Credit Research Center Seminar Ensuring Fair Lending: What Do We Know about Pricing in Mortgage Markets and What Will the New HMDA Data Fields Tell US? www.msb.edu/prog/crc March 14, 2005
Introduction to the Enhanced HMDA Data Michael Staten, Director Credit Research Center Georgetown University www.msb.edu/prog/crc March 14, 2005
Public Policy Has Encouraged Expansion of Mortgage Credit For more than 35 years, expanded d access to mortgage credit has been an explicit American policy goal HMDA was passed to ensure that banks and other depository institutions in inner city areas reinvested by making home mortgage credit available to residents. Subprime mortgage industry evolved as lenders developed flexible contracts and applied risk-based pricing to grant mortgage credit to non-prime borrowers
$Billions of current dollars 530 430 330 230 130 Subprime Mortgage Originations 1994 2004 04 30 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Source: Mortgage Statistical Annual.
Percent Change in Homeownership 1994 2003 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% Hispanic Asian Black White Source: U.S. Census Bureau.
The Policy Debate Has Changed Expanded access to mortgage credit an American policy goal HMDA passed to ensure that banks reinvested by making home mortgage credit available to residents. Subprime mortgage industry evolved as lenders developed flexible contracts and applied risk-based pricing to grant mortgage credit to non-prime borrowers In recent years, the housing policy debate has shifted from access to credit to affordability of credit High-cost mortgages are now viewed as impediments to asset- and wealth-building by low-income and minority households
Subprime Lenders are Increasingly the Target of Criticism for Excessive Pricing, Unfair Contractual Terms Subprime designation is being equated to overpriced Higher incidence of subprime loans for minority groups, relative to white borrowers, is equated to discriminatory targeting
Percent of Loans that are Subprime Conventional Refinance Loans in 2000 across all MSAs by Borrower Race and Income Group 60% African-American Hispanic Asian White 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Lower income Moderate Middle income Upper income Income Source: Calvin Bradford, Risk or Race? Racial Disparities in the Subprime Refinance Market Center for Community Change, 2002.
Prior to 2004, HMDA Data Are Silent on Questions of Pricing Fairness Until 2004, HMDA contained no pricing information All past studies that analyze HMDA data to infer pricing problems are speculative, at best There may well be problems with overpricing to some groups in some neighborhoods, but the HMDA data can t confirm it and were not designed to do so.
The Enhanced HMDA Data 2004 HMDA data will contai n loan price information (APR) for the first time, for higher priced loans The release marks an important step forward in identifying actual high-cost loans => better approximation of the nature of the subprime market BUT, the new data still have significant limits for addressing pricing fairness Insufficient detail to determine why a loan has a higher APR Many factors relevant to price determination are missing Some of these missing factors are known to be correlated with race and ethnicity of borrowers
Racial/Ethnic Differences in Income and Net Worth $Thousands $500 White, Non-Hispanic Non-White or Hispanic $400 $300 $200 $100 Income Net Worth $0 Mean Median Mean Median Source: Federal Reserve Board, 2001 Survey of Consumer Finances.
2003 Distribution of Credit Scores in High Minority vs. Low-Minority Census Tracts 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Low-Minority Census Tract (< 10% Minority) High-Minority Census Tract (80%+ Minority) Under 550 550-600 601-660 661-700 701 + Credit Score Source: Federal Reserve Bulletin, summer 2004.
Overview of Seminar Sessions History and Evolution of HMDA Mortgage Pricing 101: Determinants of price in mortgage markets The regulator s view of new HMDA data; strengths, limitations and usefulness. Research perspective on the value of the new HMDA data for assessing pricing fairness