The Mortgage Bankers Association last week won affirmation of its July victory over the Department of Labor in the trade groups appeal of a government policy that declared mortgage loan officers did not qualify under the administrative exemption to overtime pay. On Oct. 2, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia refused to grant a full-court review of its decision exactly three months earlier that sided with the MBA on how the DOL imposed overtime compensation requirements under the Fair Labor Standards Act. The MBA filed...
The Department of Justice recently announced settlements from three fair lending actions, all of which included allegations related to wholesale mortgage lending operations. In the first case, Southport Bank of Kenosha, WI, agreed to pay $687,000 to African-American and Hispanic wholesale mortgage borrowers as part of a settlement to resolve allegations that it engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination on the basis of race and national origin. The proceeds of the settlement will be used...
Clayton Holdings has long cooperated with members of the Residential MBS Working Group, but a change in personnel at the interagency group and a wide-ranging subpoena have strained the due diligence firms relationship with prosecutors, according to court filings. The U.S. Attorneys Office for the District of Connecticut, on behalf of the RMBS Working Group, is seeking an order to compel Clayton to cooperate with a subpoena issued in early July. The subpoena relates to an investigation into 16 firms that participated in the issuance and underwriting of non-agency MBS from 2005 through 2007. The RMBS Working Group is looking into possible violations of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act. The subpoena essentially seeks...
A Manhattan federal judge last week rebuffed a motion by a number of major lenders to dismiss a bid by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. against the firms in connection with $388 million of non-agency MBS sold to the now-defunct Colonial Bank. The FDIC filed its complaint in August 2012, alleging that the defendants including JPMorgan, CitiGroup, Ally Securities, First Horizon, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Merrill Lynch and Wells Fargo placed poor-quality loans in the 11 underlying residential MBS and then misled investors by marking them as safe investments. Montgomery, AL-based Colonial Bank failed...
A year and a half after the $25 billion national servicing settlement took effect, attorneys general and the settlements monitor turned up the heat this week on the five banks participating in the settlement. Wells Fargo faces a new lawsuit, Bank of America settled similar claims, and all five servicers face additional testing standards and procedures, with BofA and Wells agreeing to even more stringent process improvements. New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, D, announced a lawsuit against Wells. He said consumer advocates have documented hundreds of violations to the settlement by Wells, including delays, lost paperwork and wrongful denials. BofA avoided...
The Department of Housing and Urban Development this week proposed its own qualified mortgage rule for FHA-insured mortgage loans that builds off the existing QM rule finalized by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau earlier this year. The proposed rule aligns with the ability-to-repay criteria in the Truth in Lending Act as required by the Dodd-Frank Act. Once the proposal becomes final and takes effect, it would replace the CFPBs rule for FHA loans. The DFA has set a seven-year timetable for FHA, the VA and the Rural Housing Service to promulgate their own QM rules. HUDs proposed QM rule would ...
The FHA was still able to endorse single-family mortgage loans during the first week of the partial government shutdown, although no FHA staff were available to underwrite and approve loans. A significant delay in the processing of new FHA insurance applications might have occurred this week because only 64 employees are still at work in HUDs Office of Housing, which includes the FHA. HUD said it might need more essential employees per day, on an intermittent basis, to perform key activities. The department expects these calls for reinforcement to ...
Settlement talks between JPMorgan Chase and federal and state negotiators have reportedly focused on a possible $11 billion to resolve a string of investigations into the banks mortgage lending and securitization practices. The amount under negotiation has ballooned from JPMorgans initial offer of $3 billion to $4 billion, which negotiators rejected. The talks cover federal probes in Philadelphia, Washington and Sacramento. The Department of Justice, Department of Housing and Urban Development and New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, who co-chairs a presidential task force investigating bank securitization deals, are involved...
A federal district court judge in Manhattan this week rejected Wells Fargos plea to dismiss a lawsuit alleging it lied about the quality of home loans submitted to the Department of Housing and Urban Development for FHA insurance over a 10-year period. District Court Judge Jesse Furman allowed government claims under the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 to proceed but ruled that legal injury claims based on events that transpired before June 2009 were time-barred and that the government had waited too long to file a lawsuit. The judge also threw out claims of negligence and unjust enrichment. The government filed...
A federal district court judge in California this week dismissed without prejudice an action brought by securitization trustees to stop the City of Richmond, CA, and its partners from implementing an eminent domain strategy to seize and refinance underwater mortgages. Judge Charles Breyer of the U.S. District for Northern California said he decided to dismiss the case rather than hold it in abeyance because the plaintiffs claims are not yet ripe for adjudication. In other words, one cant sue over something that has not happened or is not bound to happen. In fact, certain developments, such as the finalization of an agency rule or the resolution of pending suits in other jurisdictions, may leave...