Rewrite of Truth in Lending Act and Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act
and Proposed Moratoria on HUD Employee Compensation Rule and Class Action Suits
Challenging Lender Paid Mortgage Broker Fees
July 9, 1997
Margot Saunders
Managing Attorney
Mr. Chairman and Members
of the Subcommittee, on behalf of our low-income clients, the National Consumer
Law Center thanks the committee for inviting us to testify today regarding the
rewrite of the Truth in Lending Act and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures
Act. We agree with the premise of these hearings that these two laws are not
perfect and could be improved, and to that end we have been participating in
the meetings among industry groups and consumer representatives to discuss how
these improvements might take place. At this point in time, we cannot even speculate
as to the success of these meetings in creating a resolution in which all interested
parties will agree.
When considering a rewrite
of the basic federal laws governing the home mortgage process, we should first
consider what protections and disclosures consumers really need the government
to ensure that lenders provide. Despite the considerable amount of resources
devoted to enabling Americans to obtain homeownership, an amazingly inconsequential
amount of resources are provided to ensuring that people maintain that homeownership.
One of the results of this lopsided approach to encouraging homeownership is
the high rate of foreclosures, especially among low income and minority homeowners.
Between the years 1980 and 1995, the number of foreclosures executed each
year rose from 150,000 to over 450,000. (See Table 1.) It does not help
Americans to tantalize them with the dream of homeownership without providing
the support to allow them to maintain that homeownership. A tripling of the
foreclosure rate in 15 years is an indication that the mortgage marketplace
is working against the maintenance of homeownership. Something is wrong.
The mortgage industry may want regulatory reform, but homeowners need help as
well.
A federal legal structure
which would significantly assist people in maintaining homeownership, without
diluting the strength of the home finance industry would include the following
elements:
Disclosure of all costs associated with obtaining a home loan in an
easy to understand and uniform manner prior to application for the loan (or
at the least prior to the payment of non-refundable fees). This would facilitate
true shopping for all of the various loan terms which contribute to the costs
of the loan. All of these costs should then be disclosed in the same format
at closing, so the homeowner can see that the loan costs are as promised.
Some homeowners -- those who are sophisticated and savvy -- may be able to
reduce their mortgage costs in this way. Reducing the costs on mortgages will
reduce foreclosures.
The requirement that the actual costs of the loan (in terms of closing
costs and interest rate) be the same as those disclosed earlier, unless
there is a very good reason why they should be different.
Prohibitions against abusive loan terms. This might take the form
of a "suitability" standard, which would hold lenders accountable
for making loans which were unsuitable for the borrowers at the time the loan
was made, in the same way that sellers of securities are responsible to their
buyers for ensuring that their product is not unsuitable for their needs.
Protections to facilitate the avoidance of foreclosures. Loan modifications,
loan extensions, reductions in contract interest rates to current rates, are
all tools currently employed by the major lenders to avoid foreclosure. Homeowners
should have uniform access to these mechanisms.
Along with appendices, this
testimony has several parts:
Part I.The Role of the
Marketplace -- which describes the role the marketplace plays in regulating
as well as failing to protect against abuses. This section also discusses the
alarming increase in the rate of home foreclosure in the United States.
Part II. Our Proposal
on Amending RESPA and TILA Disclosures - describing our specific recommendations
for changing the format for disclosures required under these two important statutes.
Part III.Rationale
explaining the reasoning behind the proposed format for RESPA and TILA disclosures.
Part IV.Proposed Substantive
Protections to be Included in any Mortgage Reform Legislation -- explaining
our recommendations for three types of substantive protections which must accompany
the major changes contemplated to RESPA and TILA.
Part V - Lender-paid
Mortgage Broker Fees and Implementation of the Employee Compensation Rule under
RESPA explaining why we oppose any moratoria on class action suits regarding
lender paid mortgage broker fees and on HUD's employee compensation rule.
