Creditworthy buyers are being constrained by dated scoring systems, according to a study released this week by VantageScore Solutions, which says there are benefits to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, as well as consumers, if a new model is adopted. The enterprises could increase their revenue while expanding access to mortgages to a more diverse group of consumers. The credit reporting company has been working to get Fannie and Freddie to embrace a new credit reporting system for years now. Its new report comes on the heels of the Federal Housing Finance Agency comments in its 2015 scorecard directing the GSEs to look into potential alternative forms of credit scoring.
New GSE Reserve Fund Bill. Rep. Marsha Blackburn, R-TN, introduced legislation on March 26 requiring the GSEs to send future profits to a newly established reserve fund administered by the FHFA. The bill is titled ''Enterprise Secondary Reserve Taxpayer Protection and Government Accountability Act of 2015'' and it would “establish a secondary reserve fund for a housing enterprise under conservatorship to protect taxpayers against loss in the event of a housing downturn, and for other purposes." Jumpstart GSE Reform Amendment. On March 25, Sens. Bob Corker, D-TN, and Mark Warner, D-VA, offered an amendment to the Jumpstart GSE Reform Act that would prohibit...
The U.S. Supreme Court this week heard oral arguments on whether a second-lien lender is secured when a borrower with an underwater first lien declares Chapter 7 bankruptcy. SCOTUS in 1992 ruled that a creditor is protected when a partially underwater mortgage goes into bankruptcy. In most cases, the courts have said second-lien creditors are secured as well, even if there isn’t enough value to pay off the first lien.
CFPB General Counsel Meredith Fuchs showed little sympathy for lenders worried about TRID's start date, referencing the rule's long implementation period.
The mortgage industry isn’t achieving any more success than lawmakers on Capitol Hill in convincing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to take it easy on lenders when it’s time to start enforcing its integrated disclosure rule. Speaking at the American Bankers Association’s government relations event in Washington, DC, earlier this week, Virginia O’Neill, head of regulatory compliance for the trade group, recounted for attendees the experience of one community bank ...