8/17/2021

Mortgage Laws



Fire away mortgage test questions and answers 


I hope this helps you



https://youtu.be/MvWRUx_uh0U 








 

Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE per the definition of "Material change"?

 

A change in the interest rate previously offered a borrower

A change in the type of loan offered to a borrower

A change that affects the borrower's information as given on the application such as an incorrect address

A change that is important enough to influence a borrower in making a borrowing decision

"Material change" means a change that would be important to a reasonable borrower in making a borrowing decision, and includes a change in the interest rate previously offered a borrower, a change in the type of loan offered to a borrower, or a change in fees to be charged to a borrower resulting in total fees greater than $100.

Which of the following is the BEST DEFINITION of "Exempt use of property"?

 

property exempt from the government use; cannot be included as easement

predominant use of property for environmental studies, exempt from taxation

exclusive use of property owned by an exempt entity for educational, religious, or charitable purposes.

primary use of property by state agency for headquarters and offices

"Exempt use of property" or "use of property for exempt purposes" means predominant or exclusive use of property owned by an exempt entity for educational, literary, scientific, religious, charitable, or governmental purposes, as defined in this chapter.

Which of the following statements is FALSE per the definition of "Material benefit" when referencing the current mortgage rates or terms?

 

A reduction in principal amount of the loan by 10% or more

Permanent reduction in the annual interest rate of at least 1% on an annual basis

Reduction of taxes to be levied on the property by 25%

Conversion of an adjustable interest rate loan to a fixed rate loan and the annual interest rate is equal to or less than the current adjustable interest rate

"Material Benefit" as used in Section 494.00296, F.S., is a beneficial change in the current mortgage rates or terms where one or more of the following occurred: (1) Reduction in Principal Amount of the loan by 10% or more; (2) Permanent reduction in the annual interest rate of at least 1% on an annual basis; or (3) Conversion of an Adjustable Interest Rate loan to a Fixed Rate loan and the annual interest rate is equal to or less than the current adjustable interest rate.

In general, an "Indirect owner" what percentage does the indirect owner have control (e.g. voting security, partnership's capital, etc)?

 

55%

5%

25%

15%

"Indirect owner" means, with respect to direct owners and other indirect owners in a multilayered organization: (a)?For an owner that is a corporation, each of its shareholders that beneficially owns, has the right to vote, or has the power to sell or direct the sale of, 25 percent or more of voting security of the corporation. (b)?For an owner that is a partnership, each general partner and each limited or special partner that has the right to receive upon dissolution, or has contributed, 25 percent or more of the partnership's capital. (c)?For an owner that is a trust, the trust and each trustee. (d)?For an owner that is a limited liability company: 1.?Each member that has the right to receive upon dissolution, or that has contributed, 25 percent or more of the limited liability company's capital; and 2.?If managed by elected managers or appointed managers, each elected or appointed manager. (e)?For an indirect owner, each parent owner of 25 percent or more of its subsidiary.

Which of the following is NOT included in the definition of "Rule"?

 

Memoranda issued by the Executive Office of the Governor relating to information resources management

Agency statement interpreting policy and its requirements

Statement of agency practice that further explains a required statute requirement

An amendment to an existing rule

"Rule" means each agency statement of general applicability that implements, interprets, or prescribes law or policy or describes the procedure or practice requirements of an agency and includes any form which imposes any requirement or solicits any information not specifically required by statute or by an existing rule. The term also includes the amendment or repeal of a rule. The term does not include: 

(a)   Internal management memoranda which do not affect either the private interests of any person or any plan or procedure important to the public and which have no application outside the agency issuing the memorandum. 

(b)   Legal memoranda or opinions issued to an agency by the Attorney General or agency legal opinions prior to their use in connection with an agency action.

 (c)  The preparation or modification of: 

1. Agency budgets. 

2.  Statements, memoranda, or instructions to state agencies issued by the Chief Financial Officer or Comptroller as chief fiscal officer of the state .

Indicate which statement is NOT a reason for denying licensure to an applicant.

 

Insufficient credit history information

Poor financial responsibility and character

Committed previous violation involving breach of trust

Pending felony criminal prosecution involving fraud

...However, it is a ground for denial of licensure if the applicant:   (a)  Has committed any violation specified in this chapter, or is the subject of a pending felony criminal prosecution or a prosecution or an administrative enforcement action, in any jurisdiction, which involves fraud, dishonesty, breach of trust, money laundering, or any other act of moral turpitude. 

(b)  Has failed to demonstrate the character, general fitness, and financial responsibility necessary to command the confidence of the community and warrant a determination that the applicant will operate honestly, fairly, and efficiently... 3.?The office may not use a credit score or the absence or insufficiency of credit history information to determine character, general fitness, or financial responsibility.

How many hours of pre-license class must be completed by an applicant for a loan originator license?

 

12

20

16

18

Each individual desiring to obtain licensure as a loan originator 

shall apply to the Office of Financial Regulation by submitting the following:(e) Confirmation from the Registry that the applicant has satisfied the requirement to complete a 20-hour pre-license class approved by the Registry;

 

What is the timeframe allowed in which an applicant may change information on a pending application form?

 

2 weeks

15 days.

7 days

1 month

If the information contained in the NMLS Individual Form (Form MU4) or any amendment thereto becomes inaccurate for any reason the applicant shall file an amendment through the Registry correcting such information within 15 days of the change.

How shall notice be given to each applicant regarding the decision for his/her application for license?

 

email message

written notice.

personal phone call

list of approved licensees is on Florida Office of Financial Regulation website

Each applicant shall be given written notice, personally or by mail, that the agency intends to grant or deny, or has granted or denied, the application for license.

What happens if a license was issued by mistake?

 

The application fee is returned to the applicant and license is annulled.

The license holder may not re-apply for a period of six months.

The license is annulled.

The license is valid for 30 days only.

A loan originator license shall be annulled pursuant to s. 120.60 if it was issued by the office by mistake.

What is the minimum net worth a mortgage lender must maintain?

 

There are no minimum requirements..

$500,000

$100,0000

$250,000

A mortgage lender may close loans in its own name but may not service the loan for more than 6 months unless the lender has a servicing endorsement. 

Only a mortgage lender who continuously maintains a net worth of at least $250,000 may obtain a servicing endorsement.

What is the type of fee acceptable for a mortgage broker to receive from a borrower?

 

a finders fee of 1% of the first year's insurance policy coverage for recommending an insurance broker

service fee for coordination of documents with title company

nonrefundable application fee or fee based on the mortgage amount being funded

no fee is acceptable as compensation

At the time of accepting a mortgage loan application, a mortgage broker may receive from the borrower a nonrefundable application fee. 

If the mortgage loan is funded, the nonrefundable application fee shall be credited against the amount owed as a result of the loan being funded. A person may not receive any form of compensation for acting as a loan originator other than a nonrefundable application fee or a fee based on the mortgage amount being funded.

What is the timeframe a property owner must begin repairs / rebuilding of homestead property that has been devastated damaged before the property is considered abandoned?

 

2 years after January 1 from the property's damage

18 months after January 1 from the property's damage

3 years after January 1 from the property's damage

1 year after the property's damage

Failure by the property owner to commence the repair or rebuilding of the homestead property within 3 years after

 January 1 following the property's damage or destruction constitutes abandonment of the property as a homestead.

Which of the following is NOT considered a prohibited action for a loan originator regarding loan modification services?

 

Charge or attempt to collect or secure payment for loan modification services before completing all loan modification services

Be employed by only one mortgage lender or mortgage broker

Execute a loan modification without the consent of the borrower

Initiate loan modification services without the borrower agreeing to the loan modification services

PROHIBITED ACTS. When offering or providing loan modification services, a loan originator, mortgage broker, or mortgage lender may not: 

(a)  Engage in or initiate loan modification services without first executing a written agreement for loan modification services with the borrower; 

(b)  Execute a loan modification without the consent of the borrower after the borrower is made aware of each modified term; or 

(c)   Solicit, charge, receive, or attempt to collect or secure payment, directly or indirectly, for loan modification services before completing or performing all services included in the agreement for loan modification services. A fee may be charged only if the loan modification results in a material benefit to the borrower. The commission may adopt rules to provide guidance on what constitutes a material benefit to the borrower.