I. The Role of the Marketplace.
The single most expensive,
complicated, and important investment most Americans make in their lifetime
is thinly regulated in this nation. There are no federal or state laws that
govern the maximum rates or fees that lenders can charge for loans used to purchase
or refinance a home. Also, states cannot set limits on the terms lenders can
impose on these loans. Other than prohibitions against discrimination in the
granting of credit, the Truth in Lending Act and the Real Estate Settlement
Procedures Act are the only federal or state laws that apply to these loans.
These two laws are thus the only significant way in which Congress has ensured
that the needs of homeowners are protected and balanced against the interests
of the lending industry. As a result, it is crucial that any changes to these
laws -- even recognizing their current imperfect condition -- should be made
only after extremely careful consideration.
Many homeowners go through
the home purchase, financing and refinancing process without any problem. Many
others, however, find themselves confused, feel deceived, or worse: lose their
home as a result of abusive or improper loan terms. This latter group is much
larger then it should be. Indeed, according to the mortgage industry's own analysis,
39-40% of all mortgage borrowers were confused by the process. Moreover, while
we do not have explicit statistics, we know that the number of homeowners who
are exploited in refinancing transactions is far too high. These abusive loans
are an indication of a failure in the marketplace; competition and self regulation
do not stop bad loans from being made. The message is, therefore, that the efforts
by industry to further deregulate the home mortgage transaction will only hurt
consumers. Reform of the mortgage transaction on a federal level should mean
improvement for consumers, not simply repeal of current laws.
The marketplace does work
to keep interest rates down and loan terms fairly even handed for the majority
of middle class borrowers who qualify for "A" credit. It is clearly
not working, however, for too many American homeowners who do not qualify for
the best credit rating; all too often these homeowners are elderly, or minority.
Nationally, 39% of households with incomes below the federal poverty level own
their own homes. (See Table 2.) More dramatically, 58% of older Americans who
are below the federal poverty guidelines own homes. Too many of these low-income,
elderly homeowners have lost equity in their homes, or their homes altogether
as a result of abusive lending.
Abusive home equity lending,
in particular, is a longstanding problem that exploded in the early 1990's.
Vulnerable homeowners who could not access mainstream forms of credit were the
focus of these abusive practices. Many were forced to rely on equity loans with
high rates of interest in order to finance home repairs, credit consolidation
or other crucial credit needs. Refinancing low rate purchase money first mortgages
with high rate first mortgage loans has become a serious problem in the low
income community leading to the escalating loss of homeownership. The terms
of these high rate loans are not necessary to protect the lenders against loss;
indeed the terms are generally so onerous that they precipitate default and
foreclosure. With these equity based loans, even foreclosure does not pose actual
risk of loss to the lender. The Home Ownership Equity Protection Act passed
by Congress in 1994 to address these abuses, while helpful, has not significantly
reduced the abuses faced by many low-income, minority and elderly homeowners.
Mortgage Crisis for
Low-Income Homeowners. A number of factors coalesced in recent years to
create an ongoing mortgage crisis for low-income homeowners:
In 1986, Congress changed the tax code to establish a tax preference for
interest on second mortgages over interest on other consumer loans. This sent
a pervasive message to homeowners that borrowing against home equity was sensible
economic planning. The message was delivered to and received by low-income
homeowners even though they benefit less, or not at all, from the deductibility
of mortgage interest.
Mainstream banks nearly abandoned low-income neighborhoods across the country,
especially minority low-income neighborhoods. This created a vacuum for finance
companies charging high rates of interest to fill. Indeed, some mainstream
banks helped fill the vacuum by setting up high rate finance companies or,
alternatively, by funneling cash to unscrupulous lenders.
Given appreciating real estate values throughout much of the country, finance
companies are able to make loans at high rates with very little risk. Many
finance companies target homeowners who have substantial equity in their homes
in order to protect their investments if the borrowers do not pay. Elders
are a common target for this equity based lending, because many have built
significant equity in their properties over time. Based on equity, a lender
is in an advantageous situation: either the borrower pays the loan back with
high interest or foreclosure on the home permits a recovery from the property
directly. In fact, when foreclosure occurs and the borrower's property is
sold to the lender for less than fair market value (as it generally is), the
lender can resell the property after foreclosure and realize the homeowner's
equity. These anticipated windfalls encourage some lenders to make loans designed
to result in foreclosure.
