Divided leadership in Congress means bipartisanship will be required to get bills to President Biden’s desk. Not many mortgage-related bills are expected to make it that far in the next two years.
Appraisal reform and redlining were major focus areas at an annual event that highlights federal accomplishments in fair lending. The Fed, meanwhile, will release new redlining risk assessment materials, perhaps by the weekend.
With prospects for the Build Back Better Act doomed, Senate leadership has proposed a new version of the budget reconciliation legislation under the moniker the Inflation Reduction Act.
While states offered broad temporary flexibilities regarding LO licensing and location requirements during the pandemic, the transition out of the temporary standards has been bumpy.
A mortgage company’s best chance at being heard in policy matters is to target the same four themes the Biden administration is using to drive policy decisions.
Senate Republicans say they’re prepared to let the current debt ceiling lapse if Democrats won’t use the budget reconciliation process to pass it on their own, with implications for the GSEs.
Community Reinvestment Act requirements that traditionally have only applied to depositories will be imposed on nonbanks in New York. The MBA warned that the standards are “unworkable.”
The House Committee on Rules recently unveiled text for the $1.75 trillion Build Back Better legislative framework, which would include $10 billion for a new first-generation downpayment assistance fund.