OPINION OF THE COURT
The issue presented in this appeal is whether the adverse action notice provisions of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”) apply to the actions of a company that provides mortgage guaranty insurance (“MI”) to a mortgage lender at a premium rate that is determined, in part, by information in the mortgage borrower’s credit report. Our decision is informed in part by the recent opinion of the United States Supreme Court in
Safeco Insurance Co. v.
Burr, - U.S. -,
*264 I.
In 2001, Whitney and Celeste Whitfield (the “Whitfields”) contracted to build a new home in Virginia. They wanted to finance all but 2% of the purchase price of their new home. The Whitfields, who had a poor credit history, enlisted a mortgage broker to facilitate the process and he helped them contact the eventual mortgagee, Countrywide Home Mortgage.
Countrywide agreed to provide the Whitfields with a mortgage which loaned them 98% of the purchase price on condition that the Whitfields pay for mortgage insurance. After the mortgage papers were signed, Countrywide requested ap-pellee Radian Guaranty, Inc. to provide the mortgage insurance, which Radian agreed to do for a monthly charge of I905.74. 1 Countrywide provided the Whit-fields with a disclosure statement that informed them the cost of the mortgage insurance. Radian based the price of the mortgage insurance on the loan-to-value ratio of the mortgage and on Mr. Whitfield’s credit score, which Countrywide obtained from Mr. Whitfield’s consumer credit report. In the mortgage closing packet, Countrywide gave the Whitfields the credit report upon which it had relied.
In accordance with the mortgage guaranty insurance process, Radian prepares and files its rate schedule for mortgage guaranty insurance with the Virginia Bureau of Insurance. After the Bureau has approved Radian’s proposed rates, lenders, including mortgagees, are free to access the Mi’s rate schedule and place their orders online by entering the borrower’s credit score and loan-to-value ratio. If Radian accepts the lender’s application for guaranty insurance, it sends a confirmation letter to the lender. On the other hand, if it rejects the application it sends an adverse action notice to the borrower. Three days after Countrywide closed the mortgage with the Whitfields, it submitted an electronic order to purchase mortgage guaranty insurance from Radian. Countrywide then passed this cost along to the Whitfields, as had been agreed upon at settlement.
The Whitfields were required to set up an escrow account to pay the cost of the premiums. Countrywide paid the premiums to Radian, regardless of whether the Whitfields’ escrow account contained sufficient funds to pay the cost of the premium. There were, however, sufficient funds in the Whitfields’ escrow account; in fact the Whitfields were due, and did receive, a refund for unearned premiums directly from Radian in the amount of $542.15.
Radian conceded that had Mr. Whitfield’s credit score been higher, it would have charged a lower premium for the mortgage insurance, and in turn, the Whit-fields would have paid a lower premium for mortgage insurance. The Whitfields were not provided with an adverse action notice by Radian. Indeed, it is Radian’s standard policy not to send adverse action notices to borrowers when the lender’s application for MI is approved.
The Whitfields filed suit in January 2004, alleging that Radian did not provide them with an adverse action notice as required by the FCRA, 15 U.S.C. § 1681m(a). They asked the District Court to certify a class, composed of borrowers who paid more than the lowest rate for private mortgage insurance and were not notified of the adverse action. The District Court granted Radian’s motion for summary judgment, which had the effect of rendering the Whitfields’ motion for class certification moot.
Whitfield v. Ra
*265
dian Guaranty, Inc.,
II.
The District Court had jurisdiction pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 1681p and 28 U.S.C. § 1331. This court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
This court exercises plenary review of the District Court’s grant of Radian’s motion for summary judgment. Further, this court applies the same standard in reviewing a motion for summary judgment as the District Court.
MBIA Ins. Corp. v. Royal Indem. Co.,
III.
