Selling Your Home

Getting a Mortgage? Know The Rules!

LegalEarlier this year, the CFPB issued one of its regular bulletins, announcing a range of financial rules for financial institutions Just by knowing the rules, you can learn how to take care of yourself. Below are some of the highlights.

Regulation Z Reins in Mortgage Originators

This regulation “prohibits a loan originator from receiving compensation based, directly or indirectly, on the terms of a consumer credit transaction secured by a dwelling.” This isn’t new; it’s been around since 2011. But recently government investigations have found evidence that some institutions have ignored this.

Regulation Z is one of the homeowner’s best friends, requiring lenders to reveal a range of details about a loan.

Getting Serious on Good-Faith Estimates

And then there is Regulation X, which requires loan originators to generally stick to the settlement charges and terms listed on the good-faith estimate provided to the borrower, unless it issues a revised GFE before settlement. And it has to document a reason for that second GFE. Again, investigations uncovered situations where poorly trained lenders with inadequate compliance procedures  overcharged.

There’s a timing issue as well. Lenders have only three business days after they receive an application to provide a GFE. Lenders don’t always correctly log in the correct day an application is received, thus improperly extending the time they have to provide the GFE. So homeowners should keep records of what they send and when.

Keep your eyes open for something new

A new Right to Cancel regulation is slated to take effect very soon. The premise is that you will have 3-days to cancel your mortgage application before it is placed in the pipeline. This is a good thing for consumers but you need to be aware that it will probably make the 30 day close impossible, or at the very least, obsolete.

Take a Close Looks at Ads

The fine print is serious. You have a right to see the details — the essential disclosures — in any advertised loan product. This is true even with social media posts. Again, investigators found instances where “loan originators advertised the length of payment, amount of payments, numbers of payments and finance charges without providing the required disclosures, a violation of Regulation Z.”

For further advice, you can access the full CFPB document online.

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