Lloyds outlines MCD changes

Lloyds Banking Group has revealed details for its implementation of the Mortgage Credit Directive (MCD).

It says they are on track to be ready ahead of the March 2016 deadline.

Lloyds said that many of the elements of the MCD are already practiced within the Group’s brands (namely Lloyds Bank, Bank of Scotland, Halifax, BM Solutions, and Scottish Widows Bank), but there are a number of changes required to ensure full compliance with all the requirements by March next year.

One of the changes introduced by the new regulatory requirements will be to warn customers of the risks of the exchange rate changes on their borrowing. Lloyds Banking Group is a UK focused bank and foreign currency loans (where the customer’s income is not in Sterling) account for a small fraction of overall lending. As such the Group has already confirmed it ceased lending to borrowers using foreign currency income to support a new mortgage or remortgage application across all its brands, from 28 September.

The remaining key changes for Lloyds Banking Group are:

Brokers have now been notified they will need to have the appropriate permissions and be fully registered with the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) to conduct consumer buy-to-let business.

Internal training on the changes brought in by the MCD will be completed before the end of 2015. And from January 2016 National Account and Business Development Managers will be running MCD workshops across the UK to provide mortgage advisers with full details of the changes for Lloyds Banking Group’s intermediary brands.

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