The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau this week fined mortgage servicer BSI Financial Services, Irving, TX, just over $230,000 for illegal mortgage servicing practices. A new consent order from the agency lays out the details.
The firm detailed its residential mortgage-related assets under management in a recent filing, demonstrating its dominating presence in the housing-finance market.
The Ninth Circuit Court has ruled that the CFPB’s structure is constitutional, noting there is no need to re-plow the same ground as the D.C. Circuit has already thoroughly discussed it.
Two banking trade groups have asked the CFPB to decline the credit union industry’s request to delegate oversight authority of credit unions to their prudential regulator.
A top CFPB official has defended the bureau’s proposed payday lending rule on Capitol Hill as state attorneys general weighed in to oppose the proposal, noting it will limit states’ ability to protect consumers.
The bureau has outlined a plan to review rules that have a significant economic impact on small entities. For starters, the bureau is looking into the 10-year-old overdraft rule that limits the ability of financial institutions to assess overdraft fees without consumer consent.
CFPB Director Kathy Kraninger continues to build her team with new additions to the agency’s senior leadership team. Brian Johnson has been named as deputy director. Separately, Eric Blankenstein, a top enforcement chief at the bureau who was under fire for a racism-tinged blog, has resigned.
The CFPB issued a proposed debt collection rule to clarify matters looming in the industry, including the use of emails and text messages. If the proposal is finalized, it will be the first time that the industry has clear rules to rely on rather than numerous court precedents.
A report by a consumer group found that consumer complaints filed with the CFPB increased sharply last year. Various consumer advocacy groups have urged the bureau to keep its complaint database public.