A proposed qualified mortgage standard to determine a borrowers ability to repay a mortgage loan creates many pitfalls for loan originators and subjects them to enormous liability if they fail to comply, warned compliance experts. The risk of making non-qualified mortgages for lenders is the borrowers defense to foreclosure and the higher damages that would be incurred for noncompliance, as well as the impact on the liquidity of those loans if lenders were to sell them down the road, according to panelists on a webinar hosted last week by Inside Mortgage Finance. The proposed ability-to-repay rules and alternative definitions of a qualified mortgage (QM) are out for...
The requirement from last years landmark financial services legislation that MBS issuers retain some of the risk associated with residential mortgages will raise the costs of securitizing them to prohibitive levels, discouraging the return of private capital and maintaining the markets dependence on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, industry experts warn. The proposed definition of qualified residential mortgages under the terms of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act was a major focus of concern raised during a webinar last week sponsored by Inside Mortgage Finance. I think the big-picture news is that certainly the risk-retention regulations do what Dodd-Frank mandates that they do. But in some very important ways they go beyond that...
The battle over the Dodd-Frank-mandated risk-retention rules continues on Capitol Hill, with lawmakers rehashing concerns about either the detrimental or beneficial effects the proposed rule may have on the market. The Dodd-Frank Act required federal regulators to come up with a definition of qualified residential mortgages that would be exempt from a 5 percent risk-retention requirement when securitized. During a hearing this week in the House Oversight Subcommittee on TARP, Financial Services and Bailouts of Public and Private Programs, Republican lawmakers argued that transparency is a better solution to restoring investor confidence and reviving the non-agency MBS market. But according to Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-MD, lenders shouldnt be let off the hook, and the risk-retention rules do furnish necessary...
Between the servicing alignment initiative recently announced by the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the consent decrees bank regulators struck with some top mortgage servicers last month, and possible national servicing standards from federal policymakers in the near future, there may be very little room left for state attorneys general and regulators to influence servicing practices going forward...
One of the most critical factors contributing to the foreclosure documentation debacle was a fundamental failure on the part of many of the nations top mortgage servicers to truly manage their foreclosure networks, and thats one of the deficiencies federal bank regulators are trying to remedy in their recent consent orders, industry experts have concluded...
The mortgage servicing industry is going to have its hands full and then some as it faces multiple levels of regulatory and statutory requirements over its practices, raising the question of exactly how all of these mandates and protocols are going to interact and how servicers are going to interface with them...
The mortgage banking industry is concerned that the Federal Reserves proposed rule on escrow accounts for higher-priced mortgage loans especially the vast expansion of escrow account disclosure is duplicative, unduly burdensome, and may be superseded shortly after it is implemented by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau...
Some Congressional Republicans are making it increasingly clear that much of their concern with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has to do with the person currently overseeing its startup at the behest of President Obama, Harvard law professor Elizabeth Warren...
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 is the greatest mortgage compliance concern for lenders, according to the third annual survey by QuestSoft, a compliance software and services firm serving the mortgage, banking and credit union industries...
Much of the mortgage industry remains abuzz with talk about the new proposed regulatory rules that would spell out what constitutes a qualified mortgage or qualified residential mortgage....