Although the CFPB recently issued a “clarifying” letter on errors tied to the TRID integrated disclosure rule, deep concerns remain among originators that fund non-agency product for sale into the secondary market. Moreover, according to interviews conducted by Inside Mortgage Finance, an affiliated publication, some nonbank lenders are seeing noticeable increases in origination costs because loans are taking longer to close and therefore remain on warehouse lines for an extended period of time. Because nonbanks fund almost all of their production using warehouse credit, the implication boils down to this: already squeezed profit margins are going to shrink. Industry efforts to comply with the new disclosures, which merge requirements of the Truth in Lending Act and the Real Estate Settlement ...
The recent letter from CFPB Director Richard Cordray to the Mortgage Bankers Association clarifying certain aspects of the bureau’s integrated disclosure rule has some important take-aways – and certain limitations – the industry should be mindful of, according to some top industry attorneys. In a recent online blog posting, attorneys Donald Lampe and Leonard Chanin of Morrison & Foerster LLP identified a handful of key take-aways for mortgage market participants related to the TRID rule. First, “If mortgage loan originators and others involved in the origination, financing and sales of mortgage loans are not familiar with the benefits of [specific] Know Before You Owe disclosure cure provisions, now is the time to assess them,” the attorneys began. They then noted that Cordray’s ...
The latest installment of the Campbell Surveys/Inside MortgageFinance HousingPulse Survey of real estate agents again found widespread, but generally minor, disruptions to mortgage closings throughout the United States due to the CFPB’s integrated disclosure rule known as TRID. TRID did affect December closings, manifesting as the second month of slight increases in closing times and in the percent of missed closings. “Most housing market metrics continue to be strong, despite the onset of TRID and the entry into the winter season,” said the report, which is sponsored by Inside Mortgage Finance, an affiliated newsletter. Further, “Closing times metrics are still showing a minor effect of TRID, and the predicted significant impact in December did not materialize.” The report also provided ...
Investors in non-agency U.S. residential mortgage-backed securities are unlikely to face much in the way of risk stemming from lender non-compliance with the new requirements of the CFPB’s integrated disclosure rule known as TRID, according to analysts at Fitch Ratings. “Although the frequency of non-compliance issues will likely be elevated initially as lenders implement the new changes, those non-compliance issues are not likely to translate into higher risk for bondholders,” the analysts said in a recent report. Their initial due diligence sampling of prime jumbo mortgages in the secondary market has revealed a high level of compliance issues thus far. However, most of them appear to be good-faith errors. The ratings service is continuing its discussions with market participants on ...
Here are the Top 10 TRID Deficiencies, According to One Lender. The folks at Stearns Correspondent Lending recently published a list of the top 10 compliance deficiencies associated with the CFPB’s integrated disclosure rule, as follows: 1.The Closing Disclosure was not provided to the borrower within three business days of the closing date. 2. Various unspecified issues with the Loan Estimate.3. The Loan Estimate was not disclosed to the borrower within three business days of the application date. 4. Borrower(s) did not receive the Loan Estimate within four business days of the closing date. 5. The lender failed to provide a valid change of circumstance for all subsequent Loan Estimates in the file. 6. The lender failed to ...
PHH, CFPB Have a Court Date. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia has scheduled to hear oral arguments in the case of PHH Corp. v. CFPB on April 12 at 9:30 am ET. Analysts at Compass Point Research & Trading said in a client note that “the oral argument date is consistent with our expectations and supports our 4Q16 estimate for a decision.” The crux of the dispute is the bureau’s assertion that PHH violated the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act by illegally referring borrowers to mortgage insurance companies in exchange for kickbacks. Back in January 2014, the CFPB initiated an administrative proceeding against PHH. Administrative Law Judge Cameron Elliot subsequently held that PHH’s referrals of ...
There’s mounting evidence that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s disclosure rule is having an impact on home sales and purchase mortgages, according to the latest Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance HousingPulse Tracking Survey. In December, closing times on mortgage-financed home purchases continued to stretch out and fewer sales closed on time. Tom Popik, research director of Campbell Surveys, said the CFPB’s Truth in Lending/Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act disclosure rule appears to have caused slight increases in closing times and the share of missed closings for the second month in a row. “Closing time metrics are still showing...
Earnings season has begun, and among the biggest financial institutions and mortgage lenders that have reported thus far, there’s been little evidence of damage to the bottom line as a result of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s integrated disclosure rule known as TRID. At top-ranked Wells Fargo, total loan production for the fourth quarter was $47 billion, versus $55 billion in the third quarter, and $44 billion in the fourth quarter of 2014, something Chairman and CEO John Stumpf attributed to seasonality as well as TRID. During an earnings-related conference call with investors last week, Stumpf was asked...
By now the word is out: Certain unnamed secondary market investors are turning away mortgages because of compliance errors, expressing the opinion they do not want to be on the “liability hook” for any origination errors under the new integrated disclosure rule known as TRID. The Mortgage Bankers Association recently singled out a jumbo investor that’s been rejecting 100 percent of the loans offered by originators. The trade group declined to identify the investor, but other ...
FHA lenders are uneasy over whether issues raised by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s new integrated disclosure rules could affect FHA lending. Although the issues cited by lenders are not FHA issues per se, these lenders are concerned that such uncertainties may cause problems for their FHA business, according to mortgage industry consultant Brian Chappelle, a principal at Potomac Partners. For example if a lender cures a mistake and the cure results in a reimbursement of, say, $100 to the borrower at closing, would that be considered a violation of the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s minimum 3.5 percent cash-investment requirement for FHA loans. “I don’t think it is a violation, but lenders are worried about how HUD might interpret it,” said Chappelle. “It is well after closing and it is obviously not a gift given to the borrower. It is ...