How long must samples of advertisements be kept for recordkeeping?

 

2 years.

Indefinitely

5 years

1 year

Each person required to be licensed under this chapter must 

maintain a record of samples of each of its advertisements, 

including commercial scripts of each radio or television broadcast, for examination by the office for

 2 years after the date of publication or broadcast.

What is the type of fee acceptable for a mortgage broker to receive from a borrower?

 

no fee is acceptable as compensation

a finders fee of 1% of the first year's insurance policy coverage for recommending an insurance broker

service fee for coordination of documents with title company

nonrefundable application fee or fee based on the mortgage amount being funded

At the time of accepting a mortgage loan application, a mortgage broker may receive from the borrower a nonrefundable application fee. 

If the mortgage loan is funded, the nonrefundable application fee shall be credited against the amount owed as a result of the loan being funded. A person may not receive any form of compensation for acting as a loan originator other than a nonrefundable application fee or a fee based on the mortgage amount being funded.

How many years must books, accounts and records be maintained?

 

5 years

3 years.

1 year

6 months

All books, accounts, records, documents, and receipts for expenses paid by the licensee on behalf of the borrower, including each closing statement signed by a borrower, shall be preserved and kept available for examination by the office for at least 3 years after the date of original entry.

Which of the following is NOT considered a prohibited action for a loan originator regarding loan modification services?

 

Charge or attempt to collect or secure payment for loan modification services before completing all loan modification services

Execute a loan modification without the consent of the borrower

Be employed by only one mortgage lender or mortgage broker

Initiate loan modification services without the borrower agreeing to the loan modification services

PROHIBITED ACTS. When offering or providing loan modification services, a loan originator, mortgage broker, or mortgage lender may not: (a)?Engage in or initiate loan modification services without first executing a written agreement for loan modification services with the borrower; (b)?Execute a loan modification without the consent of the borrower after the borrower is made aware of each modified term; or (c)?Solicit, charge, receive, or attempt to collect or secure payment, directly or indirectly, for loan modification services before completing or performing all services included in the agreement for loan modification services. A fee may be charged only if the loan modification results in a material benefit to the borrower. The commission may adopt rules to provide guidance on what constitutes a material benefit to the borrower.

Who is to sign the Anti-Coercion form?

 

The Commissioner and the borrower

The borrower first and two other witnesses in attendance at closing

The borrower

The lender and the borrower

Such notice shall be given to said borrower in the form prescribed by the Director in Rule 69O-124.013, F.A.C., in writing, with a copy of said notice to be signed by the borrower and retained by the lender.

If a corporation owns property to be considered for the homestead exemption, how many years must it lease the land to be operating as a cooperative?

 

50 years

75 years

98 years.

125 years

A corporation leasing land for a term of 98 years or more for the purpose of maintaining and operating a cooperative thereon shall be deemed the owner for purposes of this exemption.

What action may the office take if it has reason to believe a violation is, has or is about to occur?

 

provide evidence of the violation or its possible occurance to the appropriate legal entities

contact the Registry and the Attorney General to begin an investigation

assemble a committee to discuss the concerns with the licensee so that he/she has an opportunity to respond prior to punitive actions

issue and serve an order to cease and desist to the person believed to be in violation

The office may issue and serve upon any person an order to cease and desist and to take corrective action if it has reason to believe the person is violating, has violated, or is about to violate any provision of this chapter, any rule or order issued under this chapter, or any written agreement between the person and the office.

What recourse does an individual have should he / she believes a violation has occurred under this regulation?

 

May phone the Attorney General's office over the recorded phone line and provide details and concerns

May write or email the Registry so the Registry can review with the Office appropriately

May file a written complaint with the Office.

May contact the Commissioner to issue a cease and desist order

Any person having reason to believe that a provision of this act has been violated may file a written complaint with the office setting forth details of the alleged violation.

Score: 100%

Question 3

What is the charge against a person who unlawfully obtains money and property in excess of $50,000 affecting five or more victims?

 

A misdemeanor of the third degree

A misdemeanor of the first degree

A life felony

A felony in the first degree

Any person who violates any provision of this chapter, in which the total value of money and property unlawfully obtained exceeds $50,000 and there are five or more victims, commits a felony of the first degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084.

Which of the following is NOT an action the Office may impose for disciplinary action?

 

Impose a fine

Issue a reprimand

Deny a license

Notifies the principal loan originator to have wages withheld

If the office finds a person in violation of any act specified in this section, it may enter an order imposing one or more of the following penalties: (a)?Issuance of a reprimand. (b)?Suspension of a license, subject to reinstatement upon satisfying all reasonable conditions imposed by the office. (c)?Revocation of a license. (d)?Denial of a license. (e)?Imposition of a fine in an amount up to $25,000 for each count or separate offense. (f)?An administrative fine of up to $1,000 per day, but not to exceed $25,000 cumulatively...

Which of the following is NOT an action the Office may take in an effort to reduce the burden on licensees being examined?

 

Limit the period of time for the examination so that it is conducted quickly.

Furnish a copy of all examinations to an appropriate regulator

Accept an examination from an appropriate regulator

Conduct a joint or concurrent examination with another regulatory agency

To reduce the burden on persons subject to this chapter, the office may conduct a joint or concurrent examination with a state or federal regulatory agency and may furnish a copy of all examinations to an appropriate regulator if the regulator agrees to abide by the confidentiality provisions in chapter 119 and this chapter. The office may also accept an examination from an appropriate regulator.

Upon discovery of violation, the AZDFI will notify the violator of the allegations via:

 

A written notice that explains the alleged acts and contains a time and place for a hearing

A telephone call

A copy of their license with "revoked" stamped on it

A face to face interview

When it has been discovered that a person participating in the conduct of the financial institution or enterprise has been in engaged in any questionable acts, the violator and the financial institution where they are employed will receive a written notice from the Superintendent that contains a statement of the alleged facts and a time and place at which a hearing shall be held.

How quickly must the civil penalty assessed against a person for violation of title be paid?

 

By the fifteenth of the month following the service of the notice of the assessment on the person.

Within 10 days after the service of the notice of the assessment on the person.

Within thirty days after the service of the notice of assessment on the person.

By the 1st of the following month after the notice of the assessment on the person.

If the assessment is not paid in full within thirty days after the service of the notice of the assessment on the person, the attorney general, on request of the superintendent, shall bring an action in the superior court in the county in which a violation of this section is alleged to have occurred in the same manner as the filing of other actions.

Relative to license maintenance, mortgage brokers, mortgage bankers, and mortgage loan originators must meet specific DFI requirements; which of the following acts is not a DFI requirement?

 

Employing brokers or bankers keep and maintain the MLO's license at the principal place of business during the MLO's term of employment.

NMLS Registered MLO's may be granted a temporary license for up to 180 days.

Mortgage loan originators must notify the superintendent of a change in residence.

Within thirty days of a mortgage loan originator, employers must notify the superintendent of the licensee's termination and return the license to the superintendent..

For answer B to meet specific DFI requirements, the employing broker or banker must notify the superintendent of the mortgage loan originators' termination within five days of the licensee's termination. (A.R.S. § 6-991.04).

Mortgage brokers are required to observe generally accepted accounting principles and practices; which of the following acts is not a generally accepted accounting principle?

 

Immediate deposit of all monies received into an escrow account with a licensed escrow agent.

Monetary withdrawals from the escrow account can only be disbursed according to the terms of the escrow instructions.

The mortgage broker may serve as the escrow agent and disburse funds at closing.

The Mortgage Broker may accept an appraisal fee, a credit investigation fee, and an application fee which may not be commingled with other broker monies.

