The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has been feeling the heat over the size of its proposed rule to streamline and integrate the disclosures consumers get when taking out a home loan, so agency officials engaged in a little bit of push-back last week in an effort to fend off the criticism. The push-back started early in the week during a hearing of the House Small Business Committee, during which Rep. Scott Tipton, R-CO, took issue with the rulemakings size that exceeded 1,000 pages in draft form, a fraction of which is new...
One of the many concerns mortgage lenders have with the powerful and still largely untested Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is the expanded standard of unfair, deceptive and abusive acts and practices created by the Dodd-Frank Act and how the CFPB is going to enforce it. Unfortunately, theyre more likely to learn about it on the fly during the examination process than they are in advance through careful, formal rulemaking or supervisory guidance, according to one of the presenters during an Inside Mortgage Finance webinar last week on the CFPBs regulatory and supervisory landscape. What I think youre seeing develop here is examination beyond regulation, and the CFPBs examination authority and supervision authority goes beyond...
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Richard Cordray this week sought to allay the concerns of some members of Congress that small businesses in the mortgage industry and other sectors are about to be overwhelmed by regulatory overload. One of the main issues in this regard being considered by the House Small Business Committee is the CFPBs recent proposal to integrate and simplify the consumer disclosures mandated by the Truth in Lending Act and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act. Our committee is interested in how the regulations will affect...
The semiannual regulatory agenda released last week by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau indicates the regulators have a very full plate and a tight January 2013 deadline. That means mortgage lenders will be just as busy trying to figure out what the new rules mean and how to comply with them. The most recent high-profile mortgage-related projects at the bureau include a detailed proposed rule to harmonize and streamline the mortgage disclosures that homebuyers must be given under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act and the Truth in Lending Act. In draft form, this one proposal ran more than 1,000 pages in length and has already raised industry hackles. Comments on the rule are due Nov. 6, 2012. The bureau also released...
The regulatory workload required of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and other federal banking regulators is moving forward sporadically, with a number of proposals yet to be released before the January 2013 deadline imposed by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The industry concern is that regulators will find themselves forced into a massive document dump at the end of the year, with mortgage lenders then having to scramble in dozens of directions at the same time in an attempt...
Servicing rules previewed by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in April are flawed, overreaching and need to be adjusted, according to four trade groups representing servicers and lenders. The CFPB said it plans to propose disclosures this month for servicers to send to borrowers as well as servicing procedures, some of which are required by the Dodd-Frank Act. The DFA requires a notice to be sent to hybrid ARM borrowers six months before the initial interest rate reset. The CFPB said it is considering expanding ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau last week released its long-pending proposal for combined mortgage disclosures, with an emphasis on characteristics common in nonconforming mortgages. In particular, explanations of how rates and payments can change over time are not always made clear [from current disclosures], said Richard Cordray, director of the CFPB. Currently, the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act and the Truth in Lending Act require different disclosures for borrowers. As directed by the Dodd-Frank Act ...
The number of loans potentially subject to strict rules for high-cost mortgages would dramatically increase, based on a proposal last week by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. However, because so few lenders actually originate loans subject to Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act requirements, the CFPB said it believes that such loans will continue to constitute a small percentage of mortgage originations. The CFPB proposed expanding the high-cost definition to include essentially all closed-end mortgages and ...
After just a week of sifting through the massive new mortgage disclosure proposed rule released by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, mortgage industry officials have already found a lot of problems and will probably find more issues in the months ahead. Rod Alba, senior counsel for mortgage policy at the American Bankers Association, said implementing the CFPBs proposal as it is right now would be like trying to replace a human beings skeleton while the person is still alive and functioning. Just look at the sheer scope of it: 1,100 pages, where every single disclosure that mortgage loan originators and bankers must rely on when they engage in mortgage lending is going to change, Alba said. The system is going to...
As Inside Regulatory Strategies was going to press this week, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was releasing a detailed proposed rule to integrate the mortgage disclosures consumers are entitled to under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act and the Truth in Lending Act. The proposal is accompanied by new loan estimate and closing disclosure forms to present the costs and risks of the loan in clearer terms. The forms benefit consumers by using plain language and a format that will help them understand their loans, the CFPB said...