With all the concern thatfs been raised about loan originator compensation since the mortgage marketfs collapse in 2008, and given a certain amount of gget-toughh rhetoric from leadership at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the agency seemed to take a quick-and-dirty approach when issuing its first pronouncement in topic earlier this month. Back in September 2010, the Federal Reserve put out loan originator compensation rules under the Truth in Lending Act and Regulation Z, effective as of April 6, 2011. Then with enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau this week detailed servicing rules it will soon propose regarding disclosures to borrowers and servicing procedures. The mortgage servicing rules we are considering reflect two basic, common sense standards no surprises and no runarounds, CFPB Director Richard Cordray said. They would apply to all mortgage servicers regardless of how they are organized, including banks, thrifts, credit unions and nonbank servicers. The rule, which will amend the Truth in Lending Act and Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, is required by the Dodd-Frank Act. The CFPB said it will publish a proposal ...
In Rosenfield v. HSBC Bank USA, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has submitted a friend-of-the-court brief arguing that some mortgage borrowers who did not receive important disclosures mandated by the Truth in Lending Act are permitted to cancel their loans as long as they notify the lender of their intent to cancel within three years. Filed before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit in Denver late last week, the CFPB argued that Section 125 of TILA (U.S.C. Section 1635) provides consumers a statutory right to rescind qualifying mortgage loans ...
Regulatory streamlining is absolutely essential if smaller mortgage lenders are going to survive the threat they face from their enormous regulatory burdens, two industry trade groups told the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau recently. Currently, the industry is dealing with several new rules, including those under the Secure and Fair Enforcement Act for Mortgage Licensing and the Truth in Lending Act, and faces an unprecedented wave of additional rules required under Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, said the Consumer Mortgage Coalition ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has provided some potentially significant insight into some of the positions it may end up taking on the rules that will govern the final integrated mortgage disclosure its developing. The disclosures were released as part of the CFPBs announcement that it is putting together a Small Business Review Panel under the provisions of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act. The panel is part of the broader initiative to integrate the mortgage disclosure forms that borrowers receive when applying for and closing on a loan...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has released for public comment the eighth iteration of its consumer mortgage disclosure prototype forms, dubbed hemlock and butternut, specifically asking for input as to how the prototypes work with the CFPBs current application disclosure prototype. These prototypes use a format for closing costs thats similar to the format on the initial disclosure to enable the two forms to work well together, the CFPB said. Consumers should be able to see if their final loan terms and costs are different from the numbers they were originally offered ...
Government oversight of mortgage lending has dramatically increased in the last two years, and the current trajectory established by the Dodd-Frank Act suggests things are going to get a lot worse before theyre going to get any better. The Dodd-Frank Act will generate a heavy load of new regulations for the industry to implement, and the process is not yet halfway done, said Rod Alba, senior regulatory counsel at the American Bankers Association, during an Inside Mortgage Finance Publications webinar this week. We are in the midst of at least 24 months worth of overheated regulatory pronouncements,...
In Marr v. Bank of America, N.A., the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has affirmed that borrower testimony alone can overcome the Truth in Lending Acts rebuttable presumption that a borrower has received two notices of his right to rescind a refinance transaction, despite a written acknowledgement by the borrower to the contrary. In this case, the borrower argued that he wasnt given two right-to-rescind notices as required under TILA, even though he had signed a document indicating he had. He said he had filed away and left undisturbed the documents he received when ...
California. In Balderas v. Countrywide Bank, N.A., the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit recently ruled that the Truth In Lending Acts delivery obligation requires borrowers be permitted to keep written copies of the right-to-rescind notice. The court noted that to deliver the notice as per TILA requires a permanent physical transfer from one party to another, as opposed to momentary delivery. Illinois. Earlier this month, the Department of Financial and Professional Regulations published amendments to the states mortgage originator licensing requirements. One change ...
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Comments Wanted on Mortgage-Related Rules. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is asking for public comment on currently approved information collections associated with certain recently published interim final rules having to do with mortgage lending. One such rule has to do with the Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act (Regulation G) 12 CFR Part 1007.The information collection will improve the flow of information to and between regulators; provide accountability and ...