A district judge in Wisconsin ordered two now-defunct mortgage relief firms and their principals to pay $59 million over foreclosure abuses. The payment includes $21.7 million in consumer restitution and a $37.3 million fine.
The House Financial Services Committee passed eight bills on debt collection, including prohibiting the CFPB from issuing any rule that would allow collectors to contact borrowers with unlimited text messages and emails.
The bureau issued an interpretive rule that certain screening and training requirements under the Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act do not apply to loan originators with temporary authority.
Congress is mulling legislation that would allow lenders to rely on technical standards other than Appendix Q to determine a borrower’s debt-to-income ratio under the ability-to-repay rule. The move is aimed at mitigating the risk from the expiration of the qualified-mortgage patch.
Mortgage fintech lender Better.com plans to hire veterans and military spouses and recently closed on Series C funding. Other mortgage startups are also in a capital-raising mode.
In a recent filing, Fannie Mae made clear its displeasure with the pay caps placed on the company by the FHFA and Congress. Interestingly, Freddie Mac had a more muted response.
Originations are increasing, demand in the secondary market is strong and the interest rate premium on non-QMs is declining, helping to prompt more lending volume.
Moody’s Investors Service in a recent report explores the securitization of loans backed by data centers, noting the nascent asset class is susceptible to cash flow volatility.