At some point the White House might finally understand that the regulatory pendulum has swung much too far in the other direction. (By then Obama might be back home in Illinois raking leaves in Lincoln Park.) When the CFPB dropped its late night ‘LO compensation surprise’ last week the anger from loan officers and brokers palatable. The basic feeling from rank and file LOs and brokers boils down to this: the Obama Administration and most of its appointees don’t understand the residential finance business and are basically trying to hand it over to the megabanks. The “consumer protection” part of the CFPB is failing miserably because the White House doesn’t understand that the megabanks are hardly nice to consumers. Of course, Democrats (and this White House) may push to break up the big banks. In other words, there appears to be a disconnect in the understanding of how finance should work. Right now we have chaos.
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Approximately 54% of homeowners looked to a second lien product to access their home's stored value in the first quarter due to the "lock-in effect."
7h ago -
Better and Coinbase plan to make the product available to qualified borrowers nationwide by this summer. Interested customers can currently apply to a waitlist.
9h ago -
Home sales rose 3.8% in May to 308,446, driven by a 2.8% jump in existing-home sales, which also reached their highest level since October 2022.
9h ago -
A notable cyber threat actor alleged it was behind a ransomware attack that impacted nearly 138,000 individuals, a claim refuted by the lender.
9h ago -
Brian Moynihan spoke of the challenges of developing and maintaining Erica, the bank's main internal AI model, with precision.
10h ago -
The company will pay $4.6 million in the settlement, which resolves allegations that it violated foreclosure protection rules in place during the pandemic.
11h ago










