Join us on LinkedIn Follow us on Twitter Like us on Facebook Follow us on Instagram
 
  OCTOBER RESEARCH STORE Already a subscriber? LOG IN
AddControlToContainer_DynamicNavigation6

CFPB issues Section 1071 small entity compliance guide

Email A Friend Printer Friendly Version
0 comments
Banking, Dodd-Frank Basics, Government Oversight
Tuesday, May 16, 2023

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) issued a compliance guide for small entities that are to be subject to the Section 1071 small-business lending rule. The guide provides a detailed summary of the final rule’s requirements and provides details and examples when necessary to clarify the different components and requirements of the final rule.

Who is a covered entity?

The guide clarifies that whether a financial institution is a covered entity under the rule will be an annual determination each financial institution must make based on the number of covered originations it originated in each of the two immediately preceding calendar years. It is possible for a financial institution to be a covered entity for a particular calendar year, even if it was not a covered entity the year before, or for it to be a covered entity for a particular year, but not the next.

If a financial institution does not meet the threshold to be a covered entity in a particular calendar year, it is permitted to voluntarily compile data in certain circumstances. Because the collection of such data may be a violation of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) and Regulation B, the final rule grants provisions for entities that are not covered in a particular year to still voluntarily collect demographic information for covered applications.

One such provision permits any entity that was a covered entity in the previous five years, but is not for a particular year, to engage in such voluntary collection of information.

Another such provision allows for entities that have made the threshold in the previous year to voluntarily collect required data in the second year of the two-year threshold period. The financial institution in this situation may only collect demographic information for covered applications from small businesses, and it must comply with the otherwise applicable requirements of the final rule.

Otherwise, a non-covered entity may engage in voluntary collection of data, but if it decides to do so, it must report that data to the CFPB as if it were a covered entity.

Reporting requirements and mergers

In cases of mergers or acquisitions, the surviving or newly formed financial institution is a covered entity under Section 1071 if it meets the threshold when considering the combined lending activity of the surviving or new institution and the merged or acquired institution(s) in each of the two preceding calendar years.

However, if two institutions that are both not covered entities in the calendar year of the merger form a financial institution that meets the threshold to become a covered financial institution for that same calendar year, the surviving or newly formed financial institution is not required to compile, maintain, or report data for the calendar year that the merger is effective.

If a covered entity and an entity that is not a covered financial institution merge and the new or surviving institution is a covered entity, for the calendar year of the merger, the new or surviving covered financial institution must compile, maintain, and report data for covered applications from the previously covered financial institution. However, compiling, maintaining, and reporting data is optional for covered applications from the financial institution that was not covered prior to the merger or acquisition.

Covered credit transactions

To determine whether it is a covered entity, a financial institution must count certain covered credit transactions it originated in the preceding two calendar years. Specifically, a financial institution must count the covered credit transactions that it originated to small businesses, except those otherwise-covered credit transactions that extend, renew, or otherwise amend an existing transaction.

The final rule specifically excluded certain extensions of business credit from the definition of covered credit transactions. These exclusions include:

  • Trade credits: A financing arrangement wherein one business acquires goods or services from another business without making immediate payment in full to the business providing the goods or services is not a covered credit transaction.
  • Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA)-reportable transactions: A transaction that is a covered loan for purposes of HMDA (as defined by Regulation C, 12 CFR 1003.2(e)).
  • Insurance premium financing: A financing arrangement wherein a business: (i) agrees to pay to a financial institution, in installments, the principal amount advanced by the financial institution to an insurer or insurance producer in payment of premium on the business’s insurance contract or contracts plus charges, and (ii) as security for repayment, assigns to the financial institution certain rights, obligations, and/or considerations in its insurance contract or contracts.
  • Public utilities credit: extensions of credit that involve public utility services provided through pipe, wire, or other connected facilities, or radio or similar transmission (including extensions of such facilities), if the charges for service, delayed payment, and any discount for prompt payment are filed with or regulated by a government unit.
  • Securities credit: extensions of credit subject to regulation under Section 7 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or extensions of credit by a broker or dealer subject to regulation as a broker or dealer under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
  • Incidental credit: extensions of credit that are neither public utilities credit or securities credit that are not made pursuant to the terms of a credit card account, not subject to a finance charge, and not payable by agreement in more than four installments.

