.00
                                                 * Reflects part of the Fiscal Year; the ARC process was first implemented partway through FY 2012.
                                                 ** With respect to some exams, some findings are referred to supervision and some findings are referred to enforcement. Either Enforcement
                                               or Supervision will exclusively consider each finding.


                                                 The Bureau commits to publishing                                    4.2.2 HMDA Data Reviews and the                         determine what corrective actions, if
                                               ARC data going forward at the                                         Adequacy of HMDA Compliance                             any, are necessary.
                                               conclusion of each fiscal year, beginning                             Programs
                                                                                                                                                                             4.2.3 FFIEC Releases Updates to
                                               with the data for fiscal year 2017 in the                               As part of its supervision of very large              HMDA Examiner Transaction Testing
                                               next edition of Supervisory                                           banks and nonbank mortgage lenders,                     Guidelines
                                               4.2     Fair Lending Developments                                     the CFPB reviews the accuracy of
                                                                                                                     HMDA data and the adequacy of HMDA                        In August 2017, the FFIEC, of which
                                               4.2.1 HMDA Data Collection and                                        compliance programs. In 2013, the                       the Bureau is a member agency, released
                                               Reporting Reminders for 2017                                          CFPB issued a bulletin reminding                        the FFIEC HMDA Examiner Transaction
                                                                                                                     mortgage lenders about the importance                   Testing Guidelines (Guidelines).55 For
                                                  As reported in previous editions of                                                                                        HMDA data collected by financial
                                               Supervisory Highlights, beginning with                                of submitting correct mortgage loan
                                                                                                                     data. The CFPB has conducted HMDA                       institutions in or after 2018, these new
                                               Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA)                                                                                           FFIEC Guidelines replace the Bureau’s
                                               data collected in 2017 and submitted in                               reviews at dozens of bank and nonbank
                                                                                                                     mortgage lenders, and has found that                    HMDA Resubmission Schedule and
                                               2018, responsibility to receive and                                                                                           Guidelines which was released in
                                               process HMDA data will transfer from                                  many lenders have adequate compliance
                                                                                                                     systems and produce HMDA data with                      October 2013.
                                               the Federal Reserve Board (FRB) to the
                                               CFPB.53 The HMDA agencies have                                        few errors. Moreover, while some                        The Guidelines Will Help Ensure
                                               agreed that a covered institution filing                              lenders have been required to resubmit                  Accurate Data and Address Reporting
                                               HMDA data collected in or after 2017                                  their HMDA data because their errors                    Burden Concerns
                                               with the CFPB will be deemed to have                                  exceeded the relevant resubmission
                                                                                                                     thresholds, most of those matters have                     When examining financial
                                               submitted the HMDA data to the                                                                                                institutions, federal supervisory
                                               appropriate Federal agency.54                                         been addressed through a supervisory
                                                                                                                     resolution.                                             agencies may check the accuracy of
                                                  The effective date of the change in the                              As noted above, the 2015 Final Rule’s                 HMDA data within a sample of reported
                                               Federal agency that receives and                                      new data requirements will apply to                     transactions. If examiners find that the
                                               processes the HMDA data does not                                      data collected beginning on January 1,                  number of errors in the sample exceeds
                                               coincide with the effective date for the                              2018. Given the recent updates to the                   certain thresholds, the lender is directed
                                               new HMDA data to be collected and                                     rule, the Bureau’s current principal                    to correct and resubmit its HMDA data.
                                               reported under the Final Rule amending                                focus is on providing regulatory                           In light of the new data fields that will
                                               Regulation C published in the Federal                                 implementation support to financial                     be required beginning in 2018, the new
                                               Register on October 28, 2015. The Final                               institutions, to assist them in                         Guidelines:
                                               Rule’s new data requirements will apply                               operationally implementing the recent                      D Eliminate the file error
                                               to data collected beginning on January                                changes to the HMDA requirements.                       resubmission threshold under which a
                                               1, 2018. The data fields for data                                     After the rule takes effect, consistent                 financial institution would be directed
                                               collected in 2017 have not changed.                                   with our approach to the                                to correct and resubmit its entire Loan
                                                  Additional information about HMDA,                                 implementation of other Bureau rules                    Application Register (LAR) if the total
                                               the HMDA Filing Instructions Guide                                    requiring significant systems and                       number of sample files with one or more
                                               (FIG) and other data submission                                       operational changes, our approach will                  errors equaled or exceeded a certain
                                               resources are located at: http://                                     generally be diagnostic and corrective,                 threshold.
                                               www.consumerfinance.gov/data-                                         not punitive. In our initial examinations                  D Establish, for the purpose of
                                               research/hmda/.                                                       for compliance with the rule, we intend                 counting errors toward the field error
                                                                                                                     to consider whether companies have                      resubmission threshold, allowable
                                                 53 For additional information regarding HMDA                        made good faith efforts to come into                    tolerances for certain data fields.
                                               data collection and reporting reminders for 2017,                     compliance with the rule in a timely                       D Provide a more lenient 10 percent
                                               see Supervisory Highlights, Fall 2016, available at                   manner. Specifically, we will be                        field error resubmission threshold for
rmajette on DSKBCKNHB2PROD with NOTICES




