Loan originator compensation requirements released this week by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau aim to prohibit steering to subprime mortgages. The CFPB noted that during the subprime boom, some borrowers who would have qualified for prime loans were steered into subprime loans, with the steering largely tied to LO compensation. Before the financial crisis, many mortgage borrowers were steered towards risky and high-cost loans because it meant more money for the loan originator, said Richard Cordray ...
Federal regulators approved a final rule last week to set new appraisal requirements for higher-priced mortgage loans. The requirements include a complete exemption for qualified mortgages and certain other originations. Comptroller of the Currency Thomas Curry said the rule, along with the CFPBs recent ability-to-repay rule, are key components in addressing the worst economic practices since the Great Depression. The final rule requires lenders originating HPMLs to obtain ...
Mortgage bankers funded $232.69 billion worth of FHA loans in 2012, a 22 percent jump from the year prior, but the improvement pales in comparison to business gains experienced by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, according to exclusive loan-level data compiled by Inside FHA Lending. By comparison, Fannie grew its business by almost 46 percent last year with Freddie improving loan purchases from seller/servicers by 49 percent. Still, it was FHAs best quarterly showing ($64.03 billion) since the fourth quarter of 2010 when mortgage lenders originated $72.12 billion of product. And not surprisingly, consumers taking out FHA loans ... [2 charts]
Can a lender rely on an approval from the FHAs automated underwriting system in determining whether a mortgage loan is a qualified mortgage? Lawyers at BuckleySandler, a Washington, DC, law firm, indicated some uncertainty after poring over the Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus final ability-to-repay rule governing residential mortgage lending under new Truth in Lending Act regulations. Effective on Jan. 10, 2014, the final rule requires lenders to verify a borrowers financial information and determine the borrowers capacity to repay the loan over the long term. It also creates a ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development is investigating reports that a loan officer of an approved FHA lender had participated in a reverse mortgage borrowers counseling session, a practice HUD frowns upon but does not directly prohibit. A HUD representative declined to provide details but acknowledged that the report was part of informal discussions between department officials and stakeholders. That information has not been officially released in any form, he said. Once the details are finalized, we will be advising stakeholders. The National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association posted the ...
Some FHA lenders are seeing new opportunities in the distressed property market as they offer new or expand on existing 203(k) rehabilitation mortgage insurance products. Houston-based Envoy Mortgage, a full-service mortgage banker with retail branches across the country, has broadened its FHA 203(k) product line to include a full 203(k) option. The option allows borrowers to devote more funds for repair and renovation, which are rolled into the mortgage amount. The full 203(k) option is a step up from what Envoy is already offering a streamline 203(k) program designed for borrowers that have ...
Rule for Selling Government Mortgages to Fannie Mae Updated. Eligibility for delivery of mortgage loans backed by FHA, VA and the Department of Agriculture is now available on a negotiated basis only, Fannie Mae announced in a recent update to its Selling Guide (Announcement SEL-2013-01). The change is effective for all government loans, including whole loans sold to Fannie on or after May 1, 2013, and government loans in mortgage-backed securities with issue dates on or after May 1. Genworth to Delink Struggling Mortgage Insurance Operations from Holding Company. Genworth Financial plans to ...
In the end, there were no earth-shattering surprises in the Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus final rule on mortgage originator qualification and compensation, but the residential finance industry isnt quite done digesting the myriad details of the 541-page regulation, which goes into effect a year from now. Among many things, the rule codifies the difference between bank and nonbank loan officers, requiring the latter to get tested on a regular basis, a distinction that does not sit well with certain factions of the mortgage banking and brokerage industries. The point is...
Stringent appraisals have hindered home sales, limiting purchase-mortgage originations and constraining home prices, according to real estate agents responding to the latest Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance HousingPulse Tracking Survey. Appraisers counter that they are accurately pricing homes and cite burdensome regulations along with new requirements from lenders trying to avoid buybacks. In certain circumstances, appraised home prices have been set well below listing price, frustrating sellers that have received multiple offers. Appraisals continue to cause problems as the market is trying to recover value, but tight appraiser guidelines are not keeping up with the agreed sales prices between buyers and sellers, according to a real estate agent in Michigan. The sales-to-list price ratio has trended...
Fannie Mae is informing the mortgage cooperatives it works with that going forward that all the different affinity groups doing business with the government-sponsored enterprise will be treated the same when it comes to guaranty fees and charges for its Desktop Underwriter program, Inside Mortgage Finance has learned. One executive close to the situation told Inside Mortgage Finance that action by Fannie essentially equalizes all cooperatives in terms of the pricing breaks they receive from the GSE. Some affinity relationships have been in place...