(§ 6-906. Accepted Accounting Practices) C. A mortgage broker shall immediately deposit all monies received by the mortgage broker in an escrow account with an escrow agent licensed pursuant to chapter 7 of this title. Withdrawals shall only be disbursed according to the terms of the escrow instructions. The escrow agent shall not be the mortgage broker. A mortgage broker, however, may accept an appraisal fee, which the mortgage broker shall only use to obtain an appraisal, a credit investigation fee and a fee in connection with an application for a mortgage loan. The mortgage broker shall not commingle the appraisal fee or credit investigation fee with other monies of the mortgage broker."

What happens to a cease and desist order if the individual involved resigns from his position or has his employment terminated?

 

The order is null and void.

The order proceeds as if the person is still employed by the financial institution or enterprise.

The order is put in pending status for six months and then, if the person does not gain employment during that time, the order is considered null and void.

The order is put on hold until the person is employed by another financial institution or enterprise.

If the individual involved resigns or has his or her employment terminated, it does not affect the jurisdiction and authority of the superintendent to issue a notice and proceed against that person.

 

REGULATION B

 1002.1  Authority, scope and purpose.

(a)  Authority and scope. This part, known as Regulation B, is issued by the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (Bureau) pursuant to title VII (Equal Credit Opportunity Act) of the Consumer Credit Protection Act, as amended (15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.). Except as otherwise provided herein, this part applies to all persons who are creditors, as defined in § 1002.2(l), other than a person excluded from coverage of this part by section 1029 of the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010, title X of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, Public Law 111--203, 124 Stat. 1376. Information collection requirements contained in this part have been approved by the Office of Management and Budget under the provisions of 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. and have been assigned OMB No. 3170--0013.

(b)  Purpose. The purpose of this part is to promote the availability of credit to all creditworthy applicants without regard to race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, or age (provided the applicant has the capacity to contract); to the fact that all or part of the applicant's income derives from a public assistance program; or to the fact that the applicant has in good faith exercised any right under the Consumer Credit Protection Act. The regulation prohibits creditor practices that discriminate on the basis of any of these factors. The regulation also requires creditors to notify applicants of action taken on their applications; to report credit history in the names of both spouses on an account; to retain records of credit applications; to collect information about the applicant's race and other personal characteristics in applications for certain dwelling-related loans; and to provide applicants with copies of appraisal reports used in connection with credit transactions.

[Codified to 12 C.F.R. § 1002.1]

 

Childbearing, childrearing. In evaluating creditworthiness, a creditor shall not make assumptions or use aggregate statistics relating to the likelihood that any category of persons will bear or rear children or will, for that reason, receive diminished or interrupted income in the future.

Race, color, religion, national origin, sex. Except as otherwise permitted or required by law, a creditor shall not consider race, color, religion, national origin, or sex (or an applicant's or other person's decision not to provide the information) in any aspect of a credit transaction.

[Codified to 12 C.F.R. § 1002.8]

§ 1002.9  Notifications.

(a)  Notification of action taken, ECOA notice, and statement of specific reasons. (1) When notification is required. A creditor shall notify an applicant of action taken within:

(i)  30 days after receiving a completed application concerning the creditor's approval of, counteroffer to, or adverse action on the application;

(ii)  30 days after taking adverse action on an incomplete application, unless notice is provided in accordance with paragraph (c) of this section;

(iii)  30 days after taking adverse action on an existing account; or

(iv)  90 days after notifying the applicant of a counteroffer if the applicant does not expressly accept or use the credit offered.

B)  Provide a written statement of the reasons for adverse action and the ECOA notice specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section if the applicant makes a written request for the reasons within 60 days of the creditor's notification.

§ 1002.12  Record retention.

 

b)  Preservation of records. (1) Applications. For 25 months (12 months for business credit, except as provided in paragraph (b)(5) of this section) after the date that a creditor notifies an applicant of action taken on an application or of incompleteness, the creditor shall retain in original form or a copy thereof:

B)  The statement of specific reasons for adverse action; and

 

(4)  Enforcement proceedings and investigations. A creditor shall retain the information beyond 25 months (12 months for business credit, except as provided in paragraph (b)(5) of this section) if the creditor has actual notice that it is under investigation or is subject to an enforcement proceeding for an alleged violation of the Act or this part, by the Attorney General of the United States or by an enforcement agency charged with monitoring that creditor's compliance with the Act and this part, or if it has been served with notice of an action filed pursuant to section 706 of the Act and § 1002.16 of this part. The creditor shall retain the information until final disposition of the matter, unless an earlier time is allowed by order of the agency or court.

 

(i)  Ethnicity, and race using either;

(A)  For ethnicity, the aggregate categories Hispanic or Latino, and not Hispanic or Latino; and for race, the aggregate categories American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and White; or

(B)  The categories and subcategories for the collection of ethnicity and race set forth in appendix B to 12 CFR part 1003.

 

[Codified to 12 C.F.R. 1002.13]

§ 1002.14  Rules on providing appraisals and other valuations.

(a)  Providing appraisals and other valuations. (1)  In general. A creditor shall provide an applicant a copy of all appraisals and other written valuations developed in connection with an application for credit that is to be secured by a first lien on a dwelling. A creditor shall provide a copy of each such appraisal or other written valuation promptly upon completion, or three business days prior to consummation of the transaction (for closed-end credit) or account opening (for open-end credit), whichever is earlier. An applicant may waive the timing requirement in this paragraph (a)(1) and agree to receive any copy at or before consummation or account opening, except where otherwise prohibited by law. Any such waiver must be obtained at least three business days prior to consummation or account opening, unless the waiver pertains solely to the applicant's receipt of a copy of an appraisal or other written valuation that contains only clerical changes from a previous version of the appraisal or other written valuation provided to the applicant three or more business days prior to consummation or account opening. If the applicant provides a waiver and the transaction is not consummated or the account is not opened, the creditor must provide these copies no later than 30 days after the creditor determines consummation will not occur or the account will not be opened.

(2)  Disclosure. For applications subject to paragraph (a)(1) of this section, a creditor shall mail or deliver to an applicant, not later than the third business day after the creditor receives an application for credit that is to be secured by a first lien on a dwelling, a notice in writing of the applicant's right to receive a copy of all written appraisals developed in connection with the application. In the case of an application for credit that is not to be secured by a first lien on a dwelling at the time of application, if the creditor later determines the credit will be secured by a first lien on a dwelling, the creditor shall mail or deliver the same notice in writing not later than the third business day after the creditor determines that the loan is to be secured by a first lien on a dwelling.

(3)  Reimbursement. A creditor shall not charge an applicant for providing a copy of appraisals and other written valuations as required under this section, but may requireapplicants to pay a reasonable fee to reimburse the creditor for the cost of the appraisal or other written valuation unless otherwise provided by law.

 

 1002.16  Enforcement, penalties and liabilities.

(a)  Administrative enforcement. (1) As set forth more fully in section 704 of the Act, administrative enforcement of the Act and this part regarding certain creditors is assigned to the Comptroller of the Currency, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Board of Directors of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, National Credit Union Administration, Surface Transportation Board, Civil Aeronautics Board, Secretary of Agriculture, Farm Credit Administration, Securities and Exchange Commission, Small Business Administration, Secretary of Transportation, and Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.

 

(b)  Penalties and liabilities. (1) Sections 702(g) and 706(a) and (b) of the Act provide that any creditor that fails to comply with a requirement imposed by the Act or this part is subject to civil liability for actual and punitive damages in individual or class actions. Pursuant to sections 702(g) and 704(b), (c), and (d) of the Act, violations of the Act or this part also constitute violations of other Federal laws. Liability for punitive damages can apply only to nongovernmental entities and is limited to $10,000 in individual actions and the lesser of $500,000 or 1 percent of the creditor's net worth in class actions. Section 706(c) provides for equitable and declaratory relief and section 706(d) authorizes the awarding of costs and reasonable attorney's fees to an aggrieved applicant in a successful action

 

.

(2)  As provided in section 706(f) of the Act, a civil action under the Act or this part may be brought in the appropriate United States district court without regard to the amount in controversy or in any other court of competent jurisdiction within five years after the date of the occurrence of the violation, or within one year after the commencement of an administrative enforcement proceeding or of a civil action brought by the Attorney General of the United States within five years after the alleged violation.

