Title 12 › Chapter 16— FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION › § 1831bb
Federal bank regulators can only make a bank treat a high‑volatility commercial real estate (HVCRE) loan as higher risk if the loan meets the rules for an "HVCRE ADC loan" under 12 CFR 324.2 as of October 11, 2017 (or under any replacement rule in effect on May 24, 2018). An HVCRE ADC loan is a loan secured by land or improved property that mainly pays for buying, developing, or building the property, is meant to turn the property into something that makes income, and depends on future income, sales, or refinancing of that property to be repaid. An HVCRE ADC loan does not include loans for one- to four-family homes, community development investments, or agricultural land; loans that buy, refinance, or improve already income-producing property when the property’s current cash flow can cover debt under the bank’s underwriting; or projects that meet the agency’s loan-to-value limit and where the borrower put in at least 15% of the property’s appraised "as completed" value in cash, marketable assets, paid development costs, or contributed property before the bank advanced funds, and that capital must stay in the project until the loan is reclassified. Loans made before January 1, 2015, and loans already reclassified as non-HVCRE ADC loans are also excluded. Property given as capital is valued by appraisal rules under section 3339. A loan can be reclassified once construction is largely finished and the property’s cash flow can cover its debt and expenses. Federal regulators still keep authority to supervise and enforce rules to keep banks safe.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 1831bb
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60