A. Relevant Statutory Provisions
The FCRA requires that if a person who is a permissible user of information from a consumer report (also known as a credit report) takes any adverse action against an individual, such person shall notify the individual of the adverse action. We set out the relevant provision:
If any person takes any adverse action with respect to any consumer that is based in whole or in part on any information contained in a consumer report, the person shall—
(1) provide oral, written, or electronic notice of the adverse action to the consumer;
(2) provide to the consumer orally, in writing, or electronically—
(A) the name, address, and telephone number of the consumer reporting agency ... that furnished the report to the person; and
(B) a statement that the consumer reporting agency did not make the decision to take the adverse action and is unable to provide the consumer the specific reasons why the adverse action was taken; and
(3)provide to the consumer an oral, written, or electronic notice of the consumer’s right—
(A) to obtain, under section 1681j of this title, a free copy of a consumer report on the consumer from the consumer reporting agency referred to in paragraph (2), which notice shall include an indication of the 60-day period under that section for obtaining such a copy; and
(B) to dispute, under section 1681i of this title, with a consumer reporting agency the accuracy or completeness of any information in a consumer report furnished by the agency.
15 U.S.C. § 1681m(a).
The definition of “adverse action” in the FCRA includes an insurance prong, a credit prong, and a catch-all provision. Section 1681a(k)(l)(A) is referred to as the credit prong, § 1681a(k)(l)(B)(i) is referred to as the insurance prong, and § 1681a(k)(l)(B)(iv) as the catch-all provision. The District Court analyzed the transaction under the insurance prong, and we agree that the transaction at issue falls within the insurance prong.
The District Court also stated that charging a higher initial rate for insurance would be an “adverse action.”
Whitfield,
(k) Adverse action.—
*266 (1) Actions included. — The term “adverse action”—
(B) means—
(i) a denial or cancellation of, an increase in any charge for, or a reduction or other adverse or unfavorable change in the terms of coverage or amount of, any insurance, existing or applied for, in connection with the underwriting of insurance^]
15 U.S.C. § 1681a(k)(l)(B)(i).
The Act defines “consumer report,” so far as relevant here, as:
any written, oral, or other communication of any information by a consumer reporting agency bearing on a consumer’s credit worthiness, credit standing, [or] credit capacity ... which is used or expected to be used or collected in whole or in part for the purpose of serving as a factor in establishing the consumer’s eligibility for ... credit or insurance to be used primarily for personal, family, or household purposes[.]
15 U.S.C. § 1681a(d)(l)(A).
The District Court noted that the transaction at issue in this case was between Radian, the mortgage insurer, and Countrywide, the lender. It cited approvingly the decision in
Hinton v. Federal National Mortgage Ass’n,
B. The Safeco decision
The
Safeco
decision,
The Court next resolved a dispute between the courts of appeals by holding that the “increase” referred to in the statute encompasses initial rates for new applications. Id. at 2211. The Court determined that a rate is “based on” a credit report if there is a but-for causal relationship, i.e., the credit report must have been the basis for the increase. Id. at 2212. Finally, the Court rejected the Government’s argument that the baseline should be the best possible premium rate. Id. at 2213. Instead, the Court held that the baseline is what the applicant would have been charged if the company had not taken the credit score into account, i.e., the neutral rate. Id. at 2213-14.
Reviewing the record in the two cases before it, the Court held that because the rate that GEICO offered to Edo was one he would have received if his credit score had not been taken into account, it had not violated the statute. Id. at 2214. There was no record evidence as to any neutral rate with respect to Safeco, but the Court held that plaintiffs could not prevail on *267 their claim against Safeco for willful violation of the FCRA because Safeco had not acted recklessly. Id.' at 2215. Safeco had interpreted the statutory language to mean that no notice was required for its initial dealing with the insured, and the Court stated that although this was an incorrect interpretation it was not a reckless one. Id.
Following the announcement of the opinion in Safeco, this court asked the parties to comment on the effect of the Safeco decision on the issues in this case. Radian responded with essentially the same analysis applied by the District Court. It focused on the fact that it had “sold a commercial insurance product to a mortgage lender [Countrywide], not to a consumer.” Letter from David Smith, counsel for Radian Guaranty Inc., to the Court, at 1 (June 14, 2007) (on record with the Court). It stated that the Whitfields were not a party to the insurance transaction, that it completed its transaction with Countrywide without ever receiving or considering the Whitfields’ consumer report, that the only transaction to which the Whitfields were a party was a separate credit transaction with Countrywide that was completed three days before Countrywide ever contacted Radian about purchasing mortgage guaranty insurance for itself, and that therefore the District Court was correct in holding that because- Radian sold the mortgage insurance to Countrywide and not to the Whitfields, there was no violation of the FCRA as a matter of law. See id. at 4-7.
