Federal regulators have yet to finalize their qualified residential mortgage rulemaking, but housing finance experts are already trying to figure out how lending is going to be affected by the interplay of the QRM rule and the qualified mortgage standard as per the CFPBs ability-to-repay rule. As the new lending environment unfolds, the liability risks associated with non-QM and QRM loans is one of the things that is particularly troublesome to some. The worse-case scenario that I worry about is that we see a repeat of what we saw in...
A number of industry trade groups told the CFPB and other financial regulators that they generally agreed with the regulators use of voluntary self-assessments in the interagency diversity standards proposed last fall. However, the American Bankers Association, the Consumer Bankers Association, the Financial Services Roundtable and the Independent Community Bankers of America offered some cautions on vendor diversity standards and confidentiality of reports. Although some commentators had called for incorporating diversity assessments...
The Federal Reserve Office of Inspector General will be initiating some sort of audit or evaluation of the reasons the renovation costs for the CFPBs headquarters building in Washington, DC, have soared to more than three times their original estimate, Inside the CFPB has learned. The OIG responded to a request from Rep. Patrick McHenry, R-NC, a key subcommittee chairman within the House Financial Services Committee structure. We have received a request from Chairman McHenry of the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Oversight and...
HMDA Rulemaking on Consumer Advisory Board Agenda. The CFPB has scheduled a Consumer Advisory Board meeting for Feb. 26-27, at the Constitution Center (Auditorium), 400 7th Street SW, Washington, DC. The first day of the event is closed to the public. A close look at the agenda indicates an hour has been set aside for some discussion on a possible Home Mortgage Disclosure Act rulemaking. Speakers scheduled during that session include Mortgage Data Assets Team Lead Ren Essene and Senior Counsel Joan Kayagil. A session later in the day will be...
New Document Delivery Solution Aims to Boost Lenders Efforts to Meet CFPB Appraisal Delivery Requirements. Black Knight Financial Services of Jacksonville, FL, recently launched its Document Delivery Service to help lenders deliver CFPB-mandated appraisals to consumers. The service enables lenders to securely and reliably deliver the documents in both electronic and paper formats, helping lenders comply with the bureaus recent amendment to Regulation B, which implements the provisions of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, the company said...
Issuance of agency and non-agency commercial MBS increased 13.5 percent in 2013, according to a new analysis by Inside MBS & ABS, although production dropped sharply in the fourth quarter. Industry participants expect that volume will continue to grow as investor demand for commercial MBS remains strong despite some loosening of underwriting standards. Ken Cheng, a managing director at Morningstar Credit Ratings, said...[Includes one data chart]
Industry participants expect that volume will continue to grow as investor demand for commercial MBS remains strong despite some loosening of underwriting standards.
Issuers of non-agency MBS and agency mortgage sellers have addressed most of the legacy representation and warranty issues that have bedeviled the market for the past few years, according to industry analysts. However, repurchase and buyback issues havent been completely resolved as investors and regulators make last grasps at recoveries. Analysts at Compass Point Analytics & Trading estimated that the total losses incurred for rep-and-warrant claims from Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the FHA and non-agency MBS investors by publicly traded U.S. originators still in existence will total $89.0 billion. The analysts said lenders have charged off or reserved $88.0 billion for such losses. Compass Point said...
A policy shift at the Securities and Exchange Commission requiring admission of guilt in certain cases may encourage wrongdoers in the securities market to litigate rather than settle, resulting in fewer SEC settlements, according to some compliance attorneys. Fear of possible criminal prosecution and the lasting impact of an admission of guilt could compel accused companies and individuals to take their cases to trial rather than negotiate a settlement, warned Philip Stein and Jeremy Sahn, partners in the Miami-based law firm of Bilzin Sumberg. Starting in June 2013, the SEC began requiring...
Losses incurred for rep-and-warrant claims tied to MBS could total $89 billion eventually. However, banks have already reserved $88 billion, according to some tallies.