The Trump administration has released a proposed fiscal year 2019 budget that envisions big changes for the CFPB. According to budget documents, the White House is proposing to restructure the bureau, limit its mandatory funding in 2019, and provide discretionary, congressional appropriations to fund the agency beginning in 2020. Many of the proposed changes would require revisions to the bureau’s charter by Congress that would likely face a difficult path to enactment ...
The CFPB under the leadership of Acting Director Mick Mulvaney last week issued its latest five-year plan that differs markedly from the previous one in that it takes a more industry-friendly posture than the last one that was issued back in 2013 under the Richard Cordray era. “If there is one way to summarize the strategic changes occurring at the bureau, it is this: we have committed to fulfill the bureau’s statutory responsibilities, but go no further,” Mulvaney said. “By hewing to the statute ...
The House of Representatives last week voted 271-145 to approve targeted legislation to address the disclosure of certain charges in the Truth in Lending Act/Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act integrated disclosure, or TRID. H.R. 3978, the TRID Improvement Act of 2017, would require the CFPB to allow for the calculation of discounted title insurance rates that companies may offer to consumers for policies that cover both the lender and the homeowner. The bill was introduced ...
The House of Representatives has passed H.R. 1153, “The Mortgage Choice Act,” legislation that would make two adjustments to the Truth in Lending Act definition of points and fees regarding title fees charged by affiliates of the lender. The bill aims to make more loans eligible for qualified-mortgage status by excluding points and fees paid for affiliated title charges and escrow charges for insurance and taxes. House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling, R-TX, explained ...
The Community Home Lenders Association and the Community Mortgage Lenders of America sent a joint letter to CFPB Acting Director Mick Mulvaney, asking for regulatory streamlining of smaller independent mortgage bankers (IMBs) through risk-based supervision, citing the requirements of the Dodd-Frank Act. Specifically, their correspondence referenced a statutory requirement, Dodd-Frank subsection 1024(b)(2), under which the bureau is required to tailor its supervision of non-banks ...
Senior citizens filed significantly fewer complaints about their mortgage experiences in 2017, according to a new Inside the CFPB analysis of data compiled by the bureau. Seniors filed 2,966 mortgage complaints last year, down 44.6 percent from the 5,357 reported in 2016. Non-senior borrowers also submitted fewer mortgage complaints in 2017, but the decline was only 24.8 percent from the previous year. Most complaints from seniors over the past two years ... [Includes one data chart]
The ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit that the CFPB wrongly interpreted the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act will have a huge impact on the mortgage market and the regulatory landscape, industry attorneys said. In a closely-watched case involving PHH Mortgage and its captive mortgage reinsurance unit, the court upheld the notion that the plain language of RESPA permits a bona fide payment by one settlement service provider to another if ...
QM Portfolio Lending Legislation Would Cost CFPB $1 Million to Implement. Enacting H.R. 2226, the Portfolio Lending and Mortgage Access Act, introduced last April by Rep. Andy Barr, R-KY, would cost the CFPB $1 million, according to a new analysis by the Congressional Budget Office. “Using information from the CFPB, CBO estimates that enacting H.R. 2226 would increase direct spending by $1 million in 2019 for the agency to issue rules to implement ... [Includes four briefs]
As predicted, per the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the GSEs’ fourth-quarter earnings took a big hit with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac posting losses of $6.5 billion and $2.9 billion, respectively. This is a far cry from their combined net income of $7.7 billion in the third quarter. But this likely one-time event was prompted by the GSEs having to reduce the value of their deferred tax assets by $15.3 billion after the tax act became law in December 2017. As a result, Fannie will need a $3.7 billion draw from Treasury and Freddie will have to request a $312 million draw.
This week, 127 mortgage banking executives attached their names to an open letter to members of Congress, urging federally elected politicians not to cede the work of housing-finance reform to the White House and the institutions it controls.The correspondence asks lawmakers to back draft legislation that creates a new “guarantor-based” system that builds on the current infrastructure created and maintained by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.The executives, members of the Mortgage Bankers Association, favor improving the system by having “two or more” guarantors. The group believes a guarantor-based system – as opposed to an “issuer-based” system – is the best way to meet the nation’s housing-finance needs.