Washington,
Jan 20 : More than five years after the housing market collapsed, the
U.S. government's newly created consumer watchdog said it will force banks to
verify a borrower's ability to repay loans to ward off the kind of loose lending
that helped push the U.S. economy into recession.
The Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau said its new guidelines would also protect borrowers from
irresponsible mortgage lending by providing some legal shields for lenders who
issue safer, lower-priced loan products.
Lenders and consumer groups have
anxiously awaited the new rules, which are among the most controversial the
government watchdog is required to issue by the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform
law.
"When consumers sit down at the closing table, they shouldn't be set
up to fail with mortgages they can't afford," Richard Cordray, the bureau's
director, said in a statement.
The new rules are intended to combat
lending abuses that contributed to the U.S. housing bubble, when shoddy mortgage
standards led American households to take on billions of dollars in debt they
could not afford.
The U.S. economy is still feeling the after-effects of
the bubble, which sparked a global credit crisis after it burst in 2006. As the
housing market imploded, banks sharply tightened the screws on
lending.
Regulators said the new rules would head off future crises by
preventing irresponsible lending, without forcing banks to restrict credit
further. Lenders will have to verify a potential borrower's income, the amount
of debt they have and their job status before issuing a mortgage.
And
because lenders are likely to want the heightened legal protection that comes
with offering certain "plain vanilla" loans, the rules could go a long way in
determining who gets a loan and who can access low-cost borrowing
rates.
Dodd-Frank directed regulators to designate a category of
"qualified mortgages" that would automatically be considered compliant with the
ability-to-repay requirement. The rule was first set in motion by the Federal
Reserve and then handed off to the consumer bureau in July 2011.
The
consumer protection bureau said that it would define "qualified mortgages" as
those that have no risky loan features - such as interest-only payments or
balloon payments - and with fees that add up to no more than 3 percent of the
loan amount.
In addition, these loans must go to borrowers whose debt
does not exceed 43 percent of their income.
These loans would carry extra
legal protection for lenders under a two-tiered system that appears to create a
compromise between the housing industry and consumer advocates.
Bank
groups had lobbied the bureau to extend a full "safe harbor" to all qualified
loans, preventing consumers from claiming in lawsuits that they did not have the
ability to repay them. But consumer advocates wanted a lower form of protection
that would allow borrowers greater latitude to sue.
Under the rules
announced, the highest level of protection would go to lower-priced qualified
mortgages. Such prime loans generally will go to less-risky consumers with sound
credit histories, the bureau said.
Higher priced loans would receive less
protection. Lenders would be presumed to have verified the ability to repay the
loan, but borrowers could sue if they could show that they did not have
sufficient income to pay the mortgage and cover other living
expenses.
Some lawmakers and mortgage lenders had warned against a
draconian rule that could exacerbate the current credit crunch and set back a
housing market that has become a bright spot in an otherwise tepid economic
recovery.
Consumer bureau officials said they were sensitive to concerns
about credit tightening, and they baked into the rules several provisions meant
to keep credit flowing and to smooth the transition to the new
regime.
The new rules establish an additional category of loans that
would be temporarily treated as qualified. These mortgages could exceed the 43
percent debt-to-income ratio as long as they met the underwriting standards
required by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac or other U.S. government housing
agencies.
The provision would phase out in seven years, or sooner if
housing agencies issue their own qualified mortgage rules or if the government
ends its support of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two housing finance giants
it rescued in 2008.
Regulators also proposed creating a qualified
mortgage category that would apply to community banks and credit
unions.
Banks will have until January 2014 to comply with the new rules,
the consumer bureau said.
Ends
SA/EN
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Consumer watchdog tightens mortgage lending rules on banks
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