The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
On Wednesday, the CFPB put forward changes that would require mortgage servicers to provide assistance immediately after a borrower asks for help. Servicers would only be allowed to move ahead with a foreclosure after exhausting all efforts — unless the borrower has stopped communicating with the servicer, the CFPB said. The proposal also would limit the fees a servicer can charge a borrower while reviewing possible options such as forbearance, deferrals and loan modifications.
The proposal is a major shift from the highly prescriptive, document-intensive approach that the CFPB took after the 2008 mortgage crisis. It relies heavily on changes made during the pandemic when the CFPB adjusted its rules temporarily to permit servicers to provide
The American Bankers Association, the Mortgage Bankers Association and the Housing Policy Council praised the changes.
"We support updates that inform borrowers of all their options in a clear and timely manner, remove unnecessary barriers, better prepare for future national emergencies, and ultimately facilitate seamless resolutions for those who need it," the ABA and MBA said in a joint statement.
The Housing Policy Council said the changes were long overdue to update the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, also known as Regulation X.
"For years now, the industry has been requesting that the Bureau adopt sensible revisions to Reg X, to align the rules with government agency and [government-sponsored enterprise] loss mitigation program improvements," the council said in a press release.
"When struggling homeowners can get the help they need without unnecessary obstacles, it is better for borrowers, servicers, and the economy as a whole," CFPB Director Rohit Chopra said in a press release. "The CFPB's proposal would reduce avoidable foreclosures and make the mortgage market more resilient during future crises."
Currently,
The proposal builds on feedback the CFPB received from mortgage servicers, consumer advocates and trade associations in response to a 2022 request for information.
One of the biggest changes is the effort to eliminate so-called dual tracking, in which a servicer proceeds with a foreclosure while also considering a borrower's application for a loan modification or another loss mitigation option.
In another major change, servicers would be required to provide tailored notices to borrowers with information about who owns their loan and how to get assistance after a missed payment, according to the proposal. The notices would have to be provided in both English and Spanish and interpretation services must be made available to those speaking other languages, the CFPB said.
Small servicers that handle fewer than 5,000 loans are excluded from the proposal and typically have been exempt from the CFPB's loss mitigation rules. More than 90% of home loans are handled by large mortgage servicers. The proposal is open for public comment for 60 days.
The bureau
The CFPB has the authority to propose the changes under Regulation X and the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.