Regulation C

Regulation C

Regulation C is the regulation that implements the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1975. Any lending institution with total assets of $10 million or less is exempt from Regulation C. Institutions not in metropolitan statistical areas may also be exempt. Regulation C is structured to help public officials determine their distribution plans for public sector investment in order to draw more private investments to areas in need. Regulation C requires many financial institutions to annually disclose loan data about the communities to which they provided residential mortgages. Regulation C requires many financial institutions to annually disclose loan data about the communities to which they provided residential mortgages. Regulation C is structured to help public officials determine their distribution plans for public sector investment as a means of drawing more private investments to areas in need.

Regulation C requires many financial institutions to annually disclose loan data about the communities to which they provided residential mortgages.

What Is Regulation C?

Regulation C is the regulation that implements the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1975. Regulation C requires many financial institutions to annually disclose loan data about the communities to which they provided residential mortgages.

As a result, regulatory authorities can evaluate whether the lender is adequately meeting the needs of the prospective borrowers in that community.

Regulation C requires many financial institutions to annually disclose loan data about the communities to which they provided residential mortgages.
All providers of mortgages that are backed by the government in any capacity must annually reveal the quantity and dollar amounts of all mortgages provided within the past year.
Regulation C is structured to help public officials determine their distribution plans for public sector investment as a means of drawing more private investments to areas in need.

How Regulation C Works

All providers of mortgages that are backed by the government in any capacity must annually reveal the quantity and dollar amounts of all mortgages provided within the past year. These loans must be broken down by census tract in which the properties are located.

Any lending institution with total assets of $10 million or less is exempt from Regulation C. Institutions not in metropolitan statistical areas may also be exempt.

Regulation C is structured to help public officials determine their distribution plans for public sector investment in order to draw more private investments to areas in need. Even though the intent is to increase investment, Regulation C is not meant to foster “unsound lending practices” or the allocation of credit.

The policy is also meant to help identify possible discriminatory lending practices and enforce anti-discrimination statutes. The collection of lending data is meant to aid in that identification.

Financial institutions required to comply with Regulation C must report their data each calendar year. The data is broken up census tract to show mortgage origination, purchases of homes, and home-improvement loans.

Regulation C requires these institutions to also furnish data about the loan applications that did not result in originations. This includes withdrawn applications, loan denials, applications that were dismissed because they were incomplete and applications that received approval but were not accepted.

The collection of such data is supposed to give authorities a way to screen for incidents of discrimination in lending. The information is tied to geolocation and demographics from the census tract. If there is a repeating pattern where financing is denied to a particular segment of the population, the financial institution could face penalties from authorities. For example, a bank might constantly deny financing to people of a certain ethnicity or from a particular area despite otherwise being qualified. Such activity would draw attention from regulators.

Special Considerations

The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection continues to amend Regulation C. Updates to the policy have thus far included the addition of new reporting requirements to be in compliance with the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010. Dodd-Frank also transferred the rulemaking authority on the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) from the Federal Reserve Board to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Related terms:

Antitrust

Antitrust laws apply to virtually all industries and to every level of business, including manufacturing, transportation, distribution, and marketing. read more

Credit

Credit is a contractual agreement in which a borrower receives something of value immediately and agrees to pay for it later, usually with interest. read more

Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act

Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act is a series of federal regulations passed to prevent future financial crises. read more

Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA)

The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) is a federal law mandating lenders to maintain records on individual mortgages to help reveal whether they are complying with fair housing laws and meeting community needs. read more

Lender

A lender is an individual, a public or private group, or a financial institution that makes funds available to another with the expectation that the funds will be repaid. read more

Mortgage

A mortgage is a loan typically used to buy a home or other piece of real estate for which that property then serves as collateral. read more

Origination

Origination is the process of creating a home loan or mortgage. It involves numerous steps and participants, and you can't get a mortgage without it. read more

Redlining

Redlining is the discriminatory practice of denying services (typically financial) to residents of certain areas based on their race or ethnicity. read more

Regulation H

Regulation H is a rule that outlines membership requirements for state-chartered banks in the Federal Reserve System. read more

Truth in Lending Act (TILA)

The Truth in Lending Act (TILA) is a federal law enacted in 1968 to help protect consumers in their dealings with lenders and creditors. read more