Although much of the oxygen in the room is being taken up these days with concerns about the CFPB’s integrated disclosure rule, industry participants need to mind their Ps and Qs when it comes to the bureau’s loan originator compensation rule. During a recent webinar sponsored by Inside Mortgage Finance, an affiliated publication, top legal experts discussed how the industry can navigate a safe passage, compliance-wise. “We know that they’re going to really be looking at loan originator compensation plans this year,” said Kristie Kully, a partner with the Mayer Brown law firm in Washington, DC. “We know that they expect to find some problems in the LO comp area, and often when they expect to find them, they will ...
Mortgage banking industry representatives told the CFPB it should not be in a rush to make any changes to its resubmission guidelines for data that will be submitted under the bureau’s new Home Mortgage Disclosure Act rule. Because of continuing problems in implementing the integrated disclosure rule, “companies have not yet had available sufficient resources to begin HMDA implementation in earnest,” the Mortgage Bankers Association told the bureau in a recent comment letter. “Also, considering the unprecedented expansion of data elements required under the new HMDA rule, it can be anticipated that when implementation begins, there will be a far better understanding of myriad issues including appropriate resubmission guidelines.” Consequently, MBA said that while some changes may now be warranted, ...
Overall consumer complaints to the CFPB reached their lowest level in at least a year and a half, according to a new analysis and ranking by Inside the CFPB. Total gripes to the bureau slid 5.0 percent in the first quarter and were off 3.0 percent on an annual basis, data from the CFPB consumer complaint database show. Kvetching about residential mortgages was down slightly more, falling 6.7 percent and 4.1 percent, respectively, for those two time periods. In fact, mortgage-related belly-aching hasn’t been this low since the fourth quarter of 2013. The most dramatic change was seen in the prepaid card space, where criticisms plunged 73.3 percent in 1Q16. ... [with exclusive data chart] ...
U.S. Military Personnel Continue to Report Problems With Their Mortgages. Complaints to the CFPB from American military personnel about their mortgages rose 10 percent from 2014 to 2015, according to a recent report from the bureau. The good news for mortgage lenders is that total complaints about their operations – roughly 9,900 – were less than half of the total generated by debt collection practices, which came to about 20,500. ... FHFA Wants Public Input on National Mortgage Borrower Survey. The Federal Housing Finance Agency is seeking public comments about the American Survey of Mortgage Borrowers, an information collection effort otherwise known as the National Survey of Existing Mortgage Borrowers. ...
An estimated 96 million adults in the U.S. are renters who have never had a mortgage, many of whom would seem to be prime targets for first-time homeownership. However, more than half of the renter population is unlikely to receive mortgage financing anytime soon, due to underwriting factors or a preference to remain a renter, according to industry analysts. In a new report, researchers at the Urban Institute’s Housing Finance Policy Center developed ...
Individual borrowers purchasing homes in the era of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s integrated disclosure rule, dubbed TRID, generally seem to be having an improved overall customer experience, despite a few bumps in the road, according to two recent surveys. But the progress for homeowners is coming at the expense of mortgage lenders. A survey from the STRATMOR consultancy found that overall borrower satisfaction is at a multi-year high ...