The complexities of the three percent points-and-fees calculation for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau qualified mortgage standard under its ability-to-repay rule pretty much means that technology is going to be critical in order to be compliant. According to Michael Chan, vice president of ComplianceEase and an expert on compliance technology, the bureaus QM standard will usher in a whole new paradigm. Come Jan. 10, 2014, our industry again will be re-defined, Chan told participants of a webinar ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus new criteria for error notices and information requests present considerable challenges to mortgage servicers, according to a new PricewaterhouseCooper analysis. Implementing the changes will require careful review and updates to systems, processes and responsibilities to ensure servicers compliance with the new standards, said PwC. The new procedures for error notices and information requests are based on existing rules for responding to qualified written requests ...
Once upon a time, in the third quarter of 2005, Countrywide Financial became the first company to amass a mortgage servicing portfolio of over $1 trillion. Just three years later, the company would be consumed by a hungry giant, Bank of America, which in the process became the first and only $2 trillion mortgage servicer. During the second quarter of 2013, BofA gave up its chair in the $1 trillion servicing club, reporting a 16.7 percent drop in its portfolio that left the company with just $988.6 billion in servicing. Since peaking at an industry record of $2.160 trillion at the end of 2009, BofA has managed to shrink its portfolio by a whopping 54.2 percent. The bank shed...[Includes one data chart]
State and federal regulators appear to be close to getting more servicers to agree to a settlement similar to the $25 billion deal agreed to by five big banks.
The Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs this week approved bipartisan legislation to strengthen FHA solvency and oversight authority over lenders, paving the way toward dealing with the larger issue of housing finance reform. Introduced by Committee Chairman Tim Johnson, D-SD, and Ranking Minority Member Mike Crapo, R-ID, the FHA Solvency Act (S. 1376) passed by a vote of 21-1. The approved bill included...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau took its first legal action over alleged violation of the new loan originator compensation rule last week, bringing suit against Castle & Cooke Mortgage, a Utah-based nonbank, and two top executives. The CFPB claims that the defendants had an unwritten policy of paying quarterly bonuses to loan officers based on a formula that rewarded the origination of mortgages with high interest rates, thus incentivizing loan officers to steer consumers into mortgages with less favorable terms, the very practice the compensation rule sought to prohibit, said the CFPBs complaint. Overall, the firm paid...