Subject matter attorneys from the CFPB participated in a webinar sponsored by the Mortgage Bankers Association last week on the bureaus mortgage origination rules to try to give industry representatives some detailed responses to a number of frequently asked questions the agency has received in recent months. One of our key priorities has been to bring increased clarity, certainty and burden relief wherever possible and appropriate to address critical questions that we heard from industry, said Lisa Applegate, the...
As the mortgage lending industry continues to brace for qualified mortgage lending versus non-QM lending, and with the new qualified residential mortgage standard about to be put into play, its important lenders remember they dont have to originate QM or QRM loans. There is no legal requirement under [Dodd-Frank] to make QM or QRM loans, Laurence Platt, a partner with the K&L Gates law firm in Washington, DC, told participants during a recent webinar sponsored by Inside Mortgage Finance, an affiliated newsletter...
The Federal Reserve Office of Inspector General, which also serves as the IG for the CFPB, took the unusual step of entering a public policy debate and challenged the assertion by the Bipartisan Policy Center that it doesnt have adequate investigative and reporting powers related to the bureau. In its recent report on the CFPB, the center and its Task Force on Consumer Protection said, The bureau should have all of the other trademarks of accountability that independent bank regulators share. The Dodd-Frank Act contains...
The CFPB spent $13.2 million over the last two fiscal years on various, and at times controversial, data collection activities, according to documentation the bureau sent to the leadership of the House Financial Services Committee. When CFPB Director Richard Cordray appeared before the House Financial Services Committee on Sept. 16, he got an earful from chairman Jeb Hensarling, R-TX, for dozens of answers the congressman said he never got from Deputy Director Steven Antonakes related to the bureaus data collection...
The qualified residential mortgage requirements recently proposed by federal regulators could force banks to retain mortgages in portfolio instead of issuing non-agency mortgage-backed securities, according to industry participants. The Dodd-Frank Act requires that non-QRMs be subject to required risk retention of at least 5 percent. In August, federal regulators proposed aligning the definition for QRMs with the definition for qualified mortgages established by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau ...
SunTrust Banks has agreed in principle with the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Department of Justice to settle certain FHA-related claims. Separately, a federal judge in Texas refused to dismiss a government suit against two FHA lenders accused of manipulating HUD into insuring poorly underwritten loans which later resulted in massive losses to the agency. Announced on Oct. 10, SunTrusts agreement with the government agencies is part of a broader resolution of certain legacy matters and repurchase agreements with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. SunTrust has agreed to settle certain ...
The Department of Housing and Urban Developments proposed qualified mortgage rule attaches certain conditions to QM treatment that may complicate matters for participating lenders, said attorneys with K&L Gates in Washington, DC. On Sept. 30, the Department of Housing and Urban Development published its own proposed QM rule for FHA loans. The CFPB rule takes effect on Jan. 14, 2014, and will apply to FHA loans until HUD issues a final rule. Under the CFPB rule, many FHA loans would not qualify for the rules safe harbor because the higher mortgage insurance premiums would make them higher priced mortgage loans. Thus, in order to ...
Two surviving spouses of deceased reverse mortgage borrowers won their case against the Department of Housing and Urban Development after a U.S. court found HUD in violation of federal law for failing to protect the spouses from foreclosure. The courts decision marks a turning point for surviving spouses, such as Robert Bennett of Annapolis, MD, and Leila Joseph of Brooklyn, NY, and ensures that they will be protected against eviction and foreclosure, despite the loss of their husband or wife, said Jean Constantine-Davis, a senior attorney with the AARP Foundation Litigation. In March 2011, the AARP and the law firm of Mehri & Skalet of Washington, DC, filed ...
More than one in five loans originated today wont satisfy the criteria for safe harbor legal protections as qualified mortgages under the ability-to-repay rule from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, according to an analysis by ComplianceEase.