MBL: A new look at commercial lending
 Written by Alicia Nealon, Director of Regulatory Affairs
In case you didnâÂÂt see, NCUAâÂÂs MBL proposal was published in Federal Register last week, and the comment deadline has been set for August 31st. With that in mind, we are launching a series of posts where NAFCUâÂÂs Compliance Blog will break down different portions of the proposal and highlight the key issues that we are looking for your feedback on.  TodayâÂÂs topic is the scope of the proposal. Specifically, how the proposal would define and treat âÂÂcommercial loansâ versus âÂÂMBLsâ â and how the distinction between the two would trigger different regulatory requirements.
NCUAâÂÂs MBL proposal would comprehensively overhaul the way that the agency approaches commercial lending, from both a regulatory and supervisory perspective. Currently, Part 723 considers commercial lending as synonymous with the member business lending definition under the Federal Credit Union Act (FCU Act). This proposal, however, would expand Part 723âÂÂs scope to apply to commercial loans as newly defined under the proposal. So what is that definition? Well, its pretty broad and would generally include any credit extended for commercial, industrial, agricultural or professional purposesâ¦..But this wouldnâÂÂt be the Compliance Blog if NAFCU didnâÂÂt give you the direct citation
âÂÂCommercial loan means any loan, line of credit, or letter of credit (including any unfunded commitments), and any interest a credit union obtains in such loans made by another lender, to individuals, sole proprietorships, partnerships, corporations, or other business enterprises for commercial, industrial, agricultural, or professional purposes, but not for investment or personal expenditure purposes. Excluded from this definition are loans made by a corporate credit union; loans made by a federally insured credit union to another federally insured credit union; loans made by a federally insured credit union to a credit union service organization; loans secured by a 1- to 4- family residential property (whether or not it is the borrowerâÂÂs primary residence); any loan(s) to a borrower or an associated borrower, the aggregate balance of which is equal to less than $50,000; any loan fully secured by shares in the credit union making the extension of credit or deposits in other financial institutions; and loans secured by a vehicle manufactured for household use.âÂÂÂ
Loans falling under this definition would trigger the proposalâÂÂs safety and soundness risk management provisions, which would require a credit union to develop a full commercial loan, Board-approved policy, and commercial lending organizational infrastructure. But would loans falling under this definition count towards the cap? As is always the case in our world of regulatory compliance, it dependsâ¦.
The proposal includes several distinctions between commercial loans and a statutorily defined MBL. All commercial loans are subject to the proposalâÂÂs safe and soundness requirements, whether MBLs or not, but only MBLs, as defined by the FCU Act, are subject to the cap.Â
So how do these distinctions interplay? Well, we end up with some loans that are subject to the proposed safety and soundness provisions, but are not MBLs and therefore do not count towards the cap. Specifically, any commercial, industrial, agricultural, or professional loan in which a federal or state agency (or its political subdivision) has committed to fully insure repayment, fully guarantee payment, or provide an advance commitment to purchase the loan in full is a commercial loan but not an MBL. Also, any non-member loan or non-member participation interest in a commercial, industrial, agricultural, or professional loan is a commercial loan but generally not an MBL.
On the other hand, there are two types of loans that are not commercial loans subject to the proposed safety and soundness provisions but they are MBLs and thus, must be counted against the credit unionâÂÂs net member business loan balance. Specifically, loans secured by a 1- to 4- family residential property that is not the borrowerâÂÂs primary residence, and loans secured by a vehicle manufactured for household use that will be used for a commercial purpose are generally not commercial loans, but they are MBLs.
Is your head spinning yet? Mine sure is, so hopefully this chart will help you and me both keep it straight:
Type of Loan |
MBL |
Commercial Loan |
Loan fully secured by a 1- to 4- family residential property (borrowerâÂÂs primary residence) |
No |
No |
Member business loan secured by a 1- to 4- family residential property (not the borrowerâÂÂs primary residence) |
Yes* |
No |
Member business loan secured by a vehicle manufactured for household use |
Yes* |
No |
Business loan with aggregate net member business loan balance less than $50,000 |
No |
No |
Commercial loan fully secured by shares in the credit union making the extension of credit or deposits in other financial institutions |
No |
No |
Commercial loan in which a federal or state agency (or its political subdivision) fully insures repayment, fully guarantees repayment, or provides an advance commitment to purchase the loan in full |
No |
Yes* |
Non-member commercial loan or non-member participation interest in a commercial loan made by another lender |
No |
Yes* |
* If the outstanding aggregate loan balance is greater than $50,000.
Over the next few weeks, NAFCUâÂÂs Compliance blog will be breaking down more specific aspects of the proposal, and posing questions for the industry to consider. In the meantime,be sure to take a look at NAFCUâÂÂs Regulatory Alert 15-EA-16, our Member Business Lending Issue Page, or reach out to me directly (anealon@nafcu.org, 703-842-2266) with your questions or thoughts.Â