Deregulation has allowed a wide range of marginal players into the lending
and loan brokering business. Many of the historic protections against unfair
lending practices, such as state ceilings on interest rates and licensing
requirements, were removed or eviscerated during the 1980's. Even where licensing
requirements remain, inadequate funding has led to inadequate policing of
abusive lenders. A significant secondary market then developed during the
1980's creating liquidity for finance companies marketing loans with high
interest rates.
Rising Foreclosure Rate.
It is significant that foreclosures have increased by approximately three times
since 1980, and that on any given day there are almost half a million foreclosures
going on in the United States. (See Table 1.) There are a number of reasons
for this. Data shows that most foreclosures are caused not by homeowner mismanagement,
but rather by unexpected life events which are beyond the homeowner's control
such as loss of job, illness, death or divorce.
Census data establishes
that more than 1/3 of households in the lowest 40% of income range will experience
a loss of income of at least 33% for one month in a given year. Income disruptions
obviously increase the likelihood of mortgage defaults especially since the
same lower income households also have low savings rates and high debt to income
ratios. As family debt increases as a percentage of income, families are increasingly
vulnerable to the exigencies of unforeseen income decreases or increases in
expenses. Problems which would be manageable for a family whose housing costs
constitute 20% of the monthly budget are unmanageable when those costs are 40%
of the total household expenses.
Additionally, there has
been a major expansion of home equity lending, thus creating an additional pressure
on the homeowner's budget. The median amount outstanding on mortgage debt for
a typical family rose 30% between 1989 and 1995.
Increases in Foreclosures
Exceeds Increasing Homeownership In May of 1995, the Clinton Administration
announced its goal of achieving a homeownership rate of 67.5% by the year 2000.
This new initiative is an addition to the decades of homeownership strategies
employed and supported by the United States Government through HUD guarantee
programs and other government backed institutions.
The problem is that despite
decades of sincere and concentrated efforts to improve homeownership, the rate
of homeownership has not increased nearly as dramatically as the rate of foreclosures.
In 1980 there were 52 million homeowners in the United States. By 1995 that
number had increased to slightly less than 65 million. The number of homeowners
thus increased by 124% in those fifteen years. Yet the number of foreclosures
executed on American homes increased by 300% in the same time period. (See Table
3.)
It is important to recognize
that these new first time homebuyer opportunities, while creating important
housing options, nevertheless have significant risks for the participants. A
key feature of most programs is low down payment requirements, usually 5%, but,
in some instances, 3% or less. High debt to income ratios (40% and above) are
usually also required to make programs accessible to families with very low
incomes.
A correlation between low
down payments and high foreclosure rates was identified in a study conducted
by Freddie Mac officials, which found that loans with a 95% loan to value ratio
made under their affordable housing programs, such as Affordable Gold, have
delinquency rates 50-100% higher than conventionally underwritten loans with
the same loan-to-value ratio.
Another distressing trend
is a diminishing federal commitment to working with troubled borrowers who have
financial problems in the FHA loan guarantee program. Until April, 1996, homeowners
who had a default for reasons beyond their control and who could show an ability
to get back on track within 36 months were able to obtain forbearance in the
HUD assignment program to prevent foreclosure. With termination of that program
by Congress in 1996, that option is no longer available. The private market
loss mitigation options with which HUD has replaced the assignment program may
well result in more and quicker foreclosures.
For these reasons, the federal
government cannot rely on the marketplace -- or self-regulation by the mortgage
finance industry -- to police lending secured by the home. While Americans enjoy
a strong home lending industry, the appropriate degree of regulation should
not hamper legitimate lenders, while it will serve to protect the most vulnerable
homeowners from losing their homes.
II. Our Proposal on Amending RESPA and TILA Disclosures.
Enacted in 1974, the purpose
of RESPA is to provide consumers with timely information about the real estate
settlement process as well as to protect consumers from high settlement charges.
