FFIEC Announces Availability of 2020 Data on Mortgage Lending
The Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) today announced the availability of data on 2020 mortgage lending transactions at 4,475 U.S. financial institutions reported under the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA). Covered institutions include banks, savings associations, credit unions, and mortgage companies.
The HMDA data are the most comprehensive publicly available information on mortgage market activity. They are used by industry, consumer groups, regulators, and others to assess potential fair lending risks and for other purposes.
The FFIEC releases today several data products to serve a variety of data users. The HMDA Dynamic National Loan-Level Dataset is updated, on a weekly basis, to reflect late submissions and resubmissions. The Snapshot National Loan-Level Dataset contains the national HMDA datasets as of a fixed date, in the case of 2020 data, May 1, 2021. Aggregate and Disclosure Reports provide summary information on individual financial institutions and geographies. The HMDA Data Browser allows users to create custom tables and download datasets that can be further analyzed. In addition, beginning in late March 2021, the FFIEC made available Loan/Application Registers for each HMDA filer of 2020 data, modified to protect borrower privacy.
Understanding the Data
The data include a total of 48 data points providing information about the applicants, the property securing the loan or proposed to secure the loan in the case of non-originated applications, the transaction, and identifiers. A complete list of HMDA data points and the associated data fields is found in the FFIEC’s Filing Instructions Guide for HMDA Data Collected in 2020. Certain smaller-volume financial institutions are not required to report all of these data, pursuant to the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act (EGRRCPA).1
The 2020 HMDA data use the census tract delineations, population, and housing characteristic data from the 2011–2015 American Community Survey (ACS). In addition, the data reflect metropolitan statistical area (MSA) definitions released by the Office of Management and Budget in 2018 that became effective for HMDA purposes in 2019.
HMDA data comparisons across multiple years are limited by changes in HMDA definitions, values, and thresholds. Also, comparisons for certain geographic areas are limited due to the changes in MSA and census tract boundaries and updates to the population and housing characteristics of census tracts, especially those that follow the decennial census and five-year updates based on the ACS data
Among other uses, the data help the public assess how financial institutions are serving the housing needs of their local communities and facilitate federal financial regulators’ fair lending, consumer compliance, and Community Reinvestment Act examinations. For example, when these regulators evaluate an institution’s fair lending risk, they analyze HMDA data in conjunction with other information and risk factors, in accordance with the Interagency Fair Lending Examination Procedures.
HMDA data are generally not used alone to determine whether a lender is complying with fair lending laws. The data do not include some legitimate credit risk considerations for loan approval and loan pricing decisions. Therefore, when regulators conduct fair lending examinations, they analyze additional information before reaching a determination about an institution’s compliance with fair lending laws.
Observations from the 2020 Data2
For 2020, the number of reporting institutions declined by about 18.8 percent from the previous year to 4,475. One reason for the change is that, in 2020, the Bureau issued a final rule amending Regulation C to increase the threshold for collecting and reporting data about closed-end mortgage loans from 25 to 100 loans, effective July 1, 2020.3
The 2020 data include information on 22.7 million home loan applications. Among them, 20.4 million were closed-end, 1.7 million were open-end, and, for another 563,000 records, pursuant to the EGRRCPA’s partial exemptions, financial institutions did not indicate whether the records were closed-end or open-end. The number of closed-end loan applications increased by 63.2 percent, and the number of open-end line of credit applications decreased by 19.0 percent. A total of 14.5 million applications resulted in loan originations. Among them, 13.2 million were closed-end mortgage originations, 906,000 were open-end line of credit originations, and, pursuant to the EGRRCPA’s partial exemptions, 432,000 were originations for which financial institutions did not indicate whether they were closed-end or open-end. The 2020 data include 2.8 million purchased loans, for a total of 25.6 million records. The total also includes information on approximately 129,000 preapproval requests that were denied or approved but not accepted.
The total number of originated closed-end loans increased by about 5.3 million between 2019 and 2020, or 67.1 percent.4 Refinance originations for 1-4 family properties increased by 150.0 percent from 3.4 million, and home purchase lending increased by 6.7 percent from 4.5 million.5
A total of 1,637 reporters made use of the EGRRCPA’s partial exemptions for at least one of the 26 data points eligible for the exemptions. In all, they account for about 589,000 records and 439,000 originations.
From 2019 to 2020, the share of home purchase loans for first lien, 1-4 family, site-built, owner-occupied properties made to low- or moderate-income borrowers (those with income of less than 80 percent of area median income) increased slightly from 28.6 percent to 30.4 percent, and the share of refinance loans to low- and moderate-income borrowers for first lien, 1-4 family, site-built, owner-occupied properties decreased from 23.8 percent to 19.3 percent.6
In terms of borrower race and ethnicity, the share of home purchase loans for first lien, 1-4 family, site-built, owner-occupied properties made to Black borrowers rose from 7.0 percent in 2019 to 7.3 percent in 2020, the share made to Hispanic-White borrowers decreased slightly from 9.2 percent to 9.1 percent, and those made to Asian borrowers decreased from 5.7 percent to 5.5 percent. From 2019 to 2020, the share of refinance loans for first lien, 1-4 family, site-built, owner-occupied properties made to Black borrowers decreased from 5.3 percent to 4.3 percent, the share made to Hispanic-White borrowers decreased from 6.2 percent to 5.3 percent, and the share made to Asian borrowers increased from 5.4 percent to 6.7 percent.
