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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Griego
DATE TYPED 3/3/05
HB
SHORT TITLE Home Loan Flipping Provisions
SB 694
ANALYST McSherry
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
NFI
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Office of the Attorney General (AG)
Regulations and Licensing Department (RLD)
Economic Development Department (EDD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 694 proposes to amend section 4(B) of the Home Loan Protection Act by inserting
the words “high-cost” before each occurrence of the words “home loan” in that section. As a re-
sult limits the provisions of the Home Loan Protection Act, subsection 4B to high-cost home
loans.
Section 4(B) of the HLPA prohibits the knowing and intentional act of “flipping a home loan.”
“Flipping a home loan” is defined in the current section 4(B) as “ . . . the making of a home loan
to a borrower that refinances an existing home loan when the new loan does not have reasonable,
tangible net benefit to the borrower considering all the circumstances, including the terms of
both the new and refinanced loans.”
The bill also proposes the following new language: “No provision of the Home Loan Protection
Act imposing liability applies to an act done or omitted in good faith in conformity with a rule
adopted by the financial institutions division of the regulation and licensing department, notwith-
standing that the rule may later be amended, repealed or determined by judicial or other authority
to be invalid.”
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Senate Bill 694 -- Page 2
SB 694 includes an emergency clause and proposes that the changes proposed must be taken
immediately for the peace health and safety of the public.
Significant Issues
The effect of SB 694 would be to more narrowly define prohibited conduct, limiting the Home
Loan Protection Act’s prohibition against mortgage loan flipping to “high cost home loans.”
High cost home loans are defined in the act as home loans in which the contract rate or the total
points and fees exceed thresholds established in the Act (58-21A-3(H), (L), (M) and (N) NMSA
1978).
According to the Attorney General’s Office (AGO), any home loan can be flipped, and loans that
meet the definition of high-cost home loans only constitute a small proportion of the total home
loan market in New Mexico. Because of this, the AGO continues, enactment of this bill would
result in a significant reduction in consumer protections for New Mexicans.
AGO points out that a bill with a similar purpose, SB 473, was defeated in 2004 and that propo-
nents of the similar SB 473 urged in 2004 that passage was necessary in part to prevent entities
investing in New Mexico home loans from pulling out of the market as a result of fears about
assignee liability for flipped loans. AGO reports that the Office is not aware of a reduction in the
availability of funding for home loans in New Mexico since the HLPA went into effect in Janu-
ary 2004.
Section 3(B) of the bill would add language to the HLPA that would provide for an affirmative
defense based on good faith compliance with regulations promulgated under the HLPA. Accord-
ing to AGO, the use of an affirmative defense is based on a similar provision of the Truth in
Lending Act, found at 15 U.S.C.A. 1640(d) was discussed by the New Mexico Supreme Court in
Equity Plus Consumer Finance and Mortgage Company, Ltd. v. Howes, 116 N.M. 151 (1993).
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
There is no appropriation contained in the bill.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL.
The Regulations and Licensing Department asserts that a person may be held liable for an act
done or omitted in good faith in conformity with a rule adopted by the financial institutions divi-
sion.
The Home Loan Protection Act would remain in effect as originally passed by the legislature in
2003, with anti-flipping protections for borrowers of all credit levels.
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