Banks maintain real estate-owned properties unequally, with properties in minority communities showing clear signs of vacancy while those in white communities receive necessary attention, according to a new investigation by the National Fair Housing Alliance. The investigation, outlined in the report The Banks are Back Our Neighborhoods are Not: Discrimination in the Maintenance and Marketing of REO Properties, looked at 1,036 REO properties in nine different metro areas, comparing those in predominantly Latino and African-American neighborhoods to those in predominately white communities...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has intervened in an ongoing case involving a foreclosure by American Home Mortgage Servicing, the only mortgage-related probe out of three non-public investigations of debt collection practices to determine whether they violate the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act or the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The CFPB filed an amicus brief in Paul and Angela Birster vs. American Home Mortgage Servicing Inc. (11th Circuit), the agency revealed in its first FDCPA annual report to Congress, which it ...
In Rosenfield v. HSBC Bank USA, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has submitted a friend-of-the-court brief arguing that some mortgage borrowers who did not receive important disclosures mandated by the Truth in Lending Act are permitted to cancel their loans as long as they notify the lender of their intent to cancel within three years. Filed before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit in Denver late last week, the CFPB argued that Section 125 of TILA (U.S.C. Section 1635) provides consumers a statutory right to rescind qualifying mortgage loans ...
Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller, the lead official behind the recent $25 billion mortgage servicing settlement, told industry representatives last week that, unlike past agreements, the AGs are going to be sticklers for full and proper implementation this time around. Implementation is a very, very important aspect to our effort currently and going forward, Miller said to participants in a webinar sponsored by Inside Mortgage Finance, an affiliated publication. We put just an awful lot into this investigation and negotiations, and we dont want it to ...
The full House of Representatives made some progress last week in dealing with a potential blind spot in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act when it comes to maintaining the confidentiality privilege for information and communication shared with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The House passed H.R. 4014, which was introduced Feb. 13, 2012, by Reps. Bill Huizenga, R-MI, Shelley Capito, R-WV, and Spencer Bachus, R-AL. H.R. 4014 would amend Sections 11(t) and 18(x) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C. §§ 1821(t), 1828(x), to make sure the CFPB can ...
Acting Comptroller of the Currency John Walsh reassured participants at an interagency conference on the Community Reinvestment Act last week that the enforcement orders federal bank regulators issued last year and the state attorneys general national mortgage settlement will work well together. Ive said from the beginning that it is not only possible, but absolutely necessary, that our separate actions be able to work well together. And I think weve succeeded in that, Walsh said. The steps we have each required servicers to take to fix the problems in servicing and foreclosure processing ...
Indiana. House Bill 1238 allows a mortgage creditor to petition to have a state court determine whether a property is abandoned, and lays out the criteria and procedures for the court to use in making its determination. Also, Senate Bill 298 stipulates that if a mortgage or vendor's lien does not show the due date of the last installment, the mortgage or lien expires 10 years after the date of execution of the mortgage or lien, not 20 years as had been the case previously. The measure provides an exception if a foreclosure action is brought prior to the expiration...
An ongoing Securities and Exchange Commission investigation into possible misconduct related to Wells Fargos sale of almost $60 billion in MBS has resulted in the agency filing a subpoena enforcement action in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California against the firm. The commission is investigating possible fraud in connection with Wells Fargos sale of nearly $60 billion in residential MBS to investors, the SEC said. Pursuant to subpoenas dating back to September 2011, the bank was obligated to produce (and agreed to produce) documents to the...
Concern among non-agency MBS investors over principal reductions that will occur under the multistate foreclosure settlement is much greater than the reality, said Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller, who played a pivotal role in those negotiations. During a webinar sponsored by Inside Mortgage Finance this week, Miller said that the $25 billion settlement includes protections for MBS investors. He said that negotiators met with MBS investors during the drawn-out process of reaching a settlement with the five largest servicers. The Association of Mortgage Investors has complained that investors...
Deutsche Bank AG has settled a class action suit with disgruntled MBS investors for $32.5 million, after plaintiffs argued that they received false and misleading information regarding their investment. The securities were pass-through Alt A MBS issued by Deutsche between May 2006 and May 2007, which were subsequently downgraded and are no longer marketable at prices anywhere near the price paid by plaintiffs and the class, said an amended complaint. The class action, filed in 2008 by unions Massachusetts Bricklayers and Masons Trust Funds, the Pipefitters Retirement Fund Local 597...