The five banks that are parties to the $25 billion national mortgage settlement have extended more than $26.11 billion in gross relief to more than 300,000 borrowers, or roughly $84,385 per homeowner, according to a new report from the Office of Mortgage Settlement Oversight. At that pace, the five participating servicers will satisfy their obligations under the settlement two years ahead of the 2015 deadline. The report discloses that the banks have completed $21.92 billion in consumer relief to borrowers...
The CFPB recently launched Project Catalyst, an initiative it said is designed to encourage consumer] friendly innovation and entrepreneurship in markets for consumer financial products and services. gProject Catalyst is our effort to foster consumer-friendly innovation in the marketplace,h the bureau said. Through Project Catalyst, the CFPB is calling on innovators and entrepreneurs to help it by gimprovingh financial regulation to gbetter foster consumer]friendly innovation,h and in...
Adverse impact violations are the hardest to defend against and the ones causing the biggest settlements, according to Tammy Butler, the director of fair lending and compliance for Optimal Blue, a leading pricing engine. In a nutshell, this means that your institution has a policy or criterion that has a disproportionate impact on the protected class population of the areas you serve, she said in a recent blog. This can occur in the way that a lender prices loans or underwriting overlays. So far, every lender that has been...
Representatives of smaller financial institutions told officials at the CFPB recently they are apprehensive about regulatory overload and the fear that their ability to serve their local communities will be harmed by too much regulation coming too fast. The bureau got that message during separate meetings with its Community Bank Advisory Council and its Credit Union Advisory Council. In discussions about the challenges and opportunities in the post-financial crisis environment, advisory council members...
Two legal cases remain in play that are challenging some controversial recess appointments made by President Barack Obama earlier this year, one directly challenging the appointment of Richard Cordray as director of the CFPB, and another that has implications for the case. In the former, State National Bank of Big Spring, Texas, et al. v. Geithner, et al., currently before the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, federal bank regulatory agencies last week told a judge that the lawsuit should be...
Agencies Announce Increases in Dollar Thresholds for Exempt Consumer Credit and Lease Transactions. The CFPB and the Federal Reserve Board last week announced increases in the dollar thresholds in Regulation Z (Truth in Lending Act) and Regulation M (Consumer Leasing Act) for exempt consumer credit and lease transactions. The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act requires yearly adjustments to these thresholds by the annual percentage increase in the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage...
Portfolio lending by community banks could be treated differently than other types of lending under pending Basel III capital requirements, according to recent indications from federal regulators. The potential exceptions for community banks follow strong lobbying from lenders as well as bipartisan support in Congress. While we strongly believe that finalizing the regulations is critically important for certainty and planning, we also believe there are merits to considering alternative, simpler approaches to ...
Lenders face increased regulation under policy changes designed to bring the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund back to positive within the fiscal year and reduce the likelihood of a Treasury bailout to shore up the FHAs claims-paying ability. The Department of Housing and Urban Development late last week announced a hike in FHA premiums and other changes designed to restore the FHAs insurance fund, which had a negative 1.44 percent capital ratio at the end of September 2012, according to a new actuarial review. Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan blamed...
Mortgage lenders of all sizes and stripes got some breathing room late last week when the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau announced it was delaying the effective date of some new requirements under its integrated mortgage disclosure project to provide a more seamless integration with other mortgage disclosures the agency has proposed. The delay applies to more than a dozen disclosures, including those on the cancellation of escrow accounts, consumersf liability for debt payment after foreclosure, and the creditor acceptance of partial payment. Under the Dodd-Frank Act, the new disclosures were scheduled to take effect Jan. 21, 2013. gTo avoid potential consumer confusion and reduce compliance burden for industry, the bureau plans...