12 U.S.C. 2601(a). TILA was created in 1968 to bring honesty and accuracy to
the consumer credit marketplace and to standardize the cost of credit so that
borrowers could comparison shop. To that end, TILA's "price tag" disclosures
of the APR and the finance charge were defined to include, in the first instance,
all the costs attendant to the credit that the borrower would have to pay. As
discussed below, TILA's exceptions to this definition are taking the truth
out of the lending. Neither the interests of consumers nor the industry have
been served by that development.
We propose the following
changes:
1) that RESPA's post application
and settlement disclosures be provided in a format that also includes disclosures
required by TILA;
2)that TILA disclosures
provided at closing be in the same format, using the same terminology as the
early RESPA disclosures;
3) that the finance charge
disclosure include all costs associated with the loan, regardless of whether
the lender benefits from the charge;
4)that the post application
disclosures should list actual charges rather than estimated charges except
in limited circumstances; and
5) that open end credit
loans include a disclosure of the finance charge, which in turn includes all
closing costs and anticipated interest payments to be paid during the course
of the loan.
The key change here is actually
the change in the definition of finance charge under TILA. To accomplish the
goal of encompassing the RESPA-type disclosures as part of the finance charge
disclosure, the finance charge itself should be disclosed as one number, which
is derived from the sum of two other numbers: 1) the "interest" to
be paid during the course of the loan, and 2) all of the charges to be paid
"up front" or before the loan is closed, such as any points, the settlement
charges, the appraisal fees, and the like. For example, RESPA/TILA disclosures
required to be provided three days after application and again at settlement
for closed-end loans should look like the example in Appendix 1. Similar disclosures,
with minimal but appropriate distinctions would be made at closing.
Combined TILA/RESPA disclosures
for open-end variable rate loans would be essentially the same, with additional
information about variability of the annual percentage, the change in the monthly
payments, and historical and worst case scenarios. For example, information
on rate, monthly payments and potential total of payments, should be provided
on the current annual percentage rate, the historical example, and the application
of the most expensive rate allowed under the agreement. See Appendix 2 for an
example of this disclosure.
III. Rationale.
A. Combining RESPA and TILA Disclosures into One Format
Currently RESPA requires
the disclosure of all closing costs as part of the good faith estimate provided
within three days after application. Some of these costs are included in the
TILA disclosure of the finance charge but many are not. At closing (or a day
in advance if requested by the borrower), RESPA also requires that the borrower
be given a HUD-prescribed settlement statement, which details all costs imposed
on the borrower and the seller in connection with the settlement.
On the other hand, TILA
requires the disclosure of the annual percentage rate, amount financed, finance
charge, total of payments, monthly payment and loan term. These disclosures
are totals and do not include any itemizations of the amount financed and the
finance charge.
Our proposal eliminates
the differences between TILA and RESPA disclosures and creates one easy form
for closed-end loans and one easy form for open-end loans to be completed by
the lender at application (or at least before non-refundable fees are paid)
and at settlement that will fulfill the goals of both statutes. This proposal
will greatly increase a borrower's understanding of the true cost of credit
before the loan is signed. It will also reduce the disclosure headaches of lenders
because only one form will now be necessary.
B. Including ALL Costs of Credit in the Finance Charge
The problem is that the
"truth" has gone out of the Truth in Lending Act. There are too many
exceptions to what should be hard and fast rules. The disclosures provided to
borrowers at closing, which purport to disclose the "cost of the credit"
include some costs but exclude others. The annual percentage rate (which is
supposed to represent the cost of the credit in terms of a yearly rate) is equally
confusing and it does not reflect the true cost of credit because of all the
exceptions allowed to the finance charge. The APR is always more than the interest
rate that the borrower understood would be charged on the loan, but the reasons
why it is higher are never explained.
The extensive, and increasingly
complicated, list of exceptions to the fees which are included in the finance
charge creates compliance problems for lenders, and more seriously, undermines
the purpose of TILA. Fees for preparation of loan related documents, credit
reports, attorneys' fees, are all fees which are only incurred because there
is a loan being made. They are clearly a cost of obtaining credit to the borrower.
