In the past, the duty to serve rule has received a great deal of attention from manufactured housing executives who argue the GSEs are not purchasing enough of their loans.
Through the first nine months of the year, PennyMac originated $36.92 billion of residential mortgages, an impressive 74.9 percent gain from the same period a year earlier.
In case you were unaware, Joe Garrett has never been a big fan of the CFPB, but unlike some advisors, he is willing to state his feelings on-the-record…
There is limited good news to report for lenders in terms of industry efforts to secure regulatory relief from a variety of rules from the CFPB. Among the good news is that the transportation funding legislation that President Obama is expected to sign shortly includes language that will grant the CFPB greater flexibility to treat a balloon loan as a “qualified mortgage” if it was extended by a community bank or creditor operating in rural or underserved areas. Other language will institute a process for banks and other stakeholders to petition the bureau to designate an area as “rural” or “underserved” for the purposes of the CFPB’s ability-to-repay rule. Another provision will expand the bureau’s ability to exempt creditors serving ...
New information provided to Moody’s Investors Service suggests nearly every lender reviewed in a limited sample has violated the CFPB’s so-called TRID, the Truth in Lending Act/Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act Integrated Disclosure rule, at the start of the implementation period, which began Oct. 3, 2015. “Several third-party review (TPR) firms have revealed to us that their reviews of more than 90 percent of the first pipeline of residential mortgage loans subject to the CFPB’s recently enacted TRID had TRID compliance violations, although many of them were only technical in nature,” said Moody’s in a new credit outlook. “These results suggest that some lenders are having difficulty complying with the rules, a credit negative because it increases the likelihood that ...
The CFPB’s new Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (Regulation C) final rule is likely to increase costs for the mortgage industry – and by extension, homebuyers – while raising the stakes for lenders on the compliance front, according to a recent analysis by attorneys with the Morrison & Foerster law firm.“Among the largest costs of the new Regulation C will be necessary updates to data-collection systems, including integration of those systems with application, underwriting, disclosure, origination, and purchased-loan intake platforms, as applicable,” said the attorneys. In addition, HMDA compliance management will take on a whole new significance. “The need for monitoring and controls tied to new HMDA protocols is a few years off, but the preparation curve promises to be steep,” they ...