A closer look at the new integrated mortgage-disclosure rule issued last week by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau reveals a handful of important changes made to the rule itself, while the forms have undergone only modest revisions. The first important change to the final rule is a mandatory three-business-day waiting period between the time the lender provides the closing disclosure and the closing itself. By providing the closing disclosure three days before closing, consumers can review their final loan terms and costs in an unpressured environment rather than at the closing table, the bureau said. This allows consumers time to confirm they are getting what they expected. It also will give...
Loan modification trends have diverged in recent quarters, with activity in the Home Affordable Modification Program remaining strong while the use of proprietary loan mods dropping significantly. A total of 181,242 loan modifications were completed in the third quarter of 2013, according to Hope Now, a 22.1 percent decline compared with the third quarter of 2012. The decline was driven by proprietary loan mods, with 136,106 completed in the third quarter of 2013, a 26.7 percent reduction from a year ago. Some 45,136 permanent HAMP mods were completed...
Tax forgiveness enacted by Congress in 2007 for mortgage-debt relief is scheduled to expire at the end of this year. In a similar scenario last year, Congress agreed to a one-year extension of the tax break, but analysts are less certain that Congress will pass another extension in the weeks ahead. The Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007 exempts borrowers from federal tax obligations for debt forgiven via principal-reduction loan modifications and short sales. Congress has twice extended the deadline for the expiration of the tax break. Policymakers have expressed...
Two crucial legal events occurred in 2013 that might have signaled the extinction of the narrow window through which deficiency judgments were possible on residential property in California. Attorneys at Nossaman LLP said the recent passage of California Senate Bill 426 and the conforming decision by the California Court of Appeal, Fourth Appellate District, have made clear that the states anti-deficiency statutes not only protect home loan borrowers from judgments or collections but also trump any separate lender/borrower agreement regarding the payment of any deficiency following a foreclosure or a short sale. A deficiency judgment is...
Mortgage credit availability, loan quality and lenders ability to foreclose on distressed properties remain big issues as lenders try to adjust to a more difficult, more complex regulatory environment, according to industry participants in a symposium hosted last week by the Urban Institute. While private capital is available, potential investors are wary of investing in the new environment of qualified and non-qualified mortgages and on mortgage companies and ventures that have drawn much regulatory scrutiny, panelists said. The average credit scores on a conventional-conforming purchase loan has increased...
Originations of non-agency jumbo mortgages in the third quarter increased by 2.7 percent compared with the second quarter of 2013 while total originations fell by 18.6 percent, according to a new ranking by affiliated publication Inside Mortgage Finance. An estimated $77.0 billion in non-agency jumbos were originated in the third quarter, a level of originations not seen since the second quarter of 2007. The jumbo market accounted for 16.7 percent of total mortgage ... [Includes one data chart]
Non-agency lenders that plan to originate qualified mortgages suggest that one of their top concerns is meeting the debt-to-income ratio requirements. Only non-agency mortgages will have to have a back-end DTI ratio of 43 percent or below to be classified as qualified mortgages under the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule taking effect Jan 10. Average DTI ratios on mortgages in jumbo mortgage-backed securities are well below that limit 34.0 percent on the latest deal from Redwood Trust ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau released a final rule last week regarding long-running efforts to integrate mortgage-disclosure documents. The new Know Before You Owe forms will be required beginning Aug. 1, 2015. Lenders will be required to give potential borrowers a loan-estimate form within three business days after receiving a complete loan application. The form replaces the early Truth in Lending Act statement and the Good Faith Estimate required by the ... [Includes three briefs]
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are designing a securitization framework that will work for todays fully-guaranteed residential MBS as well as securities with a partial government guaranty or none at all, according to an update released this week by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Among the initiatives set for the government-sponsored enterprises by the FHFA is the development of a contractual and disclosure framework (CDF) designed to give MBS investors more clarity and confidence about what theyre buying. Along with the common securitization platform, the CDF project is a major component of the MBS architecture of the future that the GSEs are building. A lot of the CDF work involves...
The fallout from last weeks trigger of the nuclear option by Senate Democrats, which is expected to lead to the confirmation of President Obamas choice to be the new director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, has analysts worried about the possibility of expanded Home Affordable Refinance Program eligibility. The Senate voted to confirm most executive and judicial nominees by a simple majority vote, and it dramatically improves the prospects of Rep. Mel Watt, D-NC, to replace FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco. A career civil servant who has been the chief regulator of the government-sponsored enterprises for the past four years, DeMarco has resisted proposals to expand HARP and broaden the GSE loan-modification options to include principal write-downs. Expanding HARP has been...[Includes one data chart]