However, under current law, they are excluded from the finance charge; presumably
on the rationale that they do not represent a source of profit to the lender.
Regardless of the reason for the exclusions-- whether profit or not to the lender--these
fees are a cost of credit to the consumer. Indeed, often these fees are a very
significant percentage of the initial closing costs for the loan.
Requiring the inclusion
of all of the costs of credit in the finance charge will advance the ability
of consumers to actually shop for the best credit available. Competition in
the marketplace for the best loan products, as well as the best settlement service
providers will be advanced by this change in the definition of the finance charge.
In the marketplace of the
1990s, disclosure of the real costs of the credit is very often the only real
tool that homeowners have to protect themselves from unaffordable, or unreasonable
credit terms. The deregulation of interest rates on most loans secured by homes
has further increased the importance of full disclosure.
Moreover, competitive forces
now work against, not in favor, of consumers. Those lenders who would have been
inclined to fully and accurately disclose the costs find themselves at a competitive
disadvantage with those lenders who are not so inclined. The general standards,
then, have begun to sink to that of the lowest common denominator. Because of
the failure of TILA to require full disclosure of all of the costs of the loan
to be included in the finance charge -- and thus the APR -- most creditors have
no incentive to keep their closing costs down. Indeed, the competitive pressure,
again, perversely hurts the consumer, because it does nothing to encourage efficiency
or keep closing costs competitive.
It is mere rationalization
to say that third-party costs could not practically be included because they
"may not be within the creditor's knowledge or control." It is the
creditor which makes the decision as to whether to utilize third parties, how
many to use, and which ones to use. With one very narrow exception, the third
parties involved in a loan are there for the convenience and benefit of the
creditor. The lending industry, therefore, has tremendous leverage with those
ancillary segments of the market who serve them -- the title companies, real
estate closing attorneys, mortgage brokers, etc. In any other aspect of their
business, if a lender finds a supplier to be too expensive, or too inefficient
in delivering the goods or services, it looks to decrease its costs and increase
its efficiency by finding a cheaper, more reliable provider. But since, under
TILA rules, the lender can pretend these costs are completely outside the price
tag, it has no incentive to pressure the providers to keep costs down. Quite
to the contrary, where the costs are being financed, the lender has an incentive
to use more costly ones, because that increases the lender's interest income
from the loan due to higher capitalized closing costs -- yet another example
of reverse competition, and how far the practice has strayed from TILA's goals.
Some lenders may complain
that an all inclusive finance charge would inadvertently trigger the provisions
of HOEPA. This is unlikely to be a real problem. The current trigger on a 30-year
mortgage is approximately 16.77%. The current market rate on a fixed-term 30-year
mortgage loan is approximately 8.25%. The points and prepaid finance charges
would have to be extraordinarily high to generate an APR that exceeds 16.77%
if the contract rate is 8.25%.
In sum, the current patchwork
system has served neither consumers nor the industry well. Twenty-five years
of experience under TILA suggest that all concerned would be better served by
a bright line, clear-cut, easy to understand and implement, all-inclusive price
tag rule. Including all the costs of credit would provide benefits to consumers
and creditors alike:
Consumers would get the accurate and full price tag disclosures that were
originally envisioned, to give them sufficient information to decide whether
to forego credit when it is too expensive, or to comparison shop for the credit
they decide they want or need.
Creditors would get certainty about the rules, which would significantly
reduce the potential exposure to legal liability for errors and the concurrent
cost of legal advice. The FRB and the industry have raised the concern that
an all-inclusive definition would appear to raise the APR. The feared "sticker
shock" among consumers should in no way stand as an obstacle.
The market would benefit. If TILA is to effectively work as a market perfecting
mechanism, it must not be a tool which readily lends itself to manipulation
and deception. It must not be a law which perversely encourages competitive
pressures to move toward lower standards and higher prices for consumers,
rather than rewarding honest and efficient providers. Perhaps most critically,
if disclosure is to be the justification for substantive deregulation as a
matter of public policy, it must be consistent, uniform, and above all, accurate.
