The mortgage lending industry is confronting an unprecedented number of substantive compliance challenges from the half-dozen rules promulgated in January by the CFPB, leading industry representatives are making increasingly clear. For instance, the loan originator compensation rule itself presents a variety of challenges, Amy Thoreson Long, senior counsel in the consumer lending division of Wells Fargos law department, told participants in a recent webinar hosted by Inside Mortgage Finance, an affiliated newsletter...
H.R. 450: The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection Accountability Act, introduced by Rep. Bill Posey, R-FL, would amend the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010 to bring the CFPB into the regular appropriations process. The bill is a re-introduction of H.R. 1640 from the 112th Congress. Current status: referred to House Financial Services Committee. S. 190: The Restoring the Constitutional Balance of Power Act of 2013, introduced by Sen. Mike Johanns, R-NE, would prohibit the transfer of funds from the Federal Reserve that would be used by the CFPB to carry out activities that are authorized...
FHA funding accounted for 25 percent of home-purchase financing in January, based on the three-month moving average, according to the latest Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance HousingPulse Tracking Survey. February numbers will be released shortly.
Nationstar appears to be the winning bidder on the Taylor Bean & Whitaker MSR pacakge. Meanwhile: Ed DeMarco, the most powerful man in mortgage finance today?
Originations of non-agency jumbo mortgages increased by 19.4 percent in 2012 compared with the previous year, according to affiliated publication Inside Mortgage Finance. The sector is expected to continue to grow as jumbos are increasingly attractive for bank portfolios and securitization. An estimated $203.0 billion in non-agency jumbo mortgages were originated in 2012, marking the third straight year of increased production. The sector is driven by big banks ... [Includes one data chart]
Five years after the subprime mortgage industry imploded, there are signs of a revival as new players are entering the nonprime space. Whats developing is old style home-equity lending, where loan-to-value ratios are rarely larger than 75 percent and the actual funder of the loan keeps the paper in portfolio and services it. In the past two weeks, two subprime residential firms opened their doors for business: Citadel Loan Servicing and Deephaven Mortgage. Deephaven is the brainchild of ...
Conforming loan limits should be lowered to help draw private capital into the mortgage market, according to recommendations from a bipartisan think tank led by former policymakers. The Bipartisan Policy Center recommended phasing out the government-sponsored enterprises and replacing them with a new Public Guarantor that would shift mortgage finance risk to the private sector. A gradual reduction of the loan limits for government-guaranteed mortgages would help to rebalance the ...
Ocwen Financial has focused somewhat on performing prime mortgages as it has expanded its servicing portfolio recently, but officials at the special servicer said nonprime mortgages account for the majority of Ocwens planned acquisitions. Ocwen handled a $122.19 billion portfolio (excluding subservicing) at the end of 2012, according to affiliated publication Inside Mortgage Finance, including $87.23 billion in subprime mortgages. The servicer acquired $57.42 billion in agency mortgage servicing ...
Lending groups are urging the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to broaden classifications of qualified mortgages that it adopted in its final rule implementing ability-to-repay standards mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act. The Mortgage Bankers Association said the interest-rate threshold for determining which loans are eligible for safe harbor provided to QM loans should be raised. The CFPB rule generally allows QM status for loans with annual percentage rates up to 1.5 percentage points higher than ...