By Joe Light 

As the housing recovery continues in fits and starts, black and Hispanic borrowers are receiving a smaller share of mortgage loans, according to Federal Reserve data.

The report, released Monday, comes as some lenders face lawsuits alleging they aren't making enough loans to minority borrowers.

Since the financial crisis, banks have tightened credit standards beyond the criteria typically allowed by government agencies such as the Federal Housing Administration or mortgage-finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to avoid regulatory problems. Some of the regulators themselves also have raised fees they charge or heightened standards.

Lenders worry that if borrowers default, regulators might find defects in the loans and force lenders to pay penalties. Banks have paid billions of dollars since the financial crisis to settle cases with the government over poor lending practices during the housing boom. Fannie and Freddie don't make loans but instead buy them from lenders and package them into securities that are sold to other investors. During the financial crisis, many of those securities soured, eventually leading the government to take over the companies.

In part because black and Hispanic borrowers tend to have lower incomes and less-favorable credit histories, those groups have been disproportionately affected by the tough new standards, bankers and consumer advocates said.

"It's just simple math," said David Stevens, CEO of the Mortgage Bankers Association. "Tightening the credit [rules] has an unusually high impact on minority borrowers."

The latest figures suggest the government's effort to collect penalties for past mistakes continues to weigh on lending decisions years after the financial crisis ended.

Overall, the Federal Reserve report found that the number of new mortgage loans made in 2013 declined 11%, to 8.7 million, as interest rates rose. The number of loans made to purchase homes increased 13%, to 3.1 million, while refinance loans decreased 23%, to 5.1 million.

At the same time, the share of loans made to black and Hispanic borrowers to buy homes has declined. In 2013, 4.8% of loans made to buy homes were made to blacks while 7.3% of such loans were made to Hispanic borrowers. In 2012, the groups accounted for 5.1% and 7.7% of such loans, respectively. Those groups combined accounted for more than a fifth of such mortgages in 2006.

"We keep hearing reports that minority borrowers are being priced out of the market or can't get loans at all," said Barry Zigas, director of housing policy for the Consumer Federation of America.

Overall, about 19% of loans to buy homes made by all institutions were to minority borrowers, according to the Fed report, compared with 20% of such loans in 2012. At Quicken Loans Inc., about 13% of loans were made to minorities in 2013, while at U.S. Bank, which is part of U.S. Bancorp, 11% were made to such borrowers.

Quicken Loans chief economist Bob Walters said all of the company's applications come via its website or the telephone, making it difficult to assess the ethnicities of borrowers who choose not disclose it. Mr. Walters said the proportion of loans made to low- and moderate-income buyers is consistent with that of other lenders.

A U.S. Bancorp spokesman didn't respond to requests for comment.

More than a fifth of home-purchase loans were made to minorities at Wells Fargo & Co.'s Wells Fargo Bank, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.'s J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, Bank of America Corp. and Citibank, part of Citigroup Inc.

In 2013, 10% of loans to buy homes were from borrowers with a credit score under 660, on a scale of 300 to 850, according to the Urban Institute, a think tank in Washington. In 2012, that was the case for 13% of such loans; in 2001, it was 24%.

Many consumer advocates and banks generally agree the decline in the share of lending to minorities is a result of lenders' and regulators' more-stringent credit requirements. Even though the FHA allows some borrowers to have a credit score of as low as 580, many lenders won't lend to borrowers with a score below 640.

Lenders blame the tougher limits on recent penalties exacted by federal officials for mistakes made on loans during the housing boom. That, combined with the high cost of servicing a loan in default, has led some banks to mostly avoid riskier borrowers.

White House officials over the past few weeks have met with lenders and consumer advocates in part to hear what changes could be made to ease lenders' fears.

In his first major policy speech last week, Julián Castro, the new secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, said one of his priorities will be to clarify the rules and penalties for loans insured by the FHA, which HUD oversees.

Another factor hindering minority borrowing: Homes in black and Hispanic neighborhoods lost more in value than those in other areas, said Stan Humphries, chief economist of real-estate information service Zillow Inc.

Home values are down about 10% from the peak in neighborhoods where whites outnumber all other ethnic groups, according to Zillow. Home values are down 20% in predominately black neighborhoods and 26% in Hispanic neighborhoods, according to Zillow.

That makes it more likely for black and Hispanic borrowers to owe more than their home is worth and to be unable to buy a new home or refinance their mortgage, Mr. Humphries said.

This month, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman sued Evans Bank of Hamburg, N.Y., for allegedly avoiding making loans in black neighborhoods in Buffalo. In May, the city of Providence, R.I., filed a lawsuit against Banco Santander SA, making similar allegations. The banks have disputed the allegations.

Write to Joe Light at joe.light@wsj.com

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