Otherwise, consumers get the worst of all worlds.
The economy would benefit: Even assuming a more accurate, fully-loaded
APR would lead to market resistance, that would not necessarily be a bad thing.
The purpose of TILA is, after all, not to help the financial services industry
to log record profits, nor to create a national economy based on debt. Rather
its purpose is to facilitate honesty and accuracy, efficient business operations,
and, to serve the economy as a whole, to encourage consumer restraint when
the price of credit is too high.
C. Using Actual Costs on the Post Application Disclosure Except in Limited
Circumstances
Currently, RESPA allows
"good faith estimates" of the settlement costs to be disclosed within
three days following application. Similarly, TILA allows estimated APR, finance
charge, amount financed, and total of payment disclosures to be given with the
RESPA good faith estimates. The problem is that these good faith estimates view
all settlement costs as merely estimates which can legitimately be adjusted
later. With few exceptions discussed below, credit charges are known with certainty
since, like the interest rate, they are part of the price of credit to which
lenders expect to be held. By viewing credit charges as estimates, however,
these disclosures provide an open invitation to less scrupulous lenders and
brokers to "accidentally" omit a charge on the estimated disclosures
only to include it at settlement when the borrower is in too deep to back out.
Even third party charges
are known to the lender at this time. The lender, in most instances, requires
the use of certain third parties who appear on lender-approved lists. Lenders,
however, may not know the actual cost of a charge by a third party not on an
approved list who is independently selected by the borrower. In this limited
circumstance, the lender need only disclose the cost of the lender's approved
provider.
The only item listed on
the proposed form that by necessity must be an estimate is the per diem interest
charge. This is so because the lender will not know within three days after
application when the settlement will occur. Since the amount of per diem interest
is never large enough to distort the annual percentage rate to any degree, allowing
this to be an estimated charge will not affect the information upon which the
borrower relies to comparison shop.
D. Changing Disclosure Rules for Open End Home Loans
Lenders primarily object
to including all closing costs in the finance charge because they say that this
makes closed end credit appear to be more expensive than open end credit. This
is because currently TILA does not require any closing costs to be included
in the calculation of the annual percentage rate for open end extensions of
credit. Thus, if only closed end disclosure rules were changed, the fees included
in the calculation for the annual percentage rate would be higher for closed
end loans than the fees included for open end loans. The fair and appropriate
way to resolve this for lenders and consumers alike, is to require all fees
to be included in both open and closed end credit transactions secured by the
home.
When the current TILA rules
for open end credit secured by the home were being designed, both the fluid
nature of the product and the state of technology as it then existed had to
be taken into account. For example, authorizing the use of historical tables
and hypothetical $10,000 loan examples reflected an attempt to balance the need
to explain how an open end line credit might work to the consumer with the industry's
desire to save the costs that personalized predictions would incur. Because
the information in this hypothetical is so unrelated to the actual loan contemplated,
however, most borrowers find very little that is useful in the information provided.
Technology has now developed
to the point that an individualized disclosure is possible and reasonable. In
weighing the costs and benefits of more personalized, more predictive disclosures
in light of more sophisticated technology, the actual comprehensibility of the
disclosures must be considered. If consumers are to be legally held to their
contracts, then it is vital that we do as much as possible to make sure that
there is some reality to the legal premise that contracts are binding because
the parties knowingly agree to the terms.
The essence of the problem
for determining rules for open end credit is how to calculate the time and price
for the outstanding extensions of credit. This is a problem for open end lines
of credit where it is not for closed end credit because of the revolving nature
of these loans. Once some money is borrowed, and some paid back, some more money
can be borrowed again. It is indeed impossible for the lender to predict the
amount of money which will actually be extended to the borrower, the time period
and amount of repayment by the borrower, and - in most cases because open end
loans are generally also variable rate loans - the applicable interest rates
throughout the term of the loan.
