The mortgage and housing sectors know that lower loan limits for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are coming but they would like to forestall the day of reckoning for as long as possible, especially in light of looming implementation deadlines tied to a slew of new rules from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Industry lobbyists close to the issue said the Federal Housing Finance Agency was expected to make an announcement by the months end on what exactly those loan limits might be. However, some sources said the FHFA was weighing heavily the fact that mortgage lenders are already crunching on technology and compliance upgrades tied to CFPB rules, in particular, the ability-to-repay measure. One official said...
Late last week, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau finalized revisions to some of its 2013 mortgage rules slated to take effect in January mostly mortgage servicing and loan originator compensation regulations whether the industry is ready or not. The amendments and clarifications that the bureau proposed in June and now finalized via a final rules on Sept. 13 include a number of changes sought by various industry groups. There were no big surprises between June and September, but some overlooked details, one of which was the CFPB determining that seller-paid points can be excluded from the 3 percent points-and-fees test for qualified mortgages under its ability-to-repay rule. Sellers points...are excluded...
Mortgage lenders reported originating $2.01 trillion in home-purchase and refinance mortgages during 2012, a 43.7 percent increase from the prior year, according to a new Inside Mortgage Finance analysis of Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data released this week. Because HMDA data typically capture a relatively small share of home-equity originations and some small lenders dont report at all, the total originations number for last year was somewhat higher. Interestingly, the origination volume grew...[Includes one data chart]
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureaus amended final rule on ability to repay and qualified mortgages may have justifiable reasons but it is very complicated and difficult to implement, and likely to have unintended consequences, according to industry attorneys. Notwithstanding recent amendments to address concerns raised by the mortgage industry, the rule continues to pose challenges to lenders and attorneys in various areas. There are problems in the rules content and requirements as well as in developing policies and procedures to support it and the software to implement it, attorneys said. Were talking...
Brokers and others who do business with Nationstar Mortgage said theyve been hearing stories about two-week delays on funds being delivered. Meanwhile, FHA has run out of multifamily money.