Regulatory burden will be the biggest issue for mortgage originators in 2012, according to recruiting firm Hammerhouses second annual survey of originator opinions. of the 400 active mortgage loan originators surveyed, 51 percent cited further oversight and regulation as a top concern for originators in 2012. Twenty-nine percent said that finding a committed and stable mortgage lender to work with is still one of the areas of utmost concern. Product flexibility and raising interest rates were identified as top concerns by 12 percent and 8 percent, respectively ...
Its not just federal regulators and lawmakers that are complicating the business of mortgage servicing while the industry continues digging itself out of a housing market collapse of near-biblical proportions. States have become increasingly active and aggressive, and theres little sign thats about to end any time soon. Three years ago, servicers were just beginning to understand the extent to which state legislative efforts could complicate, extend and expand the cost of the foreclosure process, said Nanci Weissgold and Morey Barnes Yost, attorneys in the consumer financial services practice ...
The Democratic and Republican state attorneys general are scheduled to meet separately Monday, Jan. 23, to discuss the foreclosure practices settlement terms sent out last week, amidst varying criticism that the agreement will be either a shakedown for banks or an inadequate answer to homeowner woes. Mondays meetings come after Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan announced last week that the pending settlement was very close and would benefit about 1 million families through principal reduction for homeowners and, in some cases, direct compensation for people wrongfully ...
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit recently took on Molosky v. Washington Mutual Inc., which addressed the preemption of certain state law claims under the federal Home Owners Loan Act. The plaintiffs in this case alleged that certain fees charged by their loan servicer in connection with the prepayment of their mortgage violated both the Michigan Usury Act and their mortgage contract.The lower court had previously rejected the suit on the basis of HOLA preemption, prompting the borrowers to appeal. The Sixth Circuit basically split the difference. On the one hand, the ...
In Marr v. Bank of America, N.A., the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has affirmed that borrower testimony alone can overcome the Truth in Lending Acts rebuttable presumption that a borrower has received two notices of his right to rescind a refinance transaction, despite a written acknowledgement by the borrower to the contrary. In this case, the borrower argued that he wasnt given two right-to-rescind notices as required under TILA, even though he had signed a document indicating he had. He said he had filed away and left undisturbed the documents he received when ...
California. In Balderas v. Countrywide Bank, N.A., the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit recently ruled that the Truth In Lending Acts delivery obligation requires borrowers be permitted to keep written copies of the right-to-rescind notice. The court noted that to deliver the notice as per TILA requires a permanent physical transfer from one party to another, as opposed to momentary delivery. Illinois. Earlier this month, the Department of Financial and Professional Regulations published amendments to the states mortgage originator licensing requirements. One change ...
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Comments Wanted on Mortgage-Related Rules. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is asking for public comment on currently approved information collections associated with certain recently published interim final rules having to do with mortgage lending. One such rule has to do with the Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act (Regulation G) 12 CFR Part 1007.The information collection will improve the flow of information to and between regulators; provide accountability and ...
Insurance companies will likely increase their investment in non-agency residential MBS, with market and regulatory influences encouraging movement toward hybrid and floating-rate securities as opposed to fixed-rate bonds, according to some top securities industry analysts. The primary driver on the regulatory level is the anticipated slight rise in capital requirements expected to result from a recent action by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, the association of state insurance regulators. On Dec. 27, 2011, the NAIC released updated pricing designations that...
Principal reduction to ease negative equity situations may have a lot of positive effects for homeowners, but recent research suggests it may have little impact on worker mobility. A forthcoming working paper by Sam Schulhofer-Wohl, of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, contends that research showing underwater borrowers are 33 percent less likely to move to better employment markets is flawed because it ignores key data. In an analysis of Census Bureau housing data, Schulhofer-Wohl reached the opposite conclusion, that underwater borrowers are more likely to move, suggesting that principal...
Well-known jumbo originators contributed most of the collateral for Redwood Trusts pending $415.73 million non-agency mortgage-backed security, but a handful of smaller lenders also benefitted from Redwoods jumbo correspondent program. These lenders have little securitization experience but received strong endorsements from rating services and due-diligence firms. Redwood purchased most of the loans to be included in Sequoia Mortgage Trust 2012-1 on a flow basis, according to Kroll Bond Rating Agency. Flagstar Bank led the smaller originators, with $31.84 million of its loans included in the security ...