The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau late last week issued its long-awaited proposal to establish national mortgage servicing standards for banks and nonbanks alike, extending a number of key aspects of the big national servicing settlement to the entire industry in the process. The proposed rule covers nine major topics and would implement changes made by the Dodd-Frank Act to the Truth in Lending Act and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act. The proposed rule generally requires servicers of closed-end residential mortgage loans (other than reverse mortgages) to send a periodic statement for each billing cycle, and the CFPBs proposal spells out the timing, form and content requirements of such statements, and includes sample forms that servicers can use. Special rules will apply...
As the shadow banking sector has grown and evolved since the 1970s, questions have arisen as to the extent to which traditional banks may have been displaced by other financial institutions, insurance companies and entities as alternate sources of financing and the credit enhancement to securitization transactions. However, three economists at the New York Federal Reserve Bank recently found that, contrary to the notion that banks are being eclipsed by other institutions, banks have held their own against insurance companies involved in the enhancement business, despite their underdog status. The first thing to note is that enhancements by insurance companies outnumber...
On recommendation by its Inspector General, the Department of the Treasury is developing written policies and procedures for selecting financial agents that will require full and timely documentation of the selection process. The recommendation was prompted by an IG audit of Treasurys selection of financial agents for the Agency MBS Purchase Program, which is no longer in operation. Treasury acquired a total of $225 billion of agency MBS under the program, which the agency began selling in March last year when market conditions improved. Sales were completed in March 2012. State Street Bank and the New York branch of Barclays Bank were selected...
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Reserve are implementing third-party recommendations to improve borrower outreach and provide more opportunity for borrowers to request an independent foreclosure review (IFR), and giving consumers more time to ask for a review. Borrowers can request a review if they believe they have suffered financial injury from improper foreclosure actions in 2009 and 2010. The IFR process is being conducted by 14 mortgage servicers that are subject to the consent orders issued by the OCC and the Fed in April 2011. The orders required servicers to take steps to establish strong and comprehensive standards for mortgage servicing and foreclosure processing and to carry out...
Home Affordable Modification activity in the second quarter of 2012 was well below HAMP activity in the second quarter of 2011, according to an Inside Mortgage Finance analysis of reports from the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program and Treasury Department. The number of permanent HAMP mods outstanding hit 818,803 at the end of the second quarter of 2012, an increase of 24,055 compared with the previous quarter. But activity in the second quarter of 2012 was down 65.7 percent compared with activity a year ago. HAMP activity spiked in the second quarter of 2011 and has declined each quarter since. A recent audit completed by the SIGTARP suggested that activity has been limited...
Mortgage lenders and appraisers widely agree that the appraisal process needs to be improved, as the industry faces a fresh wave of new federal regulations. During a conference sponsored this week by the Collateral Risk Network and the American Enterprise Institute, John Brenan, director of appraisal issues at The Appraisal Foundation, suggested that lenders have stymied appraiser efforts to change the process. You cant ignore the fact that the banking lobby is one of the strongest in the country, he said. Penny Reed, a vice president of strategic partner management at Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, acknowledged...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has been feeling the heat over the size of its proposed rule to streamline and integrate the disclosures consumers get when taking out a home loan, so agency officials engaged in a little bit of push-back last week in an effort to fend off the criticism. The push-back started early in the week during a hearing of the House Small Business Committee, during which Rep. Scott Tipton, R-CO, took issue with the rulemakings size that exceeded 1,000 pages in draft form, a fraction of which is new...
American International Group, MGIC Investment, Genworth Financial and Radian Group have been served with subpoenas by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the firms said in public filings last week, as the bureau is apparently probing to determine if the mortgage insurance companies transferred billions in M.I. premiums to the banks that made the mortgages. PHH Corp. made a similar disclosure back in January. The CFPBs subpoenas, known as Civil Investigative Demands, indicate that the bureaus enforcement...
The top priority in any effort to revamp, reform or otherwise reduce risk in the $1.8 trillion tri-party repurchase or repo market should be to clearly determine whos in charge from a federal perspective, according to a top Senate Democrat. In holding this weeks hearing of the Senate Banking Subcommittee on Securities, Insurance and Investment, Chairman Jack Reed, D-RI, said the government needs to defuse potential risk to the tri-party repo credit market for funding as an act of emergency preparedness rather than allow another financial crisis, such as what crippled the market in 2008. One of the lessons we learned...
In response to criticism that the Home Affordable Modification Program is susceptible to fraud, the Treasury Department recently established a fraud detection program with unprecedented penalties for the non-agency portion of HAMP. In certain circumstances, the Treasury will recapture any servicer, borrower or investor incentive payments, even for loan modifications completed before the new fraud detection program was announced. The process was detailed in HAMP Supplemental Directive 12-04. The Treasury said it hired ...