It looks like all of the clamoring that mortgage lenders have engaged in over the last year about the volume and expanse of new regulations has earned them a bit of a reprieve on at least one front. The CFPB now expects to issue its final rule on the combined and integrated Truth in Lending Act and Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act consumer mortgage disclosures in September, according to the bureaus semiannual regulatory agenda released last week and in commentary included in its final rule on escrow accounts for...
Mortgage banking entities and credit unions are trying to prepare as best they can for an anticipated onslaught of new regulations from the CFPB that will likely dramatically reshape the landscape of mortgage lending for years and perhaps generations to come. Part of their coping strategy is to enlist the aid of bureau officials themselves to help measure out all the new rules into more digestible portions. The Mortgage Bankers Association, for one, recently wrote the CFPB, suggesting the agency use a staged...
Banks and credit unions generally are fully behind the CFPBfs ability-to-repay credit card proposal that is expected to make it easier for stay-at-home spouses to qualify for such forms of credit. The Truth in Lending Act and its implementing Regulation Z generally prohibit a card issuer from opening a credit card account for a consumer, or increasing the credit limit applicable to a credit card account, unless the card issuer considers the consumerfs ability to make the required payments under the terms of such account...
The CFPB has apparently launched investigations into some of the mortgage lending entities that it had warned last year about their advertising practices, according to a leading industry attorney following such developments. If the bureau has in fact initiated such probes, it underscores the importance for companies who receive warning letters from the bureau to promptly address issues raised by the bureau, according to Alan Kaplinsky, a practice leader with the Ballard Spahr law firm. Further, If these...
The CFPB is apparently under such time constraints to promulgate its various rules under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, it can no longer wait to publish them in the Federal Register. A recent final rule from the bureau says its final rules will now be considered issued on the earlier of the rules posting on the agencys website or publication in the Federal Register. The CFPB says the definition of when a rule is issued has legal consequences, and the bureau generally intends to issue rules by...
Is the Mortgage Servicing Rule Next? The CFPB has a field hearing scheduled for January 17 in Atlanta, and the industry scuttlebutt is that the bureau might release its mortgage servicing rulemaking sometime the day before. Last week, the CFPB released to the press, on whatfs known as an gembargoedh basis, many of the details of its gqualified mortgageh/ability-to-repay final rule on the afternoon before the bureaufs Jan. 10 mortgage policy field hearing in Baltimore, MD. The actual final rule, however, was not...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau this week issued a long-awaited final rule that establishes ability-to-repay and qualified mortgage (QM) standards, as well as a second, temporary category of QMs for government-backed mortgages to avoid market disruption. At the same time, the CFPB sought comment on a proposed rule that would exclude new and existing FHA, VA and Rural Housing Service (U.S. Department of Agriculture) programs that facilitate refinancings for borrowers at risk of delinquency or default. The temporary QM category was spurred by CFPBs concern about the ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has issued its long-awaited qualified mortgage ability-to-repay final rule that, as expected, includes an exception for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgages and does little to facilitate a rebound in the non-agency sector. Mortgage lenders will be presumed to have complied with the ability-to-repay rule if they originate qualified mortgages that prohibit or limit the risky features believed to have harmed consumers in the recent mortgage crisis. That means...
The final rule issued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau this week to define ability-to-repay requirements and qualified mortgages puts non-agency and subprime mortgages at a significant disadvantage to prime and agency mortgages. The slant against non-agency loans goes beyond what was required by the Dodd-Frank Act, according to industry analysts. The rule is set to take effect Jan. 10, 2014. Under the final rule, qualified mortgages must meet...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau this week issued a final rule setting new restrictions and requirements for high-cost mortgages. The rule implements requirements set by the Dodd-Frank Act and will take effect in January 2014. For first-lien mortgages, high-cost loans have annual percentage rates 6.5 percentage points or more above the average prime offer rate. The APR threshold for second liens is 8.5 percent above the APOR. The DFA expanded the definition of high-cost mortgages to include purchase mortgages and home-equity lines of credit in addition to refinances. The CFPB noted...