Radian then argued that in any event it did not act willfully as a matter of law, relying on the Supreme Court’s Safeco decision that the insurance company (Safeco) had acted without “authoritative guidance” and therefore did not act recklessly. Id. at 5. It also argued that it was not required to give notice because it had not received any information contained in any consumer report about the Whitfields, and therefore it did not take any action based in whole or in part on any information contained in a consumer report. Id. at 6.
In their response to the court’s inquiry, the amici, the Mortgage Insurance Companies of America, stated that under the precedent of Safeco, Radian could not have violated the FCRA willfully, thereby continuing their support for Radian’s position in this case. Letter from Kirk D. Jensen, counsel for the Mortgage Insurance Companies of America, to the Court, at 2-3 (June 13, 2007) (on record with the Court).
Not surprisingly, the Whitfields view the Safeco decision differently. Emphasizing the Supreme Court’s ruling that willful conduct must be shown to have been “objectively unreasonable,” the Whitfields noted that whether Radian acted willfully is not an issue on appeal as the question formed no basis for the District Court’s ruling and was not an issue raised on appeal by either party. Letter from Terry A. Smiljanich, counsel for the Whitfields, to the Court, at 2 (June 13, 2007) (on record with the Court). Because “the record is incomplete as to all issues involving determining whether defendant Radian’s actions were or were not ‘objectively unreasonable,’” the Whitfields argued that we should remand this case to the District Court. Id. They noted the absence of evidence that Radian (unlike GEICO) had no neutral score, and “that the Whitfields were punished with extremely high mortgage insurance premiums specifically because their credit scores were judged by Radian to warrant such high premiums.” Id. at 3. They also noted that nothing in the Safeco decision provides any basis for concluding that the District Court was correct in “grafting either a ‘privity’ requirement or a ‘direct/indirect’ category onto the FCRA.” Id. Thus, the Whitfields ar *268 gued that we should allow them to proceed with the case.
Finally, the Federal Trade Commission, which entered the case as amicus curiae on behalf of the position of the Whitfields, argued that “nothing in Safeco should have any impact on [our] decision,” and agreed with the Whitfields that we should reverse the District Court’s decision. Letter from Lawrence DeMille-Wagman, counsel for the Federal Trade Commission, to the Court, at 3 (June 13, 2007) (on record with the Court). It noted that nothing in the Supreme Court’s Safeco decision addresses Radian’s defense that it had no obligation to provide the Whitfields with an adverse action notice. Id.
C. Analysis
The Supreme Court’s Safeco opinion disposes of one issue that had arisen in the District Court but was uncontested on appeal, namely whether an initial premium can be termed an increase in any charge for insurance for purposes of the FCRA’s definition of adverse action. Radian had argued that its sale of mortgage guaranty insurance to Countrywide did not fall within the FCRA’s definition of “adverse action” because the Whitfields never had existing insurance with Radian. In Radian’s brief, it argued that it never denied, can-celled, increased, reduced, or otherwise changed the term of any insurance with respect to the Whitfields.
As we noted above in discussing the District Court’s decision, it agreed that a higher initial rate would be an adverse action. Without amplification, it relied on the decision to that effect in
Broessel v. Triad Guar. Ins. Corp.,
No. Civ. A. L04CV-4M,
Radian argued in its brief before us that it was not required to give notice because it did not take any action “based in whole or in part on any information contained in a consumer report.” See 15 U.S.C. § 1681m. Radian argued that it never had any information from a consumer reporting agency, but that its rate was based in part on the credit score that it received from Countrywide.
We reject that technical construction of the statutory language. In discussing that statutory requirement the Supreme Court stated “[i]n common talk, the phrase ‘based on’ indicates a but-for causal relationship and thus a necessary logical condition.”
Safeco,
There is no reason to limit the statutory obligation to provide notice to those cases *269 where the insurance company directly reads the credit report and exclude those cases where the insurance company indirectly is advised of the results of the credit report. The relevant fact is that the insurance company used the credit information, i.e., the credit score, in establishing the applicable premium for insurance that the borrowers were required to pay. It makes no difference to the purpose of the Act if the credit information was derived from Radian’s own reading of the consumer credit report or was transmitted to it by Countrywide based on its reading of the consumer credit report. In either event, the consumer report would have been the cause of the adverse action and thus the notice requirement applies.
