An unusual coalition of dozens of lender, realtor, consumer and civil rights groups late last week urged the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to write a broadly defined qualified mortgage as part of the ability-to-repay final rule its putting together as per the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The CFPB is expected to issue a proposed rule defining a QM shortly. As per the ability-to-repay standards of Dodd-Frank Section 1412, a qualified mortgage cannot have points and fees in excess of 3 percent of the loan amount. The groups are worried...
Four mortgage- and financial services-related trade groups told the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau theyre unhappy the CFPB hasnt adopted more of the suggestions theyve made over the numerous iterations the bureau has put out of its Know Before You Owe consolidated consumer disclosure project. The CFPB is currently on the ninth version of its evolving disclosures model. During the Know Before You Owe iterations, we have submitted a large number of comment letters that walk the CFPB through a large number of very technical, but important details, the groups said...
Ohio. The state Attorney Generals office recently finalized amendments to the states ability-to-repay rules that provide a safe harbor for certain types of mortgages. Under the new rules, a borrower is deemed to have an ability to repay and a reasonable probability of payment if the lender provides a fully-amortizing fixed-rate refinance mortgage that has the same or a lesser interest rate or principal amount than the current loan, and does not lengthen the payoff date. Pennsylvania. The state Department...
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. Mortgage Servicing Settlement Approved. Earlier this month, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia gave its approval to the consent orders that make up the $25 billion mortgage servicing settlement by federal regulators and 49 state attorneys general into alleged mortgage-related violations by the nationfs five largest mortgage servicers. The federal agencies that signed on to the settlement are the Department of Justice, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Department of Treasury...
At the request of the Federal Trade Commission, the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California has imposed a $3.89 million judgment against defendant Samuel Paul Bain and three of his companies, including U.S. Homeowners Relief, for their role in an allegedly fraudulent mortgage modification and foreclosure relief scheme. According to the FTCs complaint, the defendants charged consumers up to $4,250 for a promise to reduce their mortgage payments, interest rates, and sometimes even their loan balances.The court order also bans Bain and his firms from telemarketing...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau this week detailed servicing rules it will soon propose regarding disclosures to borrowers and servicing procedures. The mortgage servicing rules we are considering reflect two basic, common sense standards no surprises and no runarounds, CFPB Director Richard Cordray said. They would apply to all mortgage servicers regardless of how they are organized, including banks, thrifts, credit unions and nonbank servicers. The rule, which will amend the Truth in Lending Act and Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, is required by the Dodd-Frank Act. The CFPB said it will publish a proposal ...
The $25 billion servicing settlement involving five major bank servicers was approved by the US District Court for the District of Columbia on April 4 without a formal challenge from the Association of Mortgage Investors or anyone else. The servicers and settlement monitor Joseph Smith will agree on deadlines to implement the settlements various provisions, with the deadlines to be set between 60 days after approval of the settlement and up to 180 days after approval ... [Includes four briefs]
Mortgage industry participants have mixed views about the FHAs revised policy on disputed debt despite a general concern over its impact on borrower eligibility and lenders bottom lines. This week, the FHA delayed implementation of the policy until July 1 to get more feedback from lenders and industry participants and to work on clarifying guidance. The policys initial effective date was April 1. Lenders felt the FHA had bypassed them when the agency decided to announce the policy revision in a Feb. 28 mortgagee letter, along with other FHA underwriting changes. Affected parties should have been able to ...
A Department of Housing and Urban Development proposal to reduce the amount of seller contributions on FHA loans on behalf of homebuyers would lock out lower-income purchasers, limit home sales and stall economic recovery, warned FHA lenders. As the proposals comment period ended on March 24, emailed comments opposing the proposed rule continued to pour in at HUD. We are finally seeing an increase in buyers in our market in the entry-level purchase price, said one loan officer. I shudder to think of what will happen if this proposal goes through. The verdict appears to be ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development has announced discrimination settlements with two mortgage lenders accused of denying FHA mortgage loans to expectant mothers. Two women filed separate complaints against Magna Bank in Nashville, TN, and Home Loan Center in Irvine, CA, alleging a violation of the Fair Housing Act. According to the complaints, the womens loan applications were rejected because they were pregnant and temporarily on leave. The settlement agreement with Magna Bank requires the bank to pay the complainant $14,085 for allegedly ...