Lenders, however, make a
series of assumptions when they make disclosures on closed end loans, and on
variable rate loans in particular: they assume an interest rate, and they assume
that the loan will be paid back at the times and in the amounts contemplated
in the loan contract. There is no reason that the Federal Reserve Board could
not choose a series of reasonable assumptions to be applicable to open end credit
disclosures which would then be used as the basis for the disclosures provided
at the inception of the open end loan. For example, lenders could assume the
following:
a) The maximum amount of
the line of credit would be borrowed immediately (a fairly typical occurrence)
rounded up to the nearest $5,000. For example, when a borrower is contemplating
a line of credit of $37,500, information provided for a $40,000 loan is far
more relevant than it is for a $10,000 loan.
b) Only the minimum required
payments would be made by the borrower (also, a fairly standard scenario).
c) The interest rate over
the term of the loan would be what it would have been had the loan been taken
out the same number of years ago as the term is long. (In other words, if the
loan term is for fifteen years, for the purposes of the initial disclosure,
the interest rates for the next 15 years would be assumed to be what they had
been the past 15 years.)
Part IV. Proposed Substantive Protections to be Included in any Mortgage Reform
Legislation.
The government, and the
housing and lending industries have done an excellent job in recent years in
expanding programs to establish new homeownership opportunities for low-income
families. The next challenge is to enhance the long term sustainability of the
homeownership experience for these families. The ultimate success of homeownership
as an asset building strategy will be measured by the degree to which new homeowners
are able to afford proper maintenance, avoid foreclosures, build equity in their
homes, and use their equity effectively as wealth.
Suggested Remedies.
As illustrated in Part 1 above, the market does not work to provide protections
for consumers from abusive mortgage loans, because too often it is financially
remunerative for lenders to encourage foreclosure. Foreclosing on a home will
force a sale which almost always yields less than the home's true value, allowing
the creditor to purchase the home at a discounted rate and realize yet another
profit when the home is sold at full value at a later date. Not only is there
always significant collateral protection on home loans, there is the very real
emotional attachment that homeowners have in their homes, making the home loan
the first to be repaid, and the last to be defaulted upon. There is thus generally
very little risk in any loan which is secured by a home.
Should not lenders who persist
in making loans which are clearly not affordable to the homeowner, and are thus
designed to lead to default, refinancing, and eventually foreclosure, be held
responsible for their improvident extension of credit? For example, consider
the real case of a lender who makes a low-income disabled homeowner a first
mortgage loan of $102,000, charging over $7600 in settlement charges. Although
the homeowner's only income is $500 a month from SSI, the payments required
under the loan are $914 a month for thirty years. Shouldn't a lender in this
situation be held responsible for this bad judgment, and not be permitted to
profit from the deliberate attempt to take the homeowner's home by way of foreclosure?
If the TILA rules are changed
to improve disclosures and make it easier for lenders to comply with the law's
requirements, homeowners like the one in this example will have even fewer protections
from abusive lenders. TILA rescission will no longer be a viable remedy because
the disclosure rules will be so simple to comply with, even the most abusive
lenders will find it easy to meet the requirements. In the stead of the rescission
remedy under TILA, Congress should establish tools designed to prevent abuses,
rather than one used because of its convenience and the fact that there are
no others.
We propose, that along with
the disclosure amendments to TILA and RESPA, three substantive provisions along
the following lines be added to the new law:
A federal standard of loan suitability. Home mortgage lenders generally
have more information about borrowers' finances than do the borrowers' closest
relatives and friends. Using generally accepted principles in the industry,
these lenders know when the payment schedule required in a mortgage can be
reasonably met by the borrower. Indeed with the increased use of credit scoring
and computer based underwriting, legitimate lenders can reasonably anticipate
risk of non-payment. Also, loans which contain unfair terms, such as requiring
a balloon payment -- unless the borrower wins the lottery, are often a recipe
for foreclosure. Thus, when loans are made to borrowers which are clearly
unaffordable, or which contain unfair terms lenders should be held responsible
for their poor judgment. Lenders who make unsuitable loans or who commit unfair
practices in the making of home loans should not be permitted to profit from
those practices.