                                               http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/                                                                                 financial institutions with LAR counts
                                               Supervisory_                                                          evaluating a company’s overall efforts to
                                               Highlights_Issue_13__Final_10.31.16.pdf.                              come into compliance, including                         of 100 or less, many of which are
                                                 54 The ‘‘HMDA agencies’’ refers collectively to the                 assessing the compliance management                     community banks and credit unions.
                                               CFPB, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency                   system and conducting transaction
                                               (OCC), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation                                                                                 55 See the related Guidelines, available at https://

                                               (FDIC), the FRB, the National Credit Union
                                                                                                                     testing. If errors are identified, we will              s3.amazonaws.com/files.consumerfinance.gov/f/
                                               Administration (NCUA) and the Department of                           work with the institution to determine                  documents/201708_cfpb_ffiec-hmda-examiner-
                                               Housing and Urban Development (HUD).                                  the root cause of the issue and                         transaction-testing-guidelines.pdf.



                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014        15:13 Oct 18, 2017        Jkt 244001       PO 00000   Frm 00035   Fmt 4703   Sfmt 4703   E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM    19OCN1


                                               48714                       Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 201 / Thursday, October 19, 2017 / Notices

                                                 At the same time, the Guidelines                      D Module 5: Examiner Conclusions and                  and examination findings (without
                                               ensure HMDA data integrity by                              Wrap-Up                                            identifying specific institutions, except
                                               maintaining field error resubmission                       In general, all CFPB reviews will                  in the case of public enforcement
                                               thresholds that safeguard the accuracy                  include Modules 1, 2, 3, and 5. Module                actions), to communicate operational
                                               of each data field, and thus all data,                  4 will generally be included in targeted              changes to the program, and to provide
                                               reported under HMDA. Furthermore,                       reviews of individual product lines, as               a convenient and easily accessible
                                               under the Guidelines, examiners may                     well as examinations that will result in              resource for information on the Bureau’s
                                               direct financial institutions to change                 the institution receiving a consumer                  guidance documents.
                                               their policies, procedures, audit                       compliance rating. The CMS review for                   Dated: September 7, 2017.
                                               processes, or other aspects of its                      target reviews will generally be limited              Richard Cordray,
                                               compliance management system to                         to reviewing aspects of CMS pertaining                Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial
                                               prevent the reoccurrence of errors.                     to the product line under review. To the              Protection.
                                               All Federal HMDA Supervisory                            extent that CMS for a particular product              [FR Doc. 2017–22700 Filed 10–18–17; 8:45 am]
                                               Agencies Will Use the Same Guidelines                   line or a specific institution has been               BILLING CODE 4810–AM–P
                                                                                                       previously reviewed, CFPB examiners
                                                  The Guidelines represent a joint effort              may evaluate CMS by reviewing
                                               by the Bureau, the FRB, the OCC, the                    previous conclusions and assessing only
                                               FDIC, and the NCUA to provide—for the                                                                         DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
                                                                                                       the changes to the current CMS
                                               first time—uniform guidelines across all                program.
                                               Federal HMDA supervisory agencies.                                                                            Office of the Secretary
                                               This collaboration began with the                       4.4     Recent CFPB Guidance                          [Docket ID: DOD–2017–OS–0057]
                                               Bureau issuing a Request for                              The CFPB is committed to providing
                                               Information 56 and holding outreach                     guidance on its supervisory priorities to             Notice of Availability of an
                                               meetings in which the other supervisory                 industry and members of the public.                   Environmental Assessment
                                               agencies participated. The agencies then                                                                      Addressing Defense Logistics Agency
                                               worked together to develop the                          4.4.1    Phone Pay Fees Bulletin                      Construction and Operation of a
                                               Guidelines.                                               On July 31, 2017, the Bureau released               Disposition Services Complex at DLA
                                                  Information about HMDA and other                     Bulletin 2017–01,57 which provides                    Disposition Services Red River, Texas
                                               data submission resources are located at                guidance to covered persons and service               AGENCY: Defense Logistics Agency
                                               http://www.consumerfinance.gov/adata-                   providers regarding fee assessments for               (DLA), Department of Defense (DoD).
                                               research/hmda/.                                         pay-by-phone services. The bulletin
                                                                                                                                                             ACTION: Notice of availability (NOA).
                                                                                                       provides examples of conduct observed
                                               4.3   Examination Procedures
                                                                                                       during supervisory examinations and                   SUMMARY:   DLA announces the
                                               4.3.1 Updates to the Compliance                         enforcement investigations that may                   availability of an Environmental
