While lenders scramble to adapt to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s integrated disclosure rule, the agency has released its long-awaited final rule under the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, ratcheting up the industry’s data-reporting requirements – and the potential for more fair lending enforcement activity. Among the most significant changes within the 800-page regulation, the final rule modifies which institutions are subject to Regulation C and adopts a uniform loan volume threshold for depository and non-depository institutions. It excludes from institutional coverage firms that did not originate at least 25 closed-end mortgage loans in each of the two preceding calendar years or at least 100 open-end lines of credit in such a time period. The new rule also changes...
Conventional conforming loans accounted for 60.3 percent of the 2014 mortgage market, according to an Inside Mortgage Finance analysis of 2014 Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data. Wells Fargo was the top HMDA lender last year with a 7.9 percent share of the market. HMDA originations include only retail and table-funded broker production and do not include correspondent acquisitions. Wells was the top conventional-conforming lender and the biggest jumbo producer. Quicken Loans was...[Includes one data table]
Earlier this month, the House of Representatives voted 303-121 in favor of H.R. 3192, The Homebuyers Assistance Act. The legislation would provide the mortgage industry with a regulatory and legal safe harbor until Feb. 1, 2016, for mortgages originated in good faith under the CFPB’s Truth in Lending Act/Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act Integrated Disclosure rule, otherwise known as TRID. The rule, designed to streamline the mortgage disclosures under the two laws, took effect Oct. 3, 2015, after nearly two years of notice from the CFPB. “The CFPB and House Republicans agree that a transitional period for TRID compliance which enables lenders to test their systems and ensures there is no large-scale disruption to mortgage lending is necessary,” said Rep. ...
The CFPB last week issued its latest annual report on student loan complaints, citing in particular concerns about repayment problems facing those with older federal student loans that were made by banks and other private lenders. “We found that servicing issues may make repaying student debt even harder for this group of borrowers, in particular,” said CFPB Acting Student Loan Ombudsman Seth Frotman. The report noted that outstanding federal student loans made by private lenders may have a higher concentration of borrowers in default or delinquency than the student loan market at-large. In another recently released report, the bureau estimated that more than 25 percent of student loan borrowers are delinquent or in default market-wide. The CFPB observed that at ...
The CFPB ought to consider the unintended consequences of any new debt collection regulations it might promulgate and perform a careful cost-benefit analysis before it forces such regulations onto industry participants, a top university economist warned. “Debt collection is one of the most heavily regulated areas of the consumer credit ecosystem. Yet it is also one of the most important: without an efficacious and efficient debt collection system, creditors will be unable to lend, and borrowers will be unable to borrow,” Todd Zywicki, executive director of the George Mason University Law & Economics Center, said in a new white paper. Although consumers who do not pay their debts benefit by an excessively restrictive debt collection regulatory regime, everyone else pays ...
ComplianceEase, an automated compliance solutions provider based in Burlingame, CA, has come out with an insurance-backed warranty program for loans that have been audited by its ComplianceAnalyzer solution. The program, called AssureCert, provides warranty coverage for compliance defects, including ones related to the CFPB’s Truth in Lending Act/Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act Integrated Disclosure Rule (TRID) and the ability-to-repay/qualified mortgage regulation, as well as federal and state consumer lending and high-cost laws and regulations. “The new QM and TRID rules have exposed lenders and investors to civil lawsuits, as well as fines and repurchase risk,” said John Vong, president of ComplianceEase. “Our insurance-backed AssureCert warranty will offer our clients – both large and small –additional protection and peace of mind.” The ...
Bank of America Pulls the Plug on All Marketing Services Agreements. Bank of America, the third-largest residential retail lender in the U.S., has pulled the plug on all marketing services agreements it has with realty firms, sibling publication IMFnews reported last week. The bank confirmed the move to the newsletter, noting that it will discontinue all “space rental agreement programs due to recent regulatory developments.” It added: “We expect our MSA agreements will conclude by Nov. 1, 2015, and we will terminate our lease agreements for space in accordance with their terms. While the decision to wind down our MSA and SRA programs was difficult, the end of these programs allows us to pursue different ways we might help builders ...
Financial institutions will be required to provide much more data to monitor fair lending compliance and access to credit under the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, thanks to a new, 800-page, final rule the CFPB issued last week. Under the new rule, lenders must provide more information about mortgage loan underwriting and pricing, such as an applicant’s debt-to-income ratio, the interest rate of the loan, and the discount points charged. “This information will enhance the ability to screen for possible fair lending problems, helping both institutions and regulators focus their attention on the riskiest areas where fair lending problems are most likely to exist,” said the CFPB. “This information will also help the bureau and other stakeholders monitor developments in specific ...
The mortgage lending industry had a less-than-enthusiastic greeting for another rulemaking from the CFPB that goes on for hundreds of pages. The initial reaction from the American Bankers Association was muted. Frank Keating, president and CEO, said his organization is pleased that the bureau extended the compliance date and excluded the collection of data on most commercial transactions, something the ABA advocated. “However, we continue to be concerned about the privacy of bank customers’ data and ensuring that their information is properly protected. We look forward to commenting on these important issues,” he added. “The rule also imposes significantly expanded data reporting and collection requirements, so we remain concerned about the appropriate balancing of costs and benefits in order to ...
The CFPB recently issued much-sought but quite limited guidance to the mortgage industry on marketing services agreements, emphasizing the legal and regulatory risks for lenders. “We are deeply concerned about how marketing services agreements are undermining important consumer protections against kickbacks,” said CFPB Director Richard Cordray. “Companies do not seem to be recognizing the extent of the risks posed by implementing and monitoring these agreements within the bounds of the law.” The guidance, in the form of a five-page bulletin, explains that, while marketing services agreements are usually framed as payments for advertising or promotional services, “in some cases the payments are actually disguised compensation for referrals. Any agreement that entails exchanging a thing of value for referrals of settlement ...