Instances of refinancing an existing credit obligation is considered a covered application that a covered entity must report if the new obligation would be a covered credit transaction and the request is made in accordance with procedures used by the covered entity for the type of credit requested.

If a small business makes a request for two or more covered credit transactions at the same time, a covered entity must report each request that satisfies the definition of covered application as a separate reportable application. If, however, the small business is only requesting a single covered credit transaction, but is considering multiple credit products, the financial institution reports the request as a single reportable application.

In a situation where a covered entity initially determined that a covered application is from a small business based on available information and collects demographic information pursuant to the final rule, but later concludes that the applicant is not a small business, the financial institution does not violate ECOA or Regulation B if it meets the requirements for the safe harbor.

To qualify for this safe harbor, a financial institution must have had a reasonable basis at the time it collected the data for believing the application was a reportable application. The financial institution does not report the application to the CFPB on its small-business lending application register.

This is part one in a series analyzing and breaking down this guidance from the CFPB on the Section 1071 rule. More will be available in coming weeks.

Today's other top stories
House committee votes to slash CFPB funding through Dodd-Frank amendments
CFPB will not prioritize Sec. 1071 enforcement, supervision
Mortgage industry supports raising FHA loan limit to improve housing affordability
Banking agencies withdraw guidance on crypto-asset risk management
Financial services trades focus on digital assets, mortgage technology


COMMENT BOX DISCLAIMER:
October Research is not responsible for the comments posted on its websites by readers. We will do our best to remove comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments.
Comments:

Be the first to leave a comment.

Leave your comment
Please enter a comment.
CAPTCHA Validation
CAPTCHA
Code:
Please enter the word displayed in the image above. Please enter the word displayed in the image above.
: 
Please enter your name.
: 
Please enter your email address.
This field must contain a valid email address.
Your Email is for reporting purposes only. It will NOT be displayed.
Popularity:
This article has been viewed 2070 times.

Monthly Newsletter

Dodd Frank Update May 2025

Cover Story:

Wolters Kluwer experts analyze shifts in banker compliance concerns


News by Topic   News by Edition   News by Agency   News by Industry   In-depth Reports   Events
Banking
Case Law
Conference Coverage
Consumer Protection
Data Privacy
Financial Stability
Industry Spotlight
Legislation
Nonbank Financial
The TRID Journey
 
Dodd Frank Update April 2025
Dodd Frank Update May 2025
Archives
 
CFPB NCUA
CFTC OCC
FDIC OFR
FHFA SEC
FRB States
FSOC Treasury
FTC  
 
Appraisal
Broker-Dealer
Community Banks & Credit Unions
Land Title
Mortgage
Payday Lending
 
2025 State of the Industry
CRA and Affordable Housing
2025 State of the Industry
Who's My Regulator?
Fair Lending
Mortgage Technology
Marketing Compliance for Lenders
Archives
 
National Settlement Services Summit (NS3)
Women's Leadership Summit (WLS)
Webinars

Library   About   Subscribe   Other Publications
Data Privacy Vault Court Actions
Keys to Real Estate podcast Enforcement Documents
Blog - Tuesdays with Mary Guidance Documents
1071 Compliance Guide White Papers
eClosing Solutions Showcase Position Papers
Executive Interview Series Legislation
Lender Associations Regulations
The Dodd-Frank Act Reports, Studies and Surveys
Dodd-Frank Summary & History Federal Register Notices
 
