A number of industry representatives are calling on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to carefully test its pending integrated consumer disclosure forms under the Truth in Lending Act and Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act before they are actually put into use. At issue is the CFPBs proposal to conduct quantitative testing in fiscal years 2013 and 2014 of the performance of the current disclosures versus the proposed disclosures forthcoming later this year. In 2008, the Department of Housing and Urban Development finalized...
The National Association of Federal Credit Unions urged the CFPB to make sure the bureaus integrated disclosures on mortgage loans under the Truth in Lending Act and Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act are useful to consumers and impose as little burden as possible on credit unions. NAFCU Senior Regulatory Affairs Counsel Tessema Tefferi wrote to the CFPB about its proposal to conduct quantitative testing in fiscal years 2013 and 2014 of the performance of the current vs. proposed disclosures. NAFCU lodged serious concerns...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau announced this week that it will closely scrutinize servicing transfers due to complaints from borrowers tied to a recent increase in servicing sales. The federal regulator published CFPB Bulletin 2013-01 this week detailing the new oversight standards, with an emphasis on loss mitigation issues. The CFPB has particular concerns related to servicing transfers that arise from consumer complaints and supervisory work related to servicing transfers, the federal regulator said. Among other complaints, consumers have complained about service interruptions when their loans are transferred during the loss mitigation process. The problems are related...
A number of mortgage industry experts share the view that a dark cloud has been cast over President Obamas recess appointment of Richard Cordray as director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, after an appeals court ruled late last week that other recess appointments the president made at the same time were unconstitutional. The significance of this decision cannot be overstated as it raises a host of questions about the potential impact of a judicial ruling that Mr. Cordrays recess appointment was similarly invalid, said Barbara Mishkin, of counsel with the law firm of Ballard Spahr. Edward Mills, a financial policy analyst at FBR Capital Markets, said...
The CFPB issued a final rule it inherited from the Federal Reserve that generally extends the current required duration of an escrow account on certain higher-priced mortgage loans from a minimum of one year to a minimum of five years. To preserve access to credit, the rule creates an exemption from the escrow requirement for small creditors that operate predominately in rural or underserved areas.Specifically, to be eligible for the exemption, a creditor must:make more than half of its first-lien mortgages in rural or...
It looks like all of the clamoring that mortgage lenders have engaged in over the last year about the volume and expanse of new regulations has earned them a bit of a reprieve on at least one front. The CFPB now expects to issue its final rule on the combined and integrated Truth in Lending Act and Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act consumer mortgage disclosures in September, according to the bureaus semiannual regulatory agenda released last week and in commentary included in its final rule on escrow accounts for...
Mortgage banking entities and credit unions are trying to prepare as best they can for an anticipated onslaught of new regulations from the CFPB that will likely dramatically reshape the landscape of mortgage lending for years and perhaps generations to come. Part of their coping strategy is to enlist the aid of bureau officials themselves to help measure out all the new rules into more digestible portions. The Mortgage Bankers Association, for one, recently wrote the CFPB, suggesting the agency use a staged...
Mortgage industry participants are confident that newly confirmed FHA Commissioner Carol Galante will deliver on reforms she committed to in an effort to reach out to Republican critics. Eighteen Senate Republicans veered away from their hardline party colleagues to help Carol Galante secure confirmation of her nomination as the Department of Housing and Urban Developments chief overseer of the FHA mortgage insurance program and overlord of housing policies. Galante broke through the GOP firewall Dec. 30 after the Senate voted 69 to 24 to approve her nomination. She needed at least 60 votes to ...
The mortgage servicing rule proposed earlier this year by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau could easily be exploited to bring any foreclosure proceeding to a grinding halt, according to a leading mortgage industry attorney. If the rule is promulgated as currently written, that could cause mortgage lenders, who are already skittish about future losses, buyback demands and a host of other pending regulations, to pull back even further when it comes to providing mortgage credit. The consequence of these regulations is to create...
Some mortgage lenders will be able to develop and test, on a limited basis, their own consumer disclosures, under a proposed policy issued last week by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The disclosures would have to be approved by the bureau before being used. The bureau believes that there may be significant opportunities to enhance consumer protection by facilitating innovation in financial products and services and enabling companies to research informative, cost-effective disclosures, the CFPB said. The bureau also recognizes that in-market testing, involving companies and consumers in real world situations, may offer particularly valuable information with which to improve disclosure rules and model forms. The Dodd-Frank Act gave...