                                               Management Review Examination                           violate the Dodd-Frank Act prohibition                Assessment (EA) documenting the
                                               Procedures                                              on engaging in UDAAPs, as well as the                 potential environmental effects
                                                 On August 30, 2017, the CFPB                          FDCPA. The bulletin clarifies that the                associated with the Proposed Action to
                                               released revised Compliance                             Bureau is not mandating specific pay-                 construct and operate a DLA Disposition
                                               Management Review examination                           by-phone disclosure requirements, but                 Services Complex at DLA Disposition
                                               procedures. The procedures were                         states that the Bureau expects                        Services Red River, Texas, which is on
                                               updated in order to reflect changes to                  supervised entities to review their                   the Red River Army Depot. The EA has
                                               the FFIEC Interagency Consumer                          practices on charging phone pay fees for              been prepared as required under the
                                               Compliance Ratings System (CC Ratings                   potential risks of violating Federal                  National Environmental Policy Act
                                               System), which became effective March                   consumer financial laws. To that end,                 (NEPA).
                                               31, 2017. These procedures do not                       the bulletin offers a number of
                                                                                                                                                             DATES:  The public comment period will
                                               reflect any new or additional                           suggestions for entities assessing
                                                                                                                                                             end on November 20, 2017.
                                               expectations of institutions regarding                  whether their practices violate these
                                                                                                       laws and further recommends having in                 ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
                                               their CMS, nor do they change the                                                                             identified by DOD–2017–OS–0057, to
                                               examiner’s assessment from that which                   place a corrective action program to
                                                                                                       address any violations identified and                 one of the following:
                                               examiners have been conducting in the                                                                           • Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://
                                               past: They only reorganize the                          reimburse consumers when appropriate.
                                                                                                                                                             www.regulations.gov. Follow the
                                               procedures to align with the CC Ratings                 5. Conclusion                                         instructions for submitting comments.
                                               System and formalize current CMS                                                                                • Mail: Department of Defense, Office
                                               review processes.                                         The Bureau recognizes the value of
                                                                                                       communicating its program findings to                 of the Deputy Chief Management
                                                 As revised, the CMS examination                                                                             Officer, Directorate for Oversight and
                                                                                                       CFPB-supervised entities to help them
                                               procedures are divided into five                                                                              Compliance, Regulatory and Advisory
                                                                                                       comply with Federal consumer financial
                                               Modules:                                                                                                      Committee Division, 4800 Mark Center
                                                                                                       law, and to other stakeholders to foster
                                               D Module 1: Board and Management                        a better understanding of the CFPB’s                  Drive, Mailbox #24, Suite 08D09B,
                                                 Oversight                                             work.                                                 Alexandria, VA 22350–1700.
                                               D Module 2: Compliance Program                            To this end, the Bureau remains                     FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ira
                                               D Module 3: Service Provider Oversight
rmajette on DSKBCKNHB2PROD with NOTICES




                                                                                                       committed to publishing its Supervisory               Silverberg at 703–767–0705 during
                                               D Module 4: Violations of Law and                       Highlights report periodically to share               normal business hours Monday through
                                                 Consumer Harm                                         information about general supervisory                 Friday, from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
                                                                                                                                                             (EDT) or by email: ira.silverberg@
                                                 56 See the related Request for Information,             57 See Compliance Bulletin 2017–01, available at    dla.mil.
                                               available at http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/        https://www.consumerfinance.gov/policy-
                                               201601_cfpb_request-for-information-regarding-          compliance/guidance/implementation-guidance/          SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:  The EA
                                               home-mortgage-disclosure-act-resubmission.pdf.          bulletin-phone-pay-fees/.                             complies with 32 Code of Federal


                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:13 Oct 18, 2017   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00036   Fmt 4703   Sfmt 4703   E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM   19OCN1



Document Created: 2017-10-19 02:56:55
Document Modified: 2017-10-19 02:56:55
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionNotices
ActionSupervisory Highlights; notice.
DatesThe Bureau released this edition of the Supervisory Highlights on its Web site on September 12, 2017.
ContactAdetola Adenuga, Consumer Financial Protection Analyst, Office of Supervision Policy, 1700 G Street NW., 20552, (202) 435-9373.
FR Citation82 FR 48703 

2025 Federal Register | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
USC | CFR | eCFR