(3)  If an agency responsible for administrative enforcement is unable to obtain compliance with the Act or this part, it may refer the matter to the Attorney General of the United States. If the Bureau, the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, or the National Credit Union Administration has reason to believe that one or more creditors have engaged in a pattern or practice of discouraging or denying applications in violation of the Act or this part, the agency shall refer the matter to the Attorney General. If the agency has reason to believe that one or more creditors violated section 701(a) of the Act, the agency may refer a matter to the Attorney General.

 

(ii)  Inform the applicant that the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development has been notified and that remedies may be available under the Fair Housing Act.

 

 

TILA Regulation Z

 TILA, you have a right of rescission

OCC

The 2016 Servicing Rule took effect on October 19, 2017, except the provisions related to successors in interest and periodic statements for consumers in bankruptcy, which took effect on April 19, 2018. The CFPB concurrently issued an interpretive rule under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) to clarify the interaction of the FDCPA and specified mortgage servicing rules in Regulations X and Z. (81 Fed. Reg. 71977) (October 19, 2016).

In 2018, the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act (EGRRCPA)11 amended several provisions of TILA, including: (1) the addition of a new safe-harbor qualified mortgage category for portfolio mortgages of certain insured depository institutions and insured credit unions; (2) modification of the waiting period requirements for high-cost mortgage loan consummation under certain conditions; (3) clarification of “customary and reasonable” as they pertain to fee appraisers who voluntarily donate appraisal services to certain charitable organizations; and (4) student loan protections in the event of bankruptcy or death of the student or non-student obligor. The EGRRCPA also amended TILA to exclude manufactured or modular housing retailers and their employees from loan originator compensation requirements when specific conditions are met, and amended the Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act (SAFE Act) regarding employment transition of certain loan originators. These provisions were generally effective on May 24, 2018, except for the student loan protections, which became effective on November 24, 2018, and the SAFE Act changes, which became effective on November 24, 2019. On November 16, 2019, the Bureau issued an interpretive rule on the SAFE Act changes,


Subpart E 

 certain disclosures and provide limitations for closed-end credit transactions and open-end credit plans that have rates or fees above specified amounts or certain prepayment penalties 


Special disclosures are required, including the total annual loan cost rate, for reverse mortgage transactions. Rules also prohibit specific acts and practices in connection with high-cost mortgages. As of 2015 certain closed-end transactions secured by real property, or a cooperative unit (co--ops), as required with disclosures for mortgage transfers  and disclosure requirements for periodic statements for residential mortgage loans 


All transactions secured by a dwelling have to ability to repay standards.

 


Credit costs may vary depending on the interest rate, the amount of the loan and other charges, the timing and amounts of advances, and the repayment schedule. The APR, which must be disclosed in nearly all consumer credit transactions, is designed to take into account all relevant factors and to provide a uniform measure for comparing the cost of various credit transactions. The APR is a measure of the cost of credit, expressed as a nominal yearly rate. It relates the amount and timing of value received by the consumer to the amount and timing of payments made. The disclosure of the APR is central to the uniform credit cost disclosure envisioned by the TILA. The value of a closed-end credit APR must be disclosed as a single rate only, whether the loan has a single interest rate, a variable interest rate, a discounted variable interest rate, or graduated payments based on separate interest rates (step rates), and it must appear with the segregated disclosures. Segregated disclosures are grouped together and do not contain any information not directly related to the disclosures required under

 

Financial institutions may, if permitted by state or other law, precompute interest by applying a rate against a loan balance using a simple interest, add-on, discount or some other method, and may earn interest using a simple interest accrual system, the Rule of 78s (if permitted by law) or some other method. Unless the financial institution’s internal interest earnings and accrual methods involve a simple interest rate based on a 360-day year that is applied over actual days (even that is important only for determining the accuracy of the payment schedule), it is not relevant in calculating an APR, since an APR is not an interest

 

The regulation requires that the terms “finance charge” and “annual percentage rate” be disclosed more conspicuously than any other required disclosure, subject to limited exceptions. The finance charge and APR, more than any other disclosures, enable consumers to understand the cost of the credit and to comparison shop for credit. A creditor’s failure to disclose those values accurately can result in significant monetary damages to the creditor, either from a class action lawsuit or from a regulatory agency’s order to reimburse consumers for violations of law. If an APR or finance charge is disclosed incorrectly, the error is not, in itself, a violation of the regulation if: • The error resulted from a corresponding error in a calculation tool used in good faith by the financial institution. • Upon discovery of the error, the financial institution promptly discontinues use of that calculation tool for disclosure purposes. • The financial institution notifies the CFPB in writing of the error in the calculation tool.

 

When a financial institution claims a calculation tool was used in good faith, the financial institution assumes a reasonable degree of responsibility for ensuring that the tool in question provides the accuracy required by the regulation (15 U.S.C. 1640 (c)). For example, the financial institution might verify the results obtained using the tool by comparing those results to the figures obtained by using another calculation tool. The financial institution might also verify that the tool, if it is designed to operate under the actuarial method, produces figures similar to those provided by the examples in Appendix J to the regulation. The calculation tool should be checked for accuracy before it is first used and periodically thereafter

 

  Servicers are required to provide consumers with 15 days’ advance written notice of a change to any term required to be disclosed when the required minimum periodic payment is increased. Notice is not required when the change involves a reduction of any component of a finance charge or other charge or when the change results from an agreement involving a court proceeding. If the creditor prohibits additional extensions of credit or reduces the credit limit in certain circumstances (if permitted by contract), a written notice must be provided no later than three business days after the action is taken and must include the specific reasons for the action. 

 

 

Subpart C – Closed-End Credit Subpart C relates to closed-end credit. It contains rules on disclosures , treatment of credit balances annual percentage rate calculations rescission rights , and advertising 


 TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosures must be given for most closed-end transactions secured by real property or a cooperative unit, other than a reverse mortgage subject to 12 CFR 1026.33. The TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosures do not apply to HELOCs, reverse mortgages, or mortgages secured by a mobile home or by a dwelling that is not attached to real property. Truth in Lending disclosures (TIL disclosures) and the Consumer Handbook on Adjustable Rate Mortgages (CHARM) booklet must still be provided for certain closed-end

 

Subpart C – Closed-End Credit Subpart C relates to closed-end credit. It contains rules on disclosures  treatment of credit balances annual percentage rate calculations, rescission rights  and advertising 


 The TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosures must be given for most closed-end transactions secured by real property or a cooperative unit, other than a reverse mortgage subject to 


 The TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosures do not apply to HELOCs, reverse mortgages, or mortgages secured by a mobile home or by a dwelling that is not attached to real property. Truth in Lending disclosures (TIL disclosures) and the Consumer Handbook on Adjustable Rate Mortgages (CHARM) booklet must still be provided for certain closed-end

 

Consumer receives the Closing Disclosure no later than three business days before loan consummation . If the loan is a purchase transaction, the special information booklet must also be provided within three business days of receipt of the consumer’s application 

The specifics of these disclosure timing requirements are further discussed below, including a discussion about revised disclosures.


 Mortgage loans not subject to the rule are:  reverse mortgages, and chattel-dwelling loans.

Reverse mortgages, disclosures must be delivered or mailed to the consumer no later than the third business day after a creditor receives the consumer’s written application (12 CFR For chattel-dwelling mortgage loans, disclosures must be provided to the consumer prior to consummation of the loan (12 CFR 1026.17(b)). Revised disclosures are also required within three business days of consummation if certain mortgage loan terms change  For loans like reverse mortgages, the consumer will receive the Good Faith Estimate (GFE), HUD-1 Settlement Statement (HUD-1), and Truth in Lending disclosures as required under the applicable sections of both TILA and RESPA. Consumers receive TIL disclosures for chattel-dwelling loans that are not secured by land, but the GFE and the HUD-1 are not required. 


Variable rate and ARM transactions secured by a dwelling have additional disclosure obligations with specific timing requirements both prior to and after consummation. 

