Mortgage servicing employees who help troubled borrowers with loan modifications should be exempt from the licensing and registration requirements of the SAFE Act, according to a comment letter by three industry groups. The trade groups note that the Department of Housing and Urban Development is considering bringing certain servicing personnel under the Safe and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act (SAFE), which is intended to ensure uniform licensing and registration of loan officers and mortgage brokers. The American Financial Services Association, American Bankers Association, and Mortgage Bankers Association argue that there is no basis to impose SAFE requirements on mortgage servicing employees. Such an "undue expansion" of SAFE, the trade groups warn, could hamper the process of serving troubled borrowers.
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The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. issued proposals Thursday that would reduce planning requirements for big banks and slash deposit insurance prices, citing the financial health of the Deposit Insurance Fund.
June 25 -
Christopher Phelan, President Donald Trump's nominee to chair the Council of Economic Advisers, declined to directly answer questions about recent inflation data and the effects of tariffs on consumers during a Senate confirmation hearing Thursday.
June 25 -
Median purchase loan payments hit $2,198 in May, up 2.1% from April, as rising rates and home prices threaten to dampen origination volume, MBA reports.
June 25 -
Experts aren't forecasting immediate relief and instead are citing silver linings in rate certainty and greater mortgage demand as compared to the same time last year.
June 25 -
Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman said Thursday morning that the central bank recently finalized a new organizational structure for its supervision and regulation division.
June 25 -
Almost 75% of brokers reported growing non-QM volume in their business over the last three years, and just 3.7% said volume decreased, according to AD Mortgage.
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