The mortgage industry isn’t achieving any more success than lawmakers on Capitol Hill in convincing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to take it easy on lenders when it’s time to start enforcing its integrated disclosure rule. Speaking at the American Bankers Association’s government relations event in Washington, DC, earlier this week, Virginia O’Neill, head of regulatory compliance for the trade group, recounted for attendees the experience of one community bank ...
It looks like some of the biggest mortgage lenders in the nation will be closing their loans themselves largely without closing agents, once the CFPB’s integrated disclosure rule kicks in Aug. 1, 2015, one top vendor representative revealed recently. And that might put the big banks at a competitive advantage vis-à-vis their nonbank rivals. “Because this is a paradigm shift, and because the liability is staying on the lender side – both in terms of the accuracy of the disclosure and in the timing – we’ve heard some of the bigger lenders are going to close the loans themselves instead of using settlement agents,” John Vong, CEO of ComplianceEase, told Inside the CFPB recently. “For some of the banks, they have already ...
CFPB Updates TRID Documentation. Last week, the CFPB put out some updates to the implementation materials for its integrated disclosure rule under the Truth in Lending Act and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act. The updated material lines up with the rule that was published Feb. 19, 2015, that modifies the 2013 TILA/RESPA integrated disclosure rule (TRID). This rule extends the timing requirement for revised disclosures when consumers lock a rate or extend a rate lock after the Loan Estimate is provided and permits certain language related to construction loans for transactions involving new construction on the LE. Additionally, the bureau is making non-substantive corrections, including citation and cross-reference updates and wording changes for clarification purposes, to various provisions of ...
More than a dozen industry organizations asked the CFPB last week to implement a “restrained enforcement and liability” or “grace period” through the end of 2015 for those seeking to comply in good faith with its integrated disclosure rule after its August 1, 2015, effective date. “There are ... situations – such as what will occur if a closing cannot go forward on schedule because of occurrences outside the control of the parties – that are not addressed by the regulation which still require additional guidance,” the collection of 16 trade groups said in a joint letter to CFPB Director Richard Cordray. “We would like to use this grace period to identify pain points with stakeholders and then meet with bureau staff ...
The changes the CFPB wants to make to its 2013 mortgage servicing rules under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act and the Truth in Lending Act got a mixed reception from the mortgage industry. The proposed rule was issued in mid-December, and the public comment period closed last week. The proposed amendments cover nine primary topics: successors in interest, definition of delinquency, requests for information, force-placed insurance, early intervention, loss mitigation, prompt payment crediting, periodic statements, and small servicer issues. The Independent Community Bankers of America was pleased with the bureau’s proposed amendment to the small servicer definition that will permit a small servicer to service, for a fee, mortgage loans that are seller-financed transactions subject to certain limitations. ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s proposal to significantly expand the regulatory requirements related to successors in interest poses legal risks, threatens personal privacy and could foster instances of fraud, mortgage industry officials said. The provisions related to successors in interest are part of a package of proposed amendments to the bureau’s 2013 mortgage rules under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act and the Truth in Lending Act ...
A key take-away from last week’s hearing of the House Financial Services Committee was a clear indication that the CFPB plans to fully enforce its integrated disclosure rule when the Aug. 1, 2015, effective date kicks in. The rule under the Truth in Lending Act and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act was finalized in November 2013. During the hearing this past Tuesday, Reps. Randy Neugebauer, R-TX, and Brad Sherman, D-CA, both pressed CFPB Director Richard Cordray on whether he would be open to a 60-day enforcement delay or a “restrained enforcement” period when the TILA/RESPA integrated disclosure rule – the TRID – goes live. Cordray did not come right out and say he would refuse to accept or implement one, but ...
This is the first in a series on industry efforts to prepare for compliance with the CFPB’s integrated disclosure rule under the Truth in Lending Act and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act.According to Scott Stucky, chief strategy officer at DocuTech, mortgage lenders need to engage TRID preparation on multiple levels. “They’ve obviously got to be ready from a technology perspective, so working with their origination system and document solution provider, they should be in the testing phase at this point in time,” he told Inside the CFPB recently. “Even if it’s rudimentary testing, even if it’s just very basic and they can’t get everything completely together, they should be doing some basic evaluation,” he added. “That’s because, in ...
The head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau held his ground this week against pressure from Republican and Democrat lawmakers to take it easy on mortgage lenders in enforcing the bureau’s integrated disclosure rule. During a hearing before the House Financial Services Committee, Reps. Randy Neugebauer, R-TX, and Brad Sherman, D-CA, pressed CFPB Director Richard Cordray to consider a 60-day enforcement delay or a “soft enforcement” period when the new mortgage disclosures take effect Aug. 1. The new rule creates an integrated disclosure framework under the Truth in Lending Act and Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, commonly known as TRID. Cordray did not come right out...
Conversations with executives at leading industry technology vendors suggest that if mortgage lenders are not already testing their systems and processes for compliance with the impending integrated disclosure rule from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, they are already behind the curve. Tech vendors have been working with some of their clients for months already, and in some cases for more than a year, testing systems and process as they prepare for “TRID,” the Truth in Lending Act/Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act integrated disclosure rule. Scott Stucky, chief strategy officer at DocuTech, said...