 


• Disclosures for variable rate loans must be given for the full term of the transaction and must be based on the terms in effect at the time of consummation.

• If the variable rate transaction includes either a seller buydown that is reflected in a contract or a consumer buydown, the disclosed APR should be a composite rate based on the lower rate for the buy-down period and the rate that is the basis for the variable rate feature for the remainder of the term. • If the initial rate is not determined by the index or formula used to make later interest rate adjustments, as in a discounted variable-rate transaction, the disclosed APR must reflect a composite rate based on the initial rate for as long as it is applied and, for the remainder of the term, the rate that would have been applied using the index or formula at the time of consummation (i.e., the fully indexed rate). o If a loan contains a rate or payment cap that would prevent the initial rate or payment, at the time of the adjustment, from changing to the fully indexed rate, the effect of that rate or payment cap needs to be reflected in the disclosures. o The index at consummation need not be used if the contract provides a delay in the implementation of changes in an index value (e.g., the contract indicates that future rate changes are based on the index value in effect for some specified period, such as 45 days before the change date). Instead, the financial institution may use any rate from the date of consummation back to the beginning of the specified period (e.g., during the previous 45-day period). • If the initial interest rate is set according to the index or formula used for later adjustments but is set at a value as of a date before consummation, disclosures should be based on the initial interest rate, even though the index may have changed by close date

 

The total amount of the finance charge must be disclosed for all loans. In a transaction secured by real property or a dwelling, the disclosed finance charge and other disclosures affected by the disclosed finance charge (including the amount financed and the annual percentage rate) must be treated as accurate if the amount disclosed as the finance charge (1) is understated by no more than $100 or (2) is greater than the amount required to be disclosed. Amount Financed

 

If the obligation is a renewable balloon payment instrument that unconditionally obligates the financial institution to renew the short-term loan at the consumer’s option or to renew the loan subject to conditions within the consumer’s control, the payment schedule must be disclosed using the longer term of the renewal period or periods. The long-term loan must be disclosed with a variable rate feature. If there are no renewal conditions or if the financial institution guarantees to renew the obligation in a refinancing, the payment schedule must be disclosed using the shorter balloon payment term. The short-term loan must be disclosed as a fixed rate loan, unless it contains a variable rate feature during the initial loan term. Annual Percentage Rate (Closed-End Credit)

 

Due to the structure of construction-permanent and certain other multiple advance loans, Regulation Z includes certain optional provisions to help a creditor estimate the components of the APR and finance charge computations for these loans. In many instances, the amount and dates of advances are not predictable with certainty since they depend on the progress of the work. Regulation Z provides that the APR and finance charge for such loans may be estimated for disclosure based on the best information reasonably available at the time of disclosure (

a creditor has optionality as to whether it discloses the advances separate or together as one transaction in certain circumstances. First, a series of advances under an agreement to extend credit up to a certain amount may be considered as one transaction or disclosed as separate transactions 


When a multiple-advance loan to finance the construction of a dwelling may be permanently financed by the same creditor, the construction phase and the permanent phase may be treated as either one transaction or more than one transaction

Here is why: construction loans might have thirty draws during a year or more, and it would be difficult to disclose pieces of one loan as draw occur. Because construction loans or construction permanent loans may be disclosed as one transaction, or as multiple transactions, computations can be impacted by this decision. If the actual schedule of advances is not known, the methods set forth in Appendix D may be used to estimate the interest portion of the finance charge and the annual percentage rate and to make disclosures.


In a multiple advance construction loan, a creditor may establish an “interest reserve” to ensure that interest is paid as it accrues by designating a portion of the loan amount for that interest payment purpose. If the creditor requires interest reserves for construction loans, Appendix D provides further guidance. Among other things, the amount of interest reserves included in the commitment amount is not treated as a prepaid finance charge, whether the interest reserve is the same as or different from the estimated interest figure calculated under Appendix D (Comment App. D-5). If a creditor permits a consumer to make interest payments as they become due, the interest reserve should be disregarded in the disclosures and calculations under Appendix D (Comment App. D-5.i). If a creditor requires the establishment of an interest reserve and automatically deducts interest payments from the reserve amount rather than allow the consumer to make interest payments as they become due, the fact that interest will accrue on those interest payments as well as the other loan proceeds must be reflected in the calculations and disclosures. 



360-Day and 365-Day Years – 

By State

Disclosure violations may occur, however, when a financial institution applies a daily interest factor based on a 360-day year to the actual number of days between payments. In those situations, the financial institution must disclose the higher values of the finance charge, the APR, and the payment schedule resulting from this practice.

 

***Use TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosures (See Regulation Z): • Most closed-end mortgage loans, including: o Construction-only loans o Loans secured by vacant land or by 25 or more acres

 

 

Continue to use TIL20 and RESPA disclosures (as applicable): • HELOCs (subject to disclosure requirements

 • Reverse mortgages21 (subject to existing TIL and GFE disclosures) • 

Chattel-secured mortgages (i.e., mortgages secured by a mobile home or by a dwelling that is not attached to real property, such as land) (subject to existing TIL disclosures, and not RESPA)

Creditors making closed-end consumer credit transactions secured by real property or a cooperative unit, other than a reverse mortgage, and subject to provisions  


The Loan Estimate must be delivered or placed in the mail to the consumer no later than the third business day after the creditor or mortgage broker receives the consumer’s application for a mortgage loan . If the Loan Estimate is not provided to the consumer in person, the consumer is considered to have received the Loan Estimate three business days after it is delivered or placed in the mail (this applies to electronic delivery as well)  Other than for transactions secured by a consumer’s interest in a timeshare plan, the Loan Estimate must be delivered or placed in the mail no later than the seventh business day before consummation 

 

6 pieces of information are:

The consumer’s name; • The consumer’s income; The consumer’s social security number to obtain a credit report; • The property address; • An estimate of the value of the property; and • The mortgage loan amount sought.


Consumer may modify or waive the seven business day waiting period after receiving the Loan Estimate if the consumer determines that the mortgage loan is needed to meet a bona fide personal financial emergency that necessitates consummating the credit transaction before the end of the waiting period

Zero tolerance. For charges other than those that are specifically excepted, as noted below, creditors may not charge consumers more than the amount disclosed on the Loan Estimate, other than for changed circumstances that permit a revised Loan Estimate. The zero tolerance charges generally include but are not limited to the following: • Fees for required services paid to the creditor, mortgage broker, or an affiliate of either 

 • Fees paid to an unaffiliated third party if the creditor did not permit the consumer to shop for a third-party service provider for a settlement service or transfer taxes

 percent cumulative tolerance. Charges for third-party services and recording fees paid by or imposed on the consumer are grouped together and are subject to a 10 percent cumulative tolerance. This means the creditor may charge the consumer more than the amount disclosed on the Loan Estimate for any of these charges so long as the total sum of the charges does not exceed the sum of all such charges disclosed on the Loan Estimate by more than 10 percent 

These charges are:  Recording fees •

 Charges for required third-party services if: o The charge is not paid to the creditor or the creditor’s affiliate  The consumer is permitted by the creditor to shop for the third-party service 

 

Variances permitted without tolerance limit:

Prepaid interest; property insurance premiums; amounts placed into an escrow, impound, reserve or similar account 

• Charges paid to third-party service providers for services required by the creditor if the creditor permits the consumer to shop and the consumer selects a third-party service provider not on the creditor’s written list of service providers

 • Property taxes and other charges paid to third-party service providers for services not required by the creditor

 

Refunds of errors within 60 days of consummation. If the amounts paid by the consumer at closing exceed the amounts disclosed on the Loan Estimate beyond the applicable tolerance threshold, the creditor must refund the excess to the consumer no later than 60 calendar days after consummation 


• For charges subject to zero tolerance, any amount charged beyond the amount disclosed on the Loan Estimate must be refunded to the consumer


• For charges subject to a 10 percent cumulative tolerance, to the extent the total sum of the charges exceeds the sum of all such charges disclosed on the Loan Estimate by more than 10 percent, the difference must be refunded to the consumer

 

Loan Estimate - Revisions and Corrections

(A): Changed circumstances – increased settlement charges. Changed circumstances that occur after the Loan Estimate is provided to the consumer that cause estimated settlement charges to increase more than is permitted under the TILARESPA Integrated Disclosure rule

A natural disaster that damages the property or otherwise results in additional closing costs; o A creditor’s estimate of title insurance is no longer valid because the title insurer goes out of business; or o New information not relied on when the Loan Estimate was provided is discovered, such as a neighbor of the seller filing a claim contesting the property boundary.

