CitiFinancial, a nonbank that was once a powerhouse in subprime lending, Wednesday agreed to pay a $1.25 million fine for not correctly reporting its residential origination data to the Federal Reserve via the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act. The settlement, however, was not between the Fed and CitiFinancial but instead was worked out by state banking supervisors who discovered the reporting problems as part of a probe into compliance with consumer protection laws. The deal was worked out between CitiFinancial, an affiliate of Citigroup, and The Conference of State Bank Supervisors/American Association of Residential Mortgage Regulators. (Roughly 35 states were party to the agreement.) The reporting violations occurred on 91,127 loans between 2004 and 2007. Prior to that, the lender was in compliance, regulators said. According to CSBS, CitiFinancial of Baltimore, failed to report the loans in its HMDA filings. The lapse was caused by "internal system errors" at the nonbank, said CSBS. CitiFinancial eventually submitted HMDA reports on the loans in question. Regulators said that even though the loans were omitted by CitiFinancial the lender's behavior "does not in any way demonstrate a pattern or practice of discriminatory lending." The loans accounted for about 10% of CitiFinancial's production volume during the time in question.
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A tour of the technology that banking has run on, dating back to Franklin's anti-counterfeit measures and the bank-note bulletin that preceded American Banker.
July 3 -
Issuances of new HECM-backed securities dropped off in June on both a monthly and yearly basis, according to a new report from New View Advisors.
July 2 -
The vote to approve the $12 per share deal, which rejected a hostile bid from UWM Holdings, came following several postponements of a special meeting.
July 2 -
A mortgage customer claims his data was compromised in a hack last year at a tax and accounting firm reportedly used by the wholesale giant.
July 2 -
The government-sponsored enterprise clamped down on project review requirements and certain factory-built home appraisals while loosening other guidelines.
July 2 -
The June jobs report is creating an overhang on economist forecasts for interest rates going forward, especially when combined with recent inflation data.
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