HUD has released its long-awaited disparate impact final rule, sending notification to the industry that housing policies and practices can be determined to be discriminatory not simply through their intent, but also by their effect.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development released its long-awaited disparate impact final rule last week, formalizing for the first time the long-held interpretation of the Fair Housing Act by HUD, which has repeatedly asserted that housing policies and practices can be determined to be discriminatory not simply through their intent, but also by their effect. As weve learned over the years, housing discrimination comes in many forms. Discrimination doesnt have to be intentional in order to have a damaging...
The CFPBs legal position on a borrowers right of rescission under the Truth In Lending Act again swayed the day for a consumer. This time, it was the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, in Sherzer v. Homestar Mortgage Services, that agreed with the bureaus legal argument that a lawsuit filed more than three years after a mortgage has been closed can be brought, so long as the borrower sent the lender a written notice of rescission within the three-year period.In this instance, borrowers Daniel and Geraldine Sherzer obtained...
Many in the mortgage finance industry were unsettled with the recent Canning v. National Labor Relations Board ruling, fearing compliance chaos could ensue right as the industry is about to be confronted with implementing a handful of critical new regulations that will transform the landscape of mortgage lending for decades to come, such as the new ability-to-repay final rule. However, some top industry compliance attorneys urged the industry to press on full-speed ahead with their compliance efforts, regardless of the uncertainty...
CFPB Director Richard Cordray told an assemblage of financial industry representatives last week that it would be a mistake for prudential regulators to examine institutions in such a way as to steer them toward providing only mortgages that can be defined as qualified under the bureaus ability-to-repay rule, according to one industry source in attendance. Cordray said the CFPB wants other types of mortgages to flourish as well, the source continued. Bureau staff added that they would expect the percentage of QMs in the...
The ranks of non-agency mortgage-backed security issuers are set to expand beyond Redwood Trust and Credit Suisse, but industry analysts note that issuance remains constrained due to bank portfolio execution and the government-sponsored enterprises. At the American Securitization Forums ASF 2013 conference last week in Las Vegas, Laurie Goodman, a senior managing director at Amherst Securities Group, predicted $25 billion to $30 billion in new non-agency MBS will be issued this year, the most ...
Two real estate investment trusts are working toward joining Redwood Trust in issuing new non-agency jumbo mortgage-backed securities. Two Harbors Investment and PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust are acquiring jumbos with plans to securitize the loans and potentially hold the subordinate tranche, a model similar to Redwoods efforts. Two Harbors first announced its intentions to issue new non-agency MBS in 2011, with a goal for issuance at the end of that year. Thomas Siering, president and CEO ...
Issuers, investors and even regulators agree that underwriting standards for non-agency mortgage-backed securities will have to loosen for the sector to grow. We have to start moving down the credit spectrum, said Sharif Mahdavian, a director and analytical manager of residential MBS at Standard & Poors. Speaking at the American Securitization Forums ASF 2013 conference last week in Las Vegas, he said non-agency originations could easily move from shocking prime to ...