By Mary Tomkins on Tuesday, 12 May 2009
Category: Economy & Current Events

Mortgage Lender Being Investigated for Charging Hispanics More for Loans

The Federal Trade Commission reported on Monday that it is investigating a California-based mortgage lender for violating the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) by pricing loans according to the applicant's race or nationality.

According to the FTC’s complaint, Golden Empire Mortgage charged Hispanic home buyers higher prices for mortgage loans than non-Hispanic white home buyers - prices which could not be explained by the applicant's credit characteristics or underwriting risk. The FTC seeks to bar future violations and obtain redress for consumers.

“Mortgage lenders must ensure that pricing discretion does not lead to illegal pricing discrimination,” FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz said. “The FTC will continue to enforce the fair lending laws so that American borrowers are treated equally based on their credit – not their race, national origin, or gender.”

Golden Empire Mortgage, according to the FTC, also gave loan officers and branch managers wide discretion to charge, in addition to the risk-based price, “overages” through higher interest rates and higher up-front charges.

Then the mortgage company passed along a percentage of these overages to loan officers as commissions, without monitoring whether Hispanic borrowers buyers were paying higher overages than non-Hispanic white borrowers. Essentially, the loan offers received an incentive to discriminate.

The complaint alleged that the company’s policy and practice of allowing loan officers to charge discretionary overages resulted in Hispanics being charged higher prices because of their national origin – price disparities that are “substantial, statistically significant, and cannot be explained by factors related to underwriting risk or credit characteristics of the applicants.”

The ECOA prohibits credit discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, age, or whether you get public assistance. Creditors may ask you for most of this information in certain situations, but they may not use it when deciding whether to give you credit or when setting the terms of your credit. They are never allowed to ask your religion. Everyone who participates in the decision to grant credit or in setting the terms of that credit, including real estate brokers who arrange financing, must follow the provisions of the ECOA.



If you are looking for a mortgage, by law, lenders must:
But lenders cannot:
Take action if you think you’ve been discriminated against:Source:Federal Trade Commission
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