Further empirical confirmation of a recovering mortgage market continued to accumulate at the CFPB during the third quarter, as related consumer complaints dropped 19.8 percent, according to a new analysis by Inside the CFPB. For the first nine months of 2016, consumer gripes about their mortgages fell 8.4 percent compared to the same time period the year before. Criticisms about mortgage servicing fell 21.8 percent quarter-over-quarter and 2.0 percent year-over-year, the data show....
The CFPB, under its authority to administer the Equal Credit Opportunity Act and Regulation B, has bestowed its official approval upon the revised and redesigned Uniform Residential Loan Application, the standardized form used by borrowers to apply for a mortgage loan, issued earlier this year by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The issuance of the 2016 URLA was part of the effort by the two government-sponsored enterprises to update the corresponding Uniform Loan Application Dataset (ULAD). Staff of the CFPB has reviewed the 2016 URLA as per a request by the two GSEs and the Federal Housing Finance Agency, their regulator and conservator, for official approval under ECOA and Regulation B. Regulation B Section 1002.5(b) provides rules concerning requests for ...
The CFPB has formally authorized the collection of expanded Home Mortgage Disclosure Act information on race and ethnicity, as per the Equal Credit Opportunity Act and Regulation B, in 2017. “At any time from Jan. 1, 2017, through Dec. 31, 2017, a creditor may, at its option, permit applicants to self-identify using disaggregated ethnic and racial categories as instructed in appendix B to Regulation C, as amended by the 2015 HMDA final rule,” the bureau said in a Sept. 29, 2016, notice in the Federal Register. During this period, a lender permitting applicants to self-identify using these categories shall not be deemed to violate Regulation B Section 1002.5(b). Further, the lender shall also be deemed to be in compliance with ...
CFPB Director Richard Cordray appeared before credit union representatives recently and touted the performance of their industry’s mortgage operations under the bureau’s mortgage rules. “Our first set of mortgage rules have been in place for over two and a half years, and we are seeing great progress,” Cordray told the National Association of Federal Credit Unions. “In 2014, the first year of our ability-to-repay rule on mortgage origination, owner-occupied home purchase mortgages increased by 4 percent, according to HMDA data, and growth was even stronger last year: home purchase mortgages increased by an estimated 13 percent to 14 percent.” In fact, as it turns out, the mortgage industry overall actually did slightly better than Cordray said. According to analysis of ...