By Pete Schroeder
WASHINGTON, July 13 (Reuters) – Banks should be cautious of lending to people not legally authorized to work āin the United States, as their income may be less āreliable or they may be deported, a pair of U.S. bank regulators cautioned āthe industry Monday.
In new guidance, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which supervises the nation’s largest banks, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation said non-citizens working in the U.S. illegally may have “less reliable” āincome and as a ā result may be a higher credit risk. The National Credit Union Association, which monitors credit unions, also ā issued the guidance.
“When a borrower’s income is derived from employment that is not legally authorized, the source of repayment may be less reliable āand may āpresent increased credit risk,” the guidance āstated. Among reasons repayment could ābe riskier include loss of employment due to nonlegal status, an inability to become legally employed, or a borrower’s removal from the United States.
The guidance, which is nonbinding and does not impose new requirements on banks but rather reminds them of existing obligations, is āan effort to implement an executive āorder signed by President Donald Trump in āMay.
That order focused on āthe potential misuse of financial services by people living āin the U.S. illegally and ādirected the Treasury āDepartment and other agencies to identify potential red flags for the industry. That order was a lighter touch than one feared āby the banking āindustry and considered by the Trump administration, which would have ādirected banks to collect citizenship data on accountholders.
(Reporting by āPete Schroeder; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
