APR & APY: Tools & Best Practices For Accurate Disclosure

November 14, 2024

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Description:

Mistakes happen.  Even strong compliance programs can have a slip-up, and you may find your bank has wrongfully disclosed the Annual Percentage Rate (on a loan) or the Annual Percentage Yield (for a deposit product).  So what?  What does it really matter if the number is wrong?  Plenty!

Both TISA (Reg DD) and TILA (Reg Z) mandate accuracy in disclosures.  There are consequences when that doesn’t happen, and you need to know how to make things right.  An APR / Finance Charge error can easily lead to required restitution to a borrower.  Join this program to learn more about APR and APY accuracy and to learn the ropes for using those confounded calculators.  It has become a bit of a forgotten skill that you don’t want to miss! I’ll also show you how to make things right for your customer, to mitigate regulatory consequences.

**New BONUS for 2024! Learn how to use the FFIEC calculator on a TRID loan!**  In the atlas of lending compliance, these are the waters marked “here be dragons”.  Learn to sail where few dare go and slay the dragons of intimidation and uncertainty.  Learn how to check the accuracy of a TRID loan’s APR using the FFIEC calculator and up your compliance game to next-level greatness.

In banking, there are two “Truth” laws:

  • Truth In Savings Act
  • Truth In Lending Act

Congress passed these laws to ensure banks are being… well… truthful in the information they provide to customers.  Congress made sure to cover both sides of the banking house:  deposits accounts and loan accounts – and they were serious about it.  After all, failure to be less than truthful – even inadvertently – causes consumer harm.  Either the consumer isn’t earning the interest yield you told them they’d earn (APY), or they are paying a bigger interest rate than you told them they’d pay (APR).   That is a problem – both as a violation with the law itself, and also with UDAP.  Lying is unfair and deceptive.

Of course, bankers aren’t in the business of lying, and we sure aren’t looking to swindle the customer.  But we are human – and to err is human.  Moreover, the calculations for both APR and APY are downright complicated.  It can be difficult to even know you have a problem.  A reliance on vendor software doesn’t solve anything either – many errors are a result of GIGO – garbage in / garbage out.

TILA has severe consequences for making APR / Finance charge errors and then failing to correct them.  Indeed, it is no understatement that APR and FC understatements are to be taken seriously… civil and criminal liability is like that.  So, it is imperative to get it right – APR and Finance Charge accuracy is the central theme of the Truth In Lending Act, which officially made it a law for creditors to honor what they disclose. What are we to do?

Luckily, there are official and reliable calculators for your free use! The FFIEC maintains both APR and APY calculators, and they are most helpful.  But I’ll be honest… they are also intimidating.

Plus, did you know there is a Joint Agency Statement of Policy from 1998 that remains the de-facto instruction guide for making APR / Finance Charge restitution?! Do you know what it says?

This two-hour session will give you the practical knowledge to confidently understand:

  • APY accuracy:  Learn how to navigate the FFIEC calculator for determining APY accuracy on advertisements, disclosures, and periodic statements.
  • APR and Finance Charge accuracy: Figure out why, when, and how to determine if your figures are right.  If not, I’ll show you how to determine the right amount of reimbursement required, using the Agency’s Statement of Policy on Restitution and the FFIEC APR calculator.

Walking step-by-step through case studies, you’ll come away with a better understanding of a subject that need not be intimidating.  You’ll be able to answer these questions:

    • Why do I have to reimburse?  It was an unintentional error – can’t I just re-disclose?
    • Is the FFIEC APR calculator the same as the old APRWin?  How do I use it?
    • Do I have to cut a reimburse check for the borrower, or can I just credit the loan?

This is crucial information for you to know as a compliance professional. Rebekah Leonard has on the front lines of compliance for 20+ years, and has implemented and been examined on these laws, and has had to calculate restitution to reimburse real dollars back to the borrower.  She has the perspective and insight to share!

WHO SHOULD ATTEND:

The program is designed for compliance officers, lenders, loan reviewers, auditors and bank managers.

 

Presenters:

Rebekah Leonard, CRCM

Rebekah is the owner of Elucidate LLC, a compliance training and consulting company.  Elucidate means to “make clear, explain, throw light upon”, and describes Rebekah’s desire to illuminate the complexities of compliance with passion and fun.  She’s created and produced a TRID music video parody and several Compliance Breakout escape rooms, which she frequently provides at state banking compliance conferences.  She is an accomplished speaker and regularly provides webinars through BOL and Compliance Resource. Rebekah is currently serving as the VP Director of Compliance for a $6 Billion community bank in Montana.  She began her career in 1995 at a private lending company, but soon settled into banking, where she’s covered nearly all of it – customer service and teller work, loan processing and review, and security and business continuity.  She now oversees CRA, BSA and all aspects of compliance as a senior leader.  She has successfully navigated numerous FDIC Compliance, CRA, and BSA Exams.  Rebekah has a bachelor’s degree in Organizational Leadership from Chapman University (Magna cum Laude), attended the American Bankers Association National Compliance School in 2003, and has held her Certified Regulatory Compliance Manager designation since 2006.  She is a BOL Compliance Guru.

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Price: $0.00
Start Time: 2:00 pm EST
End Time: 4:00 pm EST
Date:

November 14, 2024

Sorry, this event is expired and no longer available.