B) Changed circumstances – consumer eligibility: such as income different than stated

(C): Revisions requested by the consumer: title changes, power of attorney, legal

(D): Rate locks after initial Loan Estimate.

(E): Expiration of Loan Estimate. If the consumer indicates an intent to proceed with the transaction more than 10 business days (or any additional number of days as extended by the creditor orally or in writing) after the Loan Estimate was delivered or placed in the mail to the consumer, a creditor may use a revised Loan Estimate. No justification is required for the change to the original estimate of a charge other than the lapse of 10 business days or the additional number of days as extended by the creditor

(F): Construction loans. Creditors also may use a revised Loan Estimate where the transaction involves financing of new construction and the creditor reasonably expects that settlement will occur more than 60 calendar days after the original Loan Estimate has been provided if the original Loan Estimate clearly and conspicuously stated that at any time prior to 60 days before consummation, the creditor may issue revised disclosures

 

Documentation of intent to proceed.  the creditor must document the consumer’s communication of the intent to proceed (12 CF Oral communication in person immediately upon delivery of the Loan Estimate; or • Oral communication over the phone, written communication via email, or signing a pre-printed form after receipt of the Loan Estimate.

 

The Closing Disclosure generally must contain the actual terms and costs of the transaction form integrates and replaces the HUD-1 and the final TIL

If the actual terms or costs of the transaction change prior to consummation, the creditor must provide a corrected disclosure that contains the actual terms of the transaction and complies with the other requirements of New three-day waiting period. If the creditor provides a corrected disclosure, it must provide the consumer with an additional three-business-day waiting period prior to consummation if the annual percentage rate becomes inaccurate, the loan product changes, or a prepayment penalty is added to the transaction

 

“Consummation” occurs when the consumer becomes contractually obligated to the creditor on the loan, not, for example, when the consumer becomes contractually obligated to a seller on a real estate transaction. The time when a consumer becomes contractually obligated to the creditor on the loan depends on applicable state law Closing Disclosure form no later than three business days before consummation If the Closing Disclosure is provided in person, it is considered received by the consumer on the day it is provided. If it is mailed or delivered electronically, the consumer is considered to have received the Closing Disclosure three business days after it is delivered or placed in the mail Settlement agents. Creditors may contract with settlement agents to have the settlement agent provide the Closing Disclosure to consumers on the creditor’s behalf, provided that the settlement agent complies with all relevant requirements

Three-business-day waiting period. The loan may not be consummated less than three business days after the Closing Disclosure is received by the consumer. A business day means all calendar days except Sundays and the legal public holidays

Three categories of changes that require a corrected Closing Disclosure containing all changed terms  • Changes that occur before consummation that require a new three-business-day waiting period

 • Changes that occur before consummation and do not require a new three-business-day waiting period; 

 • Changes that occur after consummation. The disclosed APR becomes inaccurate, The loan product changes.

 A prepayment penalty is added



When a post-consummation event requires a corrected Closing Disclosure, the creditor must deliver or place in the mail a corrected Closing Disclosure not later than 30 calendar days after receiving information sufficient to establish that such an event has occurred.  


In transactions involving a seller, the settlement agent must provide the seller with a corrected Closing Disclosure if an event occurs within 30 days of consummation that makes the disclosures inaccurate as they relate to the amount actually paid by the seller. The settlement agent must deliver or mail a corrected closing disclosure no later than 30 days from receiving information that establishes the Closing Disclosure is inaccurate and results in a change to an amount actually paid by the seller from what was previously disclosed Changes due to clerical errors. The creditor must provide a corrected Closing Disclosure to correct non-numerical clerical errors no later than 60 calendar days after consummation Refunds related to the good faith analysis. 

The creditor can cure a tolerance violation  by providing a refund to the consumer and delivering or placing in the mail a corrected Closing Disclosure that reflects the refund no later than 60 calendar days after consummation

A special information booklet, otherwise known as the home buying information booklet, to consumers who apply for a consumer credit transaction secured by real property or a cooperative unit the “Your Home Loan Toolkit”


If the consumer is applying for a HELOC, the creditor (or mortgage broker) can provide a copy of the brochure titled “What You Should Know About Home Equity Lines of Credit” instead of the special information booklet Creditors must deliver or place in the mail the special information booklet not later than three business days after receiving the consumer’s loan application if the creditor denies the consumer’s application or if the consumer withdraws the application before the end of the three business-day period, the creditor need not provide the special information booklet When two or more persons apply together for a loan, the creditor may provide a copy of the special information booklet to just one of them

Regulation Z provides a flexible rule for disclosure of construction loans and construction-permanent loans


. First, it provides that a series of advances under an agreement to extend credit up to a certain amount may be considered as one transaction Regulation Z provides a flexible rule for disclosure of construction loans and construction-permanent loans 


Remember creditor is LENDER, don't let the terms trick you up.

 

 


Mortgage Laws NMLS TEST PREP

 





A summary of the mortgage laws you need to memorize to pass the Federal test

You don't need to know the date but it helps to know the order of when they passed

and when CFPB took over


Regulation B ECOA Equal Credit Op Act 1975 Federal Reserve

Fair Housing Act: race/color/religion/national or/sex/familial status/handicap

Prohibited basis: Race/religion/sex/age/public assistance

Self tests ~ 25 months keep records  Free copy of appraisal/ 

copy 3 days before consummation/

Not consummated closed copies 30 days or less


Regulation Home Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1975 HMDA 

Regulation C requires many financial institutions to annually 

disclose loan data about the communities to which they provided residential mortgages.  

LAR reports Loan Application Register  low/mod    

 Was under Federal Reserve now after 2011 CFPB  COVERED LOANS            

  Fines: $10000 or $500,000 or 1% worth


Regulation N MAP Act Mortgage Acts Protection Advertisements keep 24 months

Homeowner’s Protection Act 1998 Cancel PMI Release PMI  78% 

or date scheduled or refinance


Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), (Regulation X) 1968

Excludes excess of 25 acres/farm/ commercial   includes: 1-4 and 2nd td

a-kickbacks b-unearned and splits c-fees not earned attorney % servicing sold, foreclosure

Regulation Z TILA 1968 APR disclosures 

Dodd Frank Title X Federal Trade Commission changed to CFBP

UDAPP appraisal updated every 2 years


OKAY Section 32 and 35 are difficult for me to memorize as I don't do 

hard money loans. Draw some diagrams to help you remember. 

Read out loud, sing about:

32 HOEPA only owner-occupied refinances HIGH COST 1994

The CFPB High-Cost Mortgage Amendments to Truth in Lending Act (Regulation Z

2014 expanding the types of mortgage loans subject to the protections of the 

Home Ownership and Equity Protections Act (HOEPA), 

expand tests for HOEPA coverage, and a new prepayment penalty threshold test on mortgages.

Three separate HOEPA threshold tests based on: •

The transaction’s annual percentage rate (APR) • 

The amount of points and fees paid in connection with the transaction • 

Prepayment penalties you may charge under the loan or credit agreement   

 first mortgage, the interest-rate trigger point: loan’s 

 APR exceeds 8 percent more than the rates on Treasury securities 

posted on the 15th of the month prior to the application and is of comparable maturity. 

APOR

1st APR exceeds 6.5 over

2nd APR exceeds 8.5 over

8.5 % points for first-lien loans if dwelling is personal property and less than $50,000

Prepay more than 36 months or exceeds 2%

1. Total lender points and fees are greater than 

5 percent of the total loan amount. percentage 

includes certain fees such as origination fees, broker fees,

 processing fees and servicing setup fees.

