Opinion

One Data Standard to Rule Them All

mathews-sharon-365.jpg

Even while our industry is now working through the details of operationalizing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosure rule, the next important deadline is on the horizon. The government-sponsored enterprises have mandated adoption of the Uniform Closing Dataset by 2Q of 2017. While this doesn't give any of us much time to rest, the growing acceptance of data standardization should appeal to both lenders and regulators.

The UCD defined by the GSEs extends their adoption of the MISMO reference model as the data standard for mortgages. This is the latest endorsement of MISMO, currently at version 3.3, as the de facto data standard for the mortgage industry. In conjunction with the standard, MISMO has established both company-level and professional-level certification programs which help highlight technology vendors and service providers that lenders can rely on for UCD or MISMO support.

Having a common standard for all vendors to certify against yields a number of benefits. First, since standardized data is more readily accessible and easier to exchange, it is increasingly possible to achieve a data-validated mortgage process — that is, a mortgage process in which the data within and associated with documents is used to validate quality and compliance throughout the entire workflow from pre-close to close to post-close. Proprietary data formats have made such comparisons difficult to accomplish in the past.

With the very limited variances allowed in the Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure, the ability to accurately monitor changes is critical. Relying on a common data standard is the only cost-effective way to accomplish this.

Second, the improved loan quality and compliance enabled by data-validated mortgages means lenders can offer greater transparency to investors. This brings greater efficiency and confidence to the capital markets because investors can better assess the credit risk of the assets they are acquiring.

Last, data standards make integration and data exchange between systems easier. Lenders can more confidently look to service providers to work together across systems to meet lender needs.

The UCD is the GSE’s data standard to support the CFPB’s new Closing Disclosure form. Starting 2Q 2017, Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac will only purchase loans that comply with the UCD standard. Lenders wanting to sell loans to the GSEs either need to be prepared to support the UCD standard or ensure that their service providers can.

Ideally, when implementing TRID, lenders looked ahead to the coming of UCD and incorporated preparations that met both deadlines. Lenders should continue, or begin if they have not started, project planning and budgeting with their technology service providers now as we move into 2016.

Sharon Matthews is President and CEO of eLynx.

For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
Mortgage technology Certifications and licensing Originations Compliance GSEs
MORE FROM NATIONAL MORTGAGE NEWS