This Halloween, make sure that these 5 ghouls, ghosts, and goblins aren't haunting your consumer compliance program. If any of these problems are plaguing your program, you'll learn how to get rid of them - with just a little practical magic.
Halloween is here, bringing costume parties, trick-or-treating, haunted houses, and of course, scary movies and shows. From classics like the Rocky Horror Picture Show and Ghostbusters to new favorites like Stranger Things, there are lots of ways to experience Halloween's frightful fun from the comfort of your couch.
Compliance is often considered one of the higher-cost areas of any financial institution. Some reports show that the average cost of compliance for a community bank is around $818,000. In addition, it seems that the cost of compliance has the potential to increase as regulators get more sophisticated risks get more complex, and staffing requirements increase.
The idea of increasing compliance costs can be scary, and asking for a bigger compliance budget even more frightening.
As you know, your compliance budget should be based on your institution's unique needs, risks, and realities. The larger and more complex your institution, the larger your compliance budget will need to be.
To maximize your budget, consider how you can leverage innovative solutions that can save you time and money.
Asking for a larger budget can be a major challenge, but here are a few tips:
Regulators will evaluate your culture of compliance when they evaluate your program and risk management. This culture of compliance includes:
Remember, all members of the Board and senior management are critical to a strong culture of compliance. They set the tone from the top, carry the decision-making power, and are accountable for the institution's risks.
Well, it's not easy. That said, here are some best practices for improving your culture of compliance and convincing your colleagues that compliance is important.
Consumer complaints are a bit frightening. They tend to attract the attention of regulators, community action groups, and potential customers. Negative reviews, comments, and complaints have implications well beyond compliance, but it's important that compliance actively manage consumer complaints.
There are a few benefits to this approach, beyond the simple fact that it's required by some of the consumer protection regulations. These benefits include the following:
A strong consumer complaints program provides insight into your markets' impressions of your brand and potential compliance risks. Best practices indicate that your consumer complaints program should include:
Focus in particular on any complaints that allege discrimination, as these are especially likely to attract the regulators' attention!
As a financial institution working on consumer compliance, you're expected to proactively analyze their data. This helps identify any disparities, determine their causes, and monitor for evidence of discrimination. This is one of the best - and only - ways to effectively manage and minimize Fair Lending risks before the regulators arrive. Disparity doesn’t always mean discrimination, but analysis is the only way to know for sure.
If you have disparities lurking in your data, it means you probably have some unchecked Fair Lending risk exposure that needs to be managed.
First, find a way to easily and efficiently analyze your data for disparities. The tool you use should make it easy to see any potential risks, and easily evaluate how serious they are. The best tools will also help you learn what is causing the disparity.
For example, TRUPOINT Analytics highlights your disparities in a color depending on its intensity (i.e. more intense disparities are darker). Then, you'll get a guided review to walk through the results of the analysis and find out what is causing those disparities.
Sometimes, a disparity might be easy to explain - maybe only a handful of people applied and one was denied so it wasn't statistically significant, or it was a simple error in the data. Other times, a disparity may be more difficult to understand. When it is, you may need a deep dive into your data, or even regression analysis.
Next, you'll need to consider your policies, procedures, and practices, and how they might be driving disparities.
Happy Halloween from the team here at TRUPOINT! Before you take off to celebrate, you may be interested in seeing that Guide to the 2018 HMDA changes mentioned above. Click here to get it today: