Now that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has delivered its integrated mortgage disclosure project, the agency is asking consumers to identify the key pain points associated with closing and how they might by mitigated by market innovations and technology. The CFPB seeks to encourage the development of a more streamlined, efficient and educational closing process as the mortgage industry increases its usage of technology, electronic signatures and paperless processes, the bureau said in a recent notice. The plan is to encourage interventions that increase consumer knowledge, understanding and confidence at closing, the agency said. Specifically, comment is sought...
The housing market is in the midst of a bubble or a gradual recovery, depending on who you ask. Analysts on either side of the debate point to the agency dominance of the mortgage market as one of the factors driving up home prices. Peter Wallison, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, warned last week that the housing market is in the middle of another bubble. Housing bubbles become visible and can legitimately be called bubbles when housing prices diverge significantly from rents, he wrote in an op-ed published in the New York Times. Wallison pointed...
Mortgage lenders large and small have indicated they plan to stay away from making mortgages that do not fit into either the safe harbor or the rebuttable presumption QM boxes.
According to the banks fourth quarter earnings statement, 68 percent of its originations were refis the mirror image of Wells Fargo, which had 68 percent of its production in purchase-money loans.
On a sequential basis, the origination results look slightly better: a 38 percent decline compared to the third quarter of 2013 for Wells and a 42 percent downdraft for JPM. Both have laid off thousands of mortgage workers over the few quarters.
The MBA suggested the CFPB increase the "rebuttable presumption" threshold from 150 basis points above the average prime offer rate to 250 basis points so more borrowers with less-than-perfect credit can benefit.
As expected, the Mortgage Bankers Association this week lowered its 2014 origination forecast to $1.12 trillion, a $57 billion decrease from its previous estimate. Word of the reduction was making the rounds last week.