Finally, we come to the crux of the District Court’s holding: its determination that the FCRA notice requirement was inapplicable because there was no privity between the Whitfields (the ultimate consumers) and Radian. The privity issue did not arise in Safeco because both Safeco and GEICO had direct relationships with the borrowers. In this case, we have an intermediate party, Countrywide, the mortgagee.
This precise factual situation arose in
Broessel,
where Countrywide was the mortgagee and it selected Triad to provide the mortgage insurance the day after the closing.
Privity of contract is not a requirement under the plain language of FCRA. See 15 U.S.C. § 1681m(a). FCRA states in pertinent part “that any person who ‘takes any adverse action with respect to any consumer that is based in whole or in part on any information contained in a consumer report’ must provide ‘notice of the adverse action to the consumer.’ ” [15 U.S.C. § 1681m(a) ] Triad is “any person” and the Court has held that it took an adverse action. The adverse action was with respect to a consumer. The only question remaining is whether the action was based on information contained in the consumer’s credit report.
Triad, the insurance company in the Broessel case, argued that it took no action based on the plaintiffs credit report but relied solely on the information contained in the insurance application provided by Countrywide. Id. at *4. By coincidence, Countrywide was also the mortgagee in this case and Radian makes the same argument that the insurance company made in Broessel. The District Court in Broes-sel rejected that argument:
Notwithstanding the automatic nature of the transaction, the determination of Broessel’s mortgage insurance premium was based on information which Triad used to determine the premium for the mortgage insurance. Part of the information used was Broessel’s credit score which was derived from her credit report. Whether that evaluation was done electronically or otherwise is immaterial. The ultimate decision as to the amount of her premium was based, in whole or in part, on a consumer report. 15 U.S.C. § 1681m(a).
Id. at *5.
We agree with that analysis. If we were to accept Radian’s argument, responsibility to provide notice would be limited to the mortgagee. The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit rejected that interpretation of the statute. As the court stated in
Reynolds v. Hartford Fin. Ins. Servs.,
We must construe the language of the statute in light of its clear purpose. As the court stated in
Treadway v. Gateway Chevrolet Oldsmobile Inc.,
If Radian had sent the Whitfields the required notice of adverse action, the Whitfields would have been in a position to correct any inaccurate information in their credit report and thereby lower the price they would have to pay for credit in future transactions. Indeed, the record shows that the Whitfields might even have been able to lower the mortgage guaranty insurance premium that they were obligated to pay in the present transaction with Countrywide. The mortgage papers were signed three days before Countrywide placed the request for insurance with Radian, but the record does not indicate that the Whitfields had no opportunity to adjust or correct the premium after the mortgage transaction was set. In fact, the Whitfields’ obligation to pay any mortgage insurance premium was eliminated long before their responsibility under the mortgage ceased.
Finally, we turn to Radian’s argument that it cannot be held liable under the FCRA because it did not act willfully, as the Supreme Court held in
Safeco
with respect to Safeco. The situations may not be analogous. The Supreme Court held that Safeco’s reading of the statute to exclude initial rate offers for new insureds was not objectively unreasonable.
Safeco,
Radian’s reading would be more plausible if it could argue that it had no information with respect to the identity of the purchasers and therefore was not in a *271 position to send the required notice. However, the record shows that Radian did in fact send notice directly to prospective purchasers when it declined to grant insurance covering their mortgages. It appears that Radian sent those notices pursuant to the credit prong of the FCRA — 15 U.S.C. § 1681a(k)(l)(A). That is a distinction without a difference. The essential factual concession is that Radian was in a position to identify and notify ultimate purchasers notwithstanding that it had no direct relationship with them.
We do not suggest that a factfinder could not or would not determine that Radian did not act willfully. Instead, we hold that whether it did so is factual issue, not a question of law, and it therefore cannot be decided either on appeal or by the District Court as a matter of law.
IY.
For the reasons set forth above, we will reverse the summary judgment entered by the District Court and remand for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
. The Whitfields state that the premium was $903.58, but we need not resolve the difierence.
