There’s no doubt about the importance of compliance under today’s
economic environment, as both regulators and financial institutions look to
correct the missteps of recent years. This situation puts an extra emphasis on
the one requirement that continues to raise questions among dealers — adverse
action notices.
Both the Fair
Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) and the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) require
dealerships to provide adverse action notices to their customers under certain
circumstances. Adverse action requiring such a notice means the denial of a
request for credit relative to the dollar amounts, annual percentage rate
(APR), and terms contained in the verbal or written application. There are
three conditions under which the ECOA requires the issuing of an adverse action
notice:
■ Based on the information provided in a credit
application, whether received in person or by telephone, a dealer cannot find a
lending source willing to accept assignment of the installment sale agreement.
■ A vehicle is spot delivered and no funding
source will accept the original terms of the deal, unless the dealer, customer,
and lending source agree to different terms.
■ The deal is
based on specific credit terms and the customer rejects a counteroffer. An
adverse action notice is not required if the finance company accepts the terms
of the credit under the conditions agreed to by the customer. A notice is also
not required in cases where a counteroffer is made — representing terms and
conditions that differ from the original deal — and the customer accepts.
As for the FCRA,
there are two conditions under which an adverse action notice must be issued:
■ The information used in a credit report is
the basis for denying the customer’s credit.
■ The information
provided by a party other than a credit reporting agency, such as an employer
or landlord, is the basis for denying credit.
In such cases, additional notification information required by the FCRA
must be provided to the customer. It is permissible to combine the notice
information mandated by the ECOA and the FCRA in one form.
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Adverse Action at the Dealership
Let’s take a look at two examples of how the regulatory requirements apply
to real-life situations.
Situation 1: Upon receipt of a credit application and credit bureau
report, it is learned that the customer’s BEACON score of 325 is below the
published thresholds of all lenders available to the dealer. In this case, a
decision is made in-house not to submit the application and the parameters of
the deal to any lending source. The decision to deny the credit is made by
someone at the dealership. An adverse action notice containing the ECOA and the
FCRA information is required.
Situation 2: Upon receipt of a credit application and credit bureau
report, it is apparent that the original parameters of the deal must be altered
to find a willing funding source. The deal is renegotiated before the new agreed-to
terms are submitted to a lending source. If the request for credit under the
renegotiated deal is denied, the dealer must issue an adverse action notice
containing the ECOA and the FCRA information.
Adverse action notices must be issued if the dealer can’t find a lending
source willing to accept the credit terms posted to the original deal.
Additionally, if the deal is based on the customer’s request for a specific
APR, down payment, repayment term, and other relevant factors — and the request
for credit under the parameters of the agreed-to deal is denied — an adverse
action notice must be issued.
For example, in negotiating the deal, a customer will only accept the
dealer-arranged funding if an APR of 5 percent can be secured. If a lender
balks at the original deal at the requested APR, but says it will accept the
deal at an APR higher than the customer is willing to accept, then an adverse
action notice must be issued. This standard applies regardless of whether the
decision to deny the credit was made by a dealership employee or a lending
source.
If, in the situations previously described, a counteroffer was made to
establish conditions acceptable to the customer, the lender and the dealer,
then no adverse action notice is required. A notice would be required if the
customer rejected the terms of the counteroffer.
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Let’s say a credit application is shopped with two or more lending
sources, as is generally the case. Here are three scenarios where an adverse
action notice is required:
Scenario 1: A request for credit is sent to three sources. Two deny the
request, but one will accept it on terms unacceptable to the selling dealer.
The dealer elects not to do the deal, in effect denying the credit. Since the
dealer decided not to offer credit, the dealer is responsible for issuing an
adverse action notice. (It is likely the two credit sources who denied the
credit would send notices as well.)
Scenario 2: A request for credit is sent to three sources, and all three
decline the request for credit. While all three of the lending institutions
should issue notices, the dealer cannot rely on their notices to meet the
dealer’s obligation. That’s why a dealer should also issue an adverse action
notice. (There is no prohibition against issuing duplicate notices.)
Scenario 3: A request for credit is sent to three sources. Two decline the
request and one accepts the request based on the terms agreed to by the
customer. Since the creditor accepted the terms agreed to by the customer (and
the transaction is consummated), the dealer is not required to issue an adverse
action notice. The creditors denying the credit would probably issue notices,
as they would not know the consumer received financing from another lending
source.
These three scenarios should give you a good idea of when an adverse
action notice is necessary. Meeting the obligations of the ECOA and the FCRA
will help your dealership remain compliant at a time when the future of the
powersports industry is unclear. The one thing the industry can count on is the
role compliance will play going forward.
Jim Ganther is the
co-founder and president of Mosaic Interactive LLC, developer of Web-based
legal compliance programs for automotive, RV and powersports dealers. He can be
reached at jim.ganther@bobit.com.