2.  5 % of the total loan amount if loan amount is $20,000 or more; 

or · The lesser of 8% or $1,000 for loan amounts less than $20,000

 (adjusted annually); 

or TRIGGER: fees and points (mortgage-broker fees) 

borrowers pay at or before closing exceed $547/561 

(2007 amount increased) or 8 percent of the total loan amount, whichever is larger. 

Extra 3 days rescission     

default interest rate cannot be greater than the initial rate on the promissory note.

 no more than two regular monthly periodic payments may be paid 

in advance from the loan proceeds at the closing.

No prepay unless: The lender has verified the borrowers’ gross income

through DTI new loan will be 50 percent or less. 

The money used to prepay the mortgage does not come from 

and is not affiliated with the current lender. 

prohibit a prepayment penalty being charged if

 current lender refinances the mortgage. 

The prepayment penalty does not exceed the first five years of the mortgage.

Due-on-demand clauses restricted.

no lender may refinance a borrower into a 

Section 32 mortgage within the first 12 months 

of the original Section 32 mortgage,

unless the refinance is demonstrated to be in the borrower’s best interest

SECTION 35 High priced HPML                                                                                                                                                       1st lien APR 1.5 higher than APOR Or 2nd APR 3.5 higher than APOR

percentage point benchmarks that characterize HPMLs are:

·  1.5 percent. The rate at which an HPML 

exceeds the prime rate for a first-lien mortgage, 

which has a principal balance that does not exceed

 Freddie Macs maximum principal obligation for purchase.

·  2.5 percent. The rate at which an HPML 

exceeds the prime rate for a first-lien mortgage, 

which has a principal balance that does exceed 

Freddie Macs maximum principal obligation for purchase.

·  3.5 percent. The rate at which an HPML 

exceeds the prime rate for a subordinate-lien mortgage

Freddie Mac purchase eligible HPMLs 

that are fixed-rate mortgages or adjustable rate mortgages

 (ARMs) 5/1 with 7/1 or 10/1 terms. 

These HPMLs cannot be prepayment penalty mortgages or ARMs with an initial fixed-rate period of less than seven years.

35 requires impound except for co-op, construction start, 

bridge less than 12, reverse, rural less than 50000

Appraisal required 2 appraisals on flips seller acquired the property 

90 days (or fewer) before the borrower’s agreement to purchase the property, 

and the borrower’s agreement price is greater than 10 percent. 

or seller acquired the property 91 to 180 days 

before seller’s acquisition price by more than 20 percent.

Loss mitigation more than once

Fines: $10000 1 year jail



Telephone Consumer Protection Act 1991

 from 1934 Communications Act  FCC regulates Fines $1500 per/



Gramm Leach Bliley 1999 Privacy / 

affiliated parties consumer customer 2011 under CFPB

Fines: lessor of 1 mill or 1% assets 5 years jail/



FACT ACT identity theft red flags covered account risks fraud alerts 

Fines $100- $1000/



Fair Credit Reporting Regulation V    Opt out   medical



Regulation P  Privacy notices at start and annual limit share account number

15 USC 6151 – DO NOT CALL



Patriot Act FINANCIAL Crimes Enforcement Network 

Fincen OFAC Dept Treasury SAR report

 

Categorize the laws Respa is X = REXPA with pneumonic devices

REXPA is about time lines


Study a little and in the middle of a topic go get a healthy snack or

walk around the building. 25 minutes, 5 minute break

Cramming isn't the best. 
Take the 20 hour classes and then schedule test for about nine 

days after the class and study every night for two hours.

 

 


8/14/2021

Mortgage Summary Laws








REG B

Equal Credit Opportunity Act  1974 

ECOA under TILA TITLE XIV

Federal Reserve is boss

prevents discrimination/ redlining

Fair Housing Act race/color/religion/national origin/sex/familial status/ HANDICAP

1st lien

denial in 30 days called adverse action with reasons

If more than 1 applicant notice to one is okay

free copy of appraisal

Borrower gets copy of appraisal 3 days prior to consumation.

Minor revisions of appraisal borrower can waive the 3 days at close

Not closed consumated appraisal to borrower before 30 days

cannot ask about Mrs. Ms. Miss

FINES: $10,000 individual actions. Cass actions: penalty of $500,000 or 1% of the creditor's net worth, whichever is lower.

Ethic means Latino... 

Race is American Indian/Asian/Black/Native Hawaiian/ 

Not covered are: manufactured, reverse, business, loan modifications

**********

REGULATION C

Home Mortgage Disclosure Act  HMDA

CFPB amended dwelling-secured standard for all loans or lines of credit that are for personal, family, or household purposes. Thus, most consumer-purpose transactions, including closed-end home-equity loans, home-equity lines of credit, and reverse mortgages, are subject to the regulation. 

All closed end loans for home improvement, purchase or refinance

transactional coverage to require reporting of all open end not home-equity lines of credit.

Federal Reserve

2017 platform/website

Loan data and low to moderate income data

Loan Application Register LAR report Annually

loan number/date/ loan type/ $ purpose/property type/occupancy/preapproval/actions/

DTI/ location/ ethnicity (Hispanic)/ race/ sex/ income/ pice/ HOEPA/ rate/ points/FICO/DU or LP/age/

Depository banks report to supervising agencies, non depository report to HUD US Dept of Housing and Urban Development. The Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council posts the records FFIEC  

Fines: $10000 or $500,000 or 1% of worth


********

REGULATION X

RESPA Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act

1-4 units and 2nd trust deeds

8 a) no kickbacks

8 b) no splits 

8 c) no unearned $ no attorney or broker referral fees

servicers disclose % of loans sold

FINES: $10000 and 1 year jail


******

Regulation Z

CFBP Federal Trade Commission FTC

TILA Truth in Lending HOEPA Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act of 1994

Competitive Equality Banking Act of 1987 - Title I: Financial Institutions Competitive Equality - Amends the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 

1974 RESPA Act

ABILITY TO REPAY

APR disclosure

CFPR rule 2018 Servicer statement books in BK disclose 14 days after event

Title X Dodd Frank

Predatory lending in refinances and closed-end home equity loans with high interest rates or high fees.

HOEPA Section 32 loans must also meet the same APR and APOR criteria as Section 35 loans, but Section 32 loans also include these three additional criteria, which do not apply to Section 35 loans:

  1. The APR is higher than the APOR by more than 6.5 percent.
  2. Total lender/broker points and fees are greater than 5 percent of the total loan amount. This percentage includes certain fees such as origination fees, broker fees, processing fees and servicing setup fees.
  3. A prepayment penalty exceeds 2 percent of the prepaid amount or occurs more than 36 months after closing. lender cannot extend an HPML without setting up an escrow account to collect premium payments for property taxes / insurance except cooperative shares dwelling’s initial construction loan, bridge loans that have loan terms of 12 months or less, Reverse mortgages, certain located in rural or underserved areas

2013 HOEPA Rule 

 6.5 % points for first-lien loans or

  8.5 % points for subordinate-lien loans 

 8.5 % points for first-lien loans if dwelling is personal property and less than $50,000

Points and Fees Test: Points and fees exceeding the greater of 

 5 % of the total loan amount if loan amount is $20,000 or more; or

  The lesser of 8% or $1,000 for loan amounts less than $20,000 (adjusted annually); or

 TILA Higher-Priced Mortgage Loans Appraisal Rule

Section 35 APR higher than APOR by 6.5

prepayment penalty 36 months


Fines: $5000 - 1 million or 1% of worth


*****

Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991 

amended from Communications Act of 1934

auto dialers, do not call

FCC regulates

Fines: $1500 

*****

Gram Leach Bliley 

Privacy  - Affiliated Parties

consumer vs customer ( has an account and applied)

2011 went under CFPB

2016 only need to give initial notice if they do not share

Must notify annually and at opening

Fines: lessor of 1 million or 1% assets 5 years jail

******

FACT Act 2003 FACTA

amended Fair Credit Reporting Act

Red flags

utility companies don't need social security # covered accounts risk identity theft

CREDITOR = bank, broker, or auto dealer

fraud alerts

FINES: $100 -1000

Identity theft, free annual credit report every 12 

8/13/2021

Regulation B for Mortgage

 

evening landscape painting

 



















Free NMLS Study Guide

REGULATION B

 1002.1  Authority, scope and purpose.

(a)  Authority and scope. This part, known as Regulation B, is issued by the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (Bureau) pursuant to title VII (Equal Credit Opportunity Act) of the Consumer Credit Protection Act, as amended (15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.). Except as otherwise provided herein, this part applies to all persons who are creditors, as defined in § 1002.2(l), other than a person excluded from coverage of this part by section 1029 of the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010, title X of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, Public Law 111--203, 124 Stat. 1376. Information collection requirements contained in this part have been approved by the Office of Management and Budget under the provisions of 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. and have been assigned OMB No. 3170--0013.