In 2020, Black and Hispanic-White applicants experienced denial rates for first lien, 1-4 family, site-built, owner-occupied conventional home purchase loans of 17.2 percent and 11.2 percent respectively, while the denial rates for Asian and non-Hispanic-White applicants were 9.1 and 6.1 respectively. These relationships are similar to those found in earlier years and, due to the limitations of the HMDA data mentioned above, cannot take into account all legitimate credit risk considerations for loan approval and loan pricing.
The Federal Housing Administration (FHA)-insured share of first-lien home purchase loans for 1-4 family, site-built, owner-occupied properties decreased slightly from 20.2 percent in 2019 to 19.5 percent in 2020. The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)-guaranteed share of such loans decreased slightly to 10.4 percent in 2020. The overall government-backed share of such home purchase loans, including FHA, VA, Rural Housing Service, and Farm Service Agency loans, was 32.9 percent in 2020, down from 33.4 percent in 2019.
The FHA-insured share of refinance mortgages for first lien, 1-4 family, site-built, owner-occupied properties decreased to 6.6 percent in 2020 from 12.0 percent in 2019, while the VA-guaranteed share of such refinance loans decreased from 13.5 percent in 2019 to 11.9 percent in 2020.
The share of mortgages originated by non-depository, independent mortgage companies has increased in recent years. In 2020, this group of lenders accounted for 60.7 percent of first lien, 1-4 family, site-built, owner-occupied home-purchase loans, up from 56.4 percent in 2019. Independent mortgage companies also originated 63.3 percent of first lien, 1-4 family, site-built, owner-occupied refinance loans, an increase from 58.1 percent in 2019.
The HMDA data also identify loans that are covered by the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act (HOEPA). Under HOEPA, certain types of mortgage loans that have interest rates or total points and fees above specified levels are subject to certain requirements, such as additional disclosures to consumers, and also are subject to various restrictions on loan terms. For 2020, 6,682 loan originations covered by HOEPA were reported: 2,915 home purchase loans for 1-4 family properties; 369 home improvement loans for 1-4 family properties; and 3,398 refinance loans for 1-4 family properties.
Additional HMDA Information
More information about HMDA data reporting requirements is also available at https://ffiec.cfpb.gov/.
Questions about HMDA supervision should be directed to the institution’s supervisory agency at the following phone numbers:
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation: (877) 275-3342; hearing impaired — (800) 925-4618
- Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, HMDA Assistance Line: (202) 452-2016
- National Credit Union Administration, Office of Consumer Financial Protection: (703) 518-1140
- Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Compliance Risk Policy Division: (202) 649-5470
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau: (202) 435-7000
- Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Housing: (202) 708-0685
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MEDIA CONTACTS |
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|
CFPB |
Michael Robinson |
(202) 435-9327 |
FDIC |
LaJuan Williams-Young |
(202) 898-3876 |
Federal Reserve |
Susan Stawick |
(202) 452-2955 |
NCUA |
Ben Hardaway |
(703) 518-6333 |
OCC |
Stephanie Collins |
(202) 649-6870 |
SLC |
Catherine Pickels |
(202) 728-5734 |
The FFIEC was established in March 1979 to prescribe unif
The FFIEC was established in March 1979 to prescribe uniform principles, standards, and report forms and to promote uniformity in the supervision of financial institutions. It also conducts schools for examiners employed by the five federal member agencies represented on the FFIEC and makes those schools available to employees of state agencies that supervise financial institutions. The Council consists of the following six voting members: a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; the Chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation; the Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau; the Comptroller of the Currency; the Chairman of the National Credit Union Administration; and the Chairman of the State Liaison Committee.
Footnotes
1 See Public Law 115–174, 132 Stat. 1296 (2018); Final Rule, Official Interpretation, Home Mortgage Disclosure (Regulation C), 84 FR 57946 (Oct. 29, 2019).
2 The Snapshot National Loan-Level Dataset used to develop the observations in this statement about the 2020 HMDA data is available here. Analysis of data downloaded from the HMDA Platform at a later date may not yield precisely the same conclusions provided here, given that data available from the HMDA Platform will be updated, on an ongoing basis, to reflect resubmissions and late submissions. For historical and more detailed data derived from the annual HMDA records, see https://www.consumerfinance.gov/data-research/hmda/.
3 Final Rule, Official Interpretation, Home Mortgage Disclosure (Regulation C), 85 FR 28364 (May 12, 2020).
4 The data used in these comparisons is taken from the 2019 Snapshot National Loan-Level Dataset.
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