MBA to Lawmakers: 'Don't Overreact'

With Congress in crisis mode, the Mortgage Bankers Association is calling on lawmakers to take care of "unfinished business" by addressing policy issues that have, in some cases, lingered for years. Issuing a 10-point "Agenda to Stabilize the Housing Market," the MBA said at its National Secondary Market Conference in Boston that lawmakers need to step back from their "crisis mentality" and focus on basic policies to steady the mortgage market, help distressed borrowers, and ensure that today's problems don't recur. "We're saying to Congress to be very careful, and don't overreact," MBA senior vice president Steve O'Connor said at a press briefing. The MBA's 10-point plan includes some well-worn items, such as modernizing the Federal Housing Administration and reforming the regulatory structure governing Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Home Loan Banks. But it also backs away from its previous stance that only mortgage brokers should be licensed. Now, the MBA says that with the exception of those who work directly for federally regulated institutions, all individual single-family loan originators should be licensed. "We support the licensing of all people, including direct lenders," said David Kittle, the MBA's chairman-elect. "We've come off that exception." The MBA can be found online at http://www.mortgagebankers.org.

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