(b)  Purpose. The purpose of this part is to promote the availability of credit to all creditworthy applicants without regard to race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, or age (provided the applicant has the capacity to contract); to the fact that all or part of the applicant's income derives from a public assistance program; or to the fact that the applicant has in good faith exercised any right under the Consumer Credit Protection Act. The regulation prohibits creditor practices that discriminate on the basis of any of these factors. The regulation also requires creditors to notify applicants of action taken on their applications; to report credit history in the names of both spouses on an account; to retain records of credit applications; to collect information about the applicant's race and other personal characteristics in applications for certain dwelling-related loans; and to provide applicants with copies of appraisal reports used in connection with credit transactions.

[Codified to 12 C.F.R. § 1002.1]

 

Childbearing, childrearing. In evaluating creditworthiness, a creditor shall not make assumptions or use aggregate statistics relating to the likelihood that any category of persons will bear or rear children or will, for that reason, receive diminished or interrupted income in the future.

Race, color, religion, national origin, sex. Except as otherwise permitted or required by law, a creditor shall not consider race, color, religion, national origin, or sex (or an applicant's or other person's decision not to provide the information) in any aspect of a credit transaction.

[Codified to 12 C.F.R. § 1002.8]

§ 1002.9  Notifications.

(a)  Notification of action taken, ECOA notice, and statement of specific reasons. (1) When notification is required. A creditor shall notify an applicant of action taken within:

(i)  30 days after receiving a completed application concerning the creditor's approval of, counteroffer to, or adverse action on the application;

(ii)  30 days after taking adverse action on an incomplete application, unless notice is provided in accordance with paragraph (c) of this section;

(iii)  30 days after taking adverse action on an existing account; or

(iv)  90 days after notifying the applicant of a counteroffer if the applicant does not expressly accept or use the credit offered.

B)  Provide a written statement of the reasons for adverse action and the ECOA notice specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section if the applicant makes a written request for the reasons within 60 days of the creditor's notification.

§ 1002.12  Record retention.

 

b)  Preservation of records. (1) Applications. For 25 months (12 months for business credit, except as provided in paragraph (b)(5) of this section) after the date that a creditor notifies an applicant of action taken on an application or of incompleteness, the creditor shall retain in original form or a copy thereof:

B)  The statement of specific reasons for adverse action; and

 

(4)  Enforcement proceedings and investigations. A creditor shall retain the information beyond 25 months (12 months for business credit, except as provided in paragraph (b)(5) of this section) if the creditor has actual notice that it is under investigation or is subject to an enforcement proceeding for an alleged violation of the Act or this part, by the Attorney General of the United States or by an enforcement agency charged with monitoring that creditor's compliance with the Act and this part, or if it has been served with notice of an action filed pursuant to section 706 of the Act and § 1002.16 of this part. The creditor shall retain the information until final disposition of the matter, unless an earlier time is allowed by order of the agency or court.

 

(i)  Ethnicity, and race using either;

(A)  For ethnicity, the aggregate categories Hispanic or Latino, and not Hispanic or Latino; and for race, the aggregate categories American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and White; or

(B)  The categories and subcategories for the collection of ethnicity and race set forth in appendix B to 12 CFR part 1003.

 

[Codified to 12 C.F.R. 1002.13]

§ 1002.14  Rules on providing appraisals and other valuations.

(a)  Providing appraisals and other valuations. (1)  In general. A creditor shall provide an applicant a copy of all appraisals and other written valuations developed in connection with an application for credit that is to be secured by a first lien on a dwelling. A creditor shall provide a copy of each such appraisal or other written valuation promptly upon completion, or three business days prior to consummation of the transaction (for closed-end credit) or account opening (for open-end credit), whichever is earlier. An applicant may waive the timing requirement in this paragraph (a)(1) and agree to receive any copy at or before consummation or account opening, except where otherwise prohibited by law. Any such waiver must be obtained at least three business days prior to consummation or account opening, unless the waiver pertains solely to the applicant's receipt of a copy of an appraisal or other written valuation that contains only clerical changes from a previous version of the appraisal or other written valuation provided to the applicant three or more business days prior to consummation or account opening. If the applicant provides a waiver and the transaction is not consummated or the account is not opened, the creditor must provide these copies no later than 30 days after the creditor determines consummation will not occur or the account will not be opened.

(2)  Disclosure. For applications subject to paragraph (a)(1) of this section, a creditor shall mail or deliver to an applicant, not later than the third business day after the creditor receives an application for credit that is to be secured by a first lien on a dwelling, a notice in writing of the applicant's right to receive a copy of all written appraisals developed in connection with the application. In the case of an application for credit that is not to be secured by a first lien on a dwelling at the time of application, if the creditor later determines the credit will be secured by a first lien on a dwelling, the creditor shall mail or deliver the same notice in writing not later than the third business day after the creditor determines that the loan is to be secured by a first lien on a dwelling.

(3)  Reimbursement. A creditor shall not charge an applicant for providing a copy of appraisals and other written valuations as required under this section, but may requireapplicants to pay a reasonable fee to reimburse the creditor for the cost of the appraisal or other written valuation unless otherwise provided by law.

 

 1002.16  Enforcement, penalties and liabilities.

(a)  Administrative enforcement. (1) As set forth more fully in section 704 of the Act, administrative enforcement of the Act and this part regarding certain creditors is assigned to the Comptroller of the Currency, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Board of Directors of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, National Credit Union Administration, Surface Transportation Board, Civil Aeronautics Board, Secretary of Agriculture, Farm Credit Administration, Securities and Exchange Commission, Small Business Administration, Secretary of Transportation, and Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.

 

(b)  Penalties and liabilities. (1) Sections 702(g) and 706(a) and (b) of the Act provide that any creditor that fails to comply with a requirement imposed by the Act or this part is subject to civil liability for actual and punitive damages in individual or class actions. Pursuant to sections 702(g) and 704(b), (c), and (d) of the Act, violations of the Act or this part also constitute violations of other Federal laws. Liability for punitive damages can apply only to nongovernmental entities and is limited to $10,000 in individual actions and the lesser of $500,000 or 1 percent of the creditor's net worth in class actions. Section 706(c) provides for equitable and declaratory relief and section 706(d) authorizes the awarding of costs and reasonable attorney's fees to an aggrieved applicant in a successful action

 

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(2)  As provided in section 706(f) of the Act, a civil action under the Act or this part may be brought in the appropriate United States district court without regard to the amount in controversy or in any other court of competent jurisdiction within five years after the date of the occurrence of the violation, or within one year after the commencement of an administrative enforcement proceeding or of a civil action brought by the Attorney General of the United States within five years after the alleged violation.

(3)  If an agency responsible for administrative enforcement is unable to obtain compliance with the Act or this part, it may refer the matter to the Attorney General of the United States. If the Bureau, the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, or the National Credit Union Administration has reason to believe that one or more creditors have engaged in a pattern or practice of discouraging or denying applications in violation of the Act or this part, the agency shall refer the matter to the Attorney General. If the agency has reason to believe that one or more creditors violated section 701(a) of the Act, the agency may refer a matter to the Attorney General.

 

(ii)  Inform the applicant that the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development has been notified and that remedies may be available under the Fair Housing Act.