The Real Deal New York

Posts Tagged ‘center for responsible lending’

  • Borrowers from racial minorities accounted for a large portion of the U.S. population whose homes fell into foreclosure between 2004 and 2008, according to a report by the Center for Responsible Lending cited by the Daily. Approximately 6.4 percent of mortgages taken out in that four-year period have fallen into foreclosure, and another 8.3 percent of the mortgages taken out during that period are on the brink of foreclosure.

    African-Americans and Latinos were more likely to be sold risky loans between 2004 and 2008, the Daily said, making them more inclined to default. Even minority borrowers with great credit scores were more likely to pay higher rates than white borrowers. [more]

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  • A borrower’s bill of rights

    April 20, 2011 10:31AM

    From the April issue: When you take out a home mortgage, do you expect to be treated fairly and competently by your bank or loan servicer?

    Most likely you do. But the widely publicized “robo-signing” and foreclosure scandals suggest that for thousands of homeowners, fair dealing and competence have not been routinely available at some of the largest mortgage servicing operations in the country.

    According to witnesses at recent congressional hearings: [more]

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  • You may have seen reports that the federal government is proposing new mortgage finance rules under which only home purchasers who can afford a minimum 20 percent down payment on a conventional loan would get a shot at the best available interest rates and terms.

    That is correct, and it’s deeply sobering news for large numbers of first-time and moderate-income buyers who can’t come up with that much cash or afford to pay higher rates.

    But some of the other requirements that federal agencies and the Obama administration are proposing in the same plan have gotten much less attention, yet could prove just as troublesome for consumers: [more]

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  • Disagreements are underway in Washington over how much to punish the banks involved in mortgage fraud abuse and over who should benefit from a settlement, the New York Times reported. The newly created Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is pushing for $20 billion or more in penalties, a measure which is supported by the attorneys general and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. But other regulators, including the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which oversees national banks, and the Federal Reserve, do not favor such a large fine, contending that a small number of people were the victims of flawed foreclosure procedures. Comments

  • Congress reached an agreement today on the terms of the long-debated
    finance reform bill, which could have wide-ranging implications for the mortgage industry, if the bill is approved by a vote, according to the New York Times. Analysts expect the congressional vote to take place in the coming days. Under the
    terms of the bill, mortgage lenders would be required to look more closely at borrowers’ qualifications, making mandatory checks on their
    income and assets before granting a loan. Other rules include a ban on payment penalties for
    people with adjustable rate mortgages. Mortgage brokers and bank
    employees will no longer be able to earn bonuses based on the type of
    loan they issue, in the hopes that this will eliminate any incentive
    to push high-interest loans on borrowers to inflate bank profits.
    According to Julia Gordon, senior policy counsel for the Center for
    Responsible Lending, there will also be a cap limiting mortgage
    origination fees to 3 percent of the loan, with exceptions for
    required upfront mortgage insurance premiums. [NYT]

    [more]

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  • Congress reached an agreement today on the terms of the long-debated
    finance reform bill, which could have wide-ranging implications for the mortgage industry, if the bill is approved by a vote, according to the New York Times. Analysts expect the congressional vote to take place in the coming days. Under the
    terms of the bill, mortgage lenders would be required to look more closely at borrowers’ qualifications, making mandatory checks on their
    income and assets before granting a loan. Other rules include a ban on payment penalties for
    people with adjustable rate mortgages. Mortgage brokers and bank
    employees will no longer be able to earn bonuses based on the type of
    loan they issue, in the hopes that this will eliminate any incentive
    to push high-interest loans on borrowers to inflate bank profits.
    According to Julia Gordon, senior policy counsel for the Center for
    Responsible Lending, there will also be a cap limiting mortgage
    origination fees to 3 percent of the loan, with exceptions for
    required upfront mortgage insurance premiums. [NYT]

    [more]

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  • Congress is pushing for legislation designed to curb abusive lending practices that lured people into ill-suited loans prone to
    foreclosure, the Washington Post reported. The main goal is to align the financial incentives of lenders with the financial well-being of consumers. The provisions would change the way loan officers are compensated and hold lenders responsible for their loans, by requiring them to extend mortgages only to borrowers who can repay them and limit penalties for those who pay off their loans early. “It would have been unthinkable to get through financial reform without addressing the mortgage market because this is why we are in the mess we’re in,” said Julia Gordon, senior policy counsel at the Center for
    Responsible Lending, which supports the provisions. Advocates for the mortgage industry, who have resisted federal regulation in the past, are likely to object, but the industry has accepted that some changes are inevitable. The measures are included in both the House and Senate versions of the financial overhaul legislation, and a final bill is scheduled to reach President Barack Obama for his signature this summer. [Washington Post]

    [more]

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  • Mortgage pros brace for hit to pocketbook

    February 19, 2010 03:11PM

    From the February issue: When the Federal Reserve Board invites comments on proposed changes to
    one of its regulations, a few hundred responses typically trickle in.
    But before its recent deadline for feedback on amendments that
    would revise the disclosure rules for closed-end mortgages, or
    mortgages that can’t be paid off until they mature, the agency was
    deluged with nearly 4,000 comments.
    Many came from loan originators, in New York and elsewhere, who
    alleged that the Fed’s proposal to restrict a compensation practice
    known as yield-spread premiums –YSPs for short — will put mortgage
    brokers out of business and hamper lending.

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  • Rising unemployment is causing the foreclosure crisis, which started
    with the relatively small subprime market, to expand to prime
    borrowers. That’s a much larger pool of homeowners, a sign that
    foreclosure rate — more than 6,600 home foreclosure filings per day,
    according to the Center for Responsible Lending — isn’t likely to slow
    down in the near future. “People are no longer defaulting simply
    because of a change in the payment structure of their loan. They are
    defaulting because of lost jobs or reduced hours or pay,” said a
    Florida foreclosure task force report released in September. Michael
    Barr, assistant secretary for financial institutions at the Treasury
    Department, said last month that more than six million families could
    lose their homes over the next three years. [more]

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