Friday, March 29, 2013

New Database Allows Americans to Post Mortgage Gripes

Americans have a lot of gripes when it comes to mortgages. Of the 90,000 consumer complaints that have been filed so far to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s new consumer complaint database, 50,000 have related to mortgage issues. Complaints over loan modifications, foreclosures, and other servicing issues dominate.

The CFPB launched a database on Thursday to field consumer complaints -- the nation’s largest public database for consumer financial complaints. The database captures individual complaints on everything from mortgages to credit cards, student loans, bank accounts, and other financial services.

The public can view the complaints in the database by mortgage issue and product type and even organize the issues by name of the lender or servicer. The identity of the person who posted the complaint is not included in the database.

"By sharing these complaints with the public, we are creating greater transparency in consumer financial products and services," says Richard Cordray, CFPB director.

The agency’s Web site notes, however, that it does not verify “all the facts alleged in these complaints but we do take steps to confirm a commercial relationship between the consumer and company.”

You can find this data base at http://www.consumerfinance.gov/complaintdatabase/


Source: “Loan mod, foreclosure complaints dominate CFPB consumer reports,” HousingWire (March 28, 2013) and “CFPB enhances transparency with consumer complaint database,” HousingWire (March 28, 2013)

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Mortgage Program Aims to Cut Payments

The Federal Housing Finance Agency is rolling out a new program designed to help more borrowers reduce their monthly mortgage payments.

Under this program, home owners who are beyond 90 days late on their mortgages automatically will become eligible for a loan modification. The program will be available only to borrowers whose loans are owned or insured by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.

A modification would be finalized after the borrower makes three on-time payments at the lower amount.

Some financial analysts have expressed concern that the program could encourage other borrowers to deliberately miss payments in an attempt to become eligible. FHFA has offered assurances Fannie and Freddie would take certain measures to screen out strategic defaulters.

Source: "Mortgage Program Aims to Cut Payments," Washington Post (March 28, 2013)

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Are Banks Easing Up on Mortgage Standards?


A very tight mortgage lending environment “promises improvements this year as the drivers of tough credit standards reverse,” according to Moody’s Analytics ResiLandscape Report. Still, lending will remain tight by historical standards, the report notes.

Tight underwriting conditions have been one of the main obstacles for the housing market recovery. But the credit agency says that those conditions began to ease somewhat this year and likely will continue to.

"Rising house prices give lenders more breathing room to extend credit," the analysts at Moody’s noted.

Over the past year and a half, large lenders have loosened up or held standards stable on prime loans for mortgage originations, according to the Survey of Senior Lending Officers.

Aiding lenders’ confidence is that mortgage delinquencies have fallen to pre-recession rates.

"Being right-side up on the mortgage improves a borrower’s credit profile. It also lowers the risk of default and increases the likelihood of trade-up buying," according to the Moody’s report.

Mortgage supply will remain constrained, but “improved consumer credit quality combined with steady growth in jobs, low mortgage interest rates and modestly rising house prices makes it clear that more households will be able to qualify for a mortgage," Moody's said. "Greater credit availability will in turn help drive stronger home sales and stronger price appreciation and help keep the housing market and the larger economy on an upward path."

Source: “Slight opening of credit spigot aids housing outlook,” HousingWire (March 4, 2013