Washington,
Jan 27 : The US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau announced new
rules for mortgage servicers to help prevent the sloppy practices that
aggravated the U.S. foreclosure crisis.
Mortgage servicers collect
monthly payments from borrowers on behalf of the investors that own the loans.
That often involves letting borrowers know about the status of loans, modifying
the loans for those struggling to make payments on time, and handling
foreclosures.
The CFPB rules will now require servicers to follow clear
procedures to help troubled borrowers seeking alternatives to losing their
homes. The rules also restrict what is known as dual-tracking, in which
servicers simultaneously pursue a loan modification and the foreclosure
process.
"For many borrowers, dealing with mortgage servicers has meant
unwelcome surprises and constantly getting the runaround," CFPB Director Richard
Cordray said in a statement.
"Our rules ensure fair treatment for all
borrowers and establish strong protections for those struggling to save their
homes," he said.
The consumer bureau was created by the 2010 Dodd-Frank
financial oversight law and given responsibility for policing mortgage markets
and other consumer products. The regulator first proposed rules for mortgage
servicers in August.
Servicing problems -- including poor record-keeping,
sparse customer service and "robo-signing" unread foreclosure documents -- came
under intense scrutiny as foreclosures exploded after the 2007-2009 financial
crisis.
Bank of America Corp, Citigroup Inc, JPMorgan Chase & Co,
Wells Fargo & Co and Ally Financial Inc entered into a $25 billion
settlement last year with state and federal authorities over abusive servicing
and foreclosure actions.
The consumer watchdog said it looked at the
changes stipulated in that agreement, as well as state and other federal rules
for mortgage servicers, before deciding on its final rules.
The new rules
would create a minimum national standard for mortgage servicers, bureau
officials said. Servicers have until January 2014 to comply.
Under the
new guidelines, servicers must alert mortgage borrowers who miss two consecutive
payments and spell out options, such as changing the interest rate or extending
the terms of the loan, that could help borrowers avoid foreclosure.
The
rules preempt quick foreclosures by requiring servicers to wait until a loan is
delinquent more than 120 days before beginning foreclosure proceedings, the
bureau said.
Borrowers who apply for loss mitigation must be evaluated
for all of the options allowed by the investor, who owns the loan, and servicers
must have an appeals process for borrowers whose applications are
denied.
Regulators stopped short of mandating that servicers offer
specific options such as loan modifications, which consumer groups wanted in the
final rules.
"The CFPB's final rules fail to implement the key lesson of
the foreclosure crisis, that a loan modification requirement is essential to
protect qualified homeowners from unnecessary foreclosures," Alys Cohen, an
attorney with the National Consumer Law Center, said in a statement.
In
addition, the rules require servicers to provide warnings before interest rates
adjust, correct errors quickly, and help consumers avoid so-called force-placed
insurance, or homeowners' insurance bought by the servicer that is often more
expensive than what borrowers might find on their own.
Some small
companies that service loans they own or make themselves will be exempt from
many of the rules. Regulators expanded this group in the final rules to include
servicers with 5,000 or fewer loans, after community banks argued they have more
incentives to work with borrowers than larger servicers
do.
Ends
SA/EN
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Consumer bureau issues rules to clean up mortgage servicing
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