Dodd Frank Update
Contact / Editors
Advertise
Request a Media Kit
Social Media
Are You An Expert?
Subscriber Agreement
 
Subscriptions
Free Email Updates
Try a Free Edition
 
The Title Report
The Legal Description
Valuation Review
RESPA News
Copyright © 2011-2025 Dodd Frank Update
An October Research, LLC publication
3046 Brecksville Road, Suite D, Richfield, OH 44286
(330) 659-6101, All Rights Reserved
www.doddfrankupdate.com | Privacy Policy
VISIT OUR OTHER WEBSITES
> The Legal Description
> RESPA News
> The Title Report
> Valuation Review
> NS3 The Summit
> Women's Leadership Summit
> October Research, LLC
> The October Store


Loading... Loading...
Featuring:
  • Delivery 3X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • Comprehensive title insurance industry news
  • Recent acquisitions, mergers, real estate stats
  • Exclusive in-depth coverage of the industry's hottest stories
Featuring:
  • Delivery 2X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • Comprehensive Dodd-Frank coverage
  • The latest information from the CFPB
  • Full coverage of Congressional hearings
  • Updates on all agency actions
  • Analysis of controversial provisions
  • Release of newest studies and reports
Sign up today and...
  • Be one of the first to know where NS3 is being held
  • Learn about NS3 speakers and sessions
  • Save on registration with Super-Early Bird rates
  • Discover the networking opportunities NS3 offers
  • Find out if CE credits will be offered for your area
  • And much more
Featuring:
  • Delivery 2X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • Preview the latest RESPAnews.com Top Story
  • RESPA related headline news
  • Quote of the Week
Featuring:
  • Delivery 2X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • Legal, regulatory and legislative information impacting the settlement services industry
  • News from HUD, Congress, state legislatures and other regulatory agencies
  • Follow the lobbying efforts of all the major national real estate services organizations.
Featuring:
  • Delivery 2X a week plus breaking news as it happens
  • The industry's only full-time newsroom
  • Relevant, up-to-date appraisal industry news
  • Covering the hottest stories and industry trends
NEWS BY TOPIC
EDITION
AGENCY
IN-DEPTH REPORTS
INDUSTRY
EVENTS
LIBRARY
EMAIL UPDATES
ABOUT
SUBSCRIBE
Banking
Case Law
Conference Coverage
Consumer Protection
Data Privacy
Financial Stability
Industry Spotlight
Legislation
Nonbank Financial
The TRID Journey
Current Edition
April 2025
March 2025
February 2025
Archives
CFPB
CFTC
FDIC
FHFA
FRB
FSOC
NCUA
OCC
OFR
SEC
States
Treasury
2025 State of the Industry
Real Estate Compliance Outlook
CRA and Affordable Housing report
Who's My Regulator?
Fair Lending
Marketing Compliance for Lenders
Archives
Appraisal
Broker-Dealer
Community Banks & Credit Unions
Land Title
Mortgage
Payday Lending
National Settlement
Services Summit (NS3)
Women's Leadership
Summit (WLS)
Webinars
CFPB's Shake-Up & Its Impact on You
2025 Economic Outlook Series
Data Privacy Compliance
Fintech Partner Compliance
Strategies post-NAR settlement
Industry and Regulatory Outlook
Securing Your Cyber Network
Compliant Marketing Tactics
2024 Economic Forecast Series
Webinar Archives
Data Privacy Vault
Keys to Real Estate podcast
Blog - Tuesdays with Mary
1071 Compliance Guide
eClosing Solutions Showcase
Executive Interview Series
Lender Associations
The Dodd-Frank Act
Dodd-Frank Summary
Court Actions
Enforcement Documents
Guidance Documents
White Papers
Position Papers
Legislation
Regulations
Reports, Studies and Surveys
Federal Register Notices
Proposals
Final Rules
GAO
Agency
Contact Us
Advertise
Request a Media Kit
Social Media
Are You An Expert?
Subscriber Agreement