Increased support for housing counselors and mandatory notice regarding
their availability. Good housing counselors can facilitate loan workouts
that preserve homeownership, prevent foreclosure, and reduce costs for lenders.
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the FHA have implemented loss mitigation tools
to avoid foreclosure and housing counselors are an essential part of that
process. All mortgage lenders should be required to provide some support for
housing counselors and notice of the availability of housing counselors should
be required before any foreclosure can proceed.
Lenders should provide homeowners with the opportunity to pay off the
arrearages and avoid foreclosure. Although this seems obvious, and in
the best interest of both parties, this is not always done. Lenders should
be required to give notice to defaulting homeowners of the amount past due
and the amount needed to avoid foreclosure prior to the addition of fees.The
notice should list the various workout options available. These options have
been accepted by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the FHA as appropriate loss
management tools in the industry. Lenders should also be required to attempt
to avoid foreclosure through various loan workout mechanisms. Further, a lender
should not be permitted to unreasonably reject a workout proposal.
Part V - Lender-paid Mortgage Broker Fees and Implementation of the Employee
Compensation Rule under RESPA.
Congress Must Protect
Consumers from Improper Yield Spread Premiums. The mortgage industry seeks
a moratorium on the class action suits currently proceeding under RESPA which
challenge the payment of a yield spread premium to a mortgage broker by a lender.
We strongly oppose any Congressional action on this issue, as it is would cause
significant harm to consumers. Further, it would do little to provide assistance
to the mortgage industry unless Congress also passes a statute providing retroactive
immunity to the industry for illegal kickbacks. There would be simply no justification
for retroactive relief to the industry. Consumers have been truly hurt by the
payment of yield spread premiums; paying thousands of dollars more for their
loans than their lenders required.
The mortgage broker fee
brouhaha is only analagous to the Rodash fuss in one way: the
mortgage industry is facing judicially imposed liability for blatantly violating
one of the two federal consumer protection statutes governing mortgage loans.
Unlike Rodash, we are not talking about windfalls in the tens
of thousands of dollars for the failure of the lender to place the disclosure
of a specific fee -- which the borrower had to pay anyway -- in the proper column.
This issue is whether a yield spread premium, which significantly increases
the cost of the loan to the borrower without providing any benefit to the borrower,
should be legal.
A yield spread premium is
a lender's fee paid to the broker for increasing the loan rate. Yield spread
premiums benefit lenders and brokers. They generally provide no benefit whatsoever
to borrowers. Yield spread premiums only increase the cost of the loan -- inflating
the cost of the home -- to the borrower without providing any benefit to the
borrower. The entire practice of paying yield spread premiums thrives because
of reverse competition in the market: the lender with the costliest loans to
the borrowers -- those paying the highest yield spread premiums -- do the best.
Lenders and brokers have
been saying that yield spread premiums are justified, and indeed are good for
consumers. Yield spread premiums, the industry maintains, are justified because
they are typically paid to compensate brokers for covering closing costs borrowers
do not otherwise need to pay. Representatives of consumers do not dispute that
a consumer might decide that a higher interest rate on the loan is a good idea,
if the consumer could cover closing costs in this way. However, we have never
seen these types of loans. This argument is a red herring: it is the industry's
way of justifying yield spread premiums as providing benefits to the borrowers.
Nevertheless, we agree with the idea that in limited circumstances yield spread
premiums are legal under the statute, when they actually provide a benefit to
the borrower equivalent in value to the cost incurred.
The disagreement is not
over whether all lender paid broker fees are always illegal. The disagreement
is about whether yield spread premiums can be legal based on the value of the
services provided to the lender rather than the borrower. One must look to the
person who bears the burden of the fee in dispute. If the borrower is paying
the fee then the borrower must receive the benefit. If it is legal for lenders
to obtain the benefit of a fee which is essentially borne by the borrower, then
as yield spread premiums always provide a benefit to the lenders, they will
always be legal. RESPA's prohibition against referral fees would become meaningless.
To date there have been
four federal district court opinions on the issue of whether a lender paid mortgage
broker fee is illegal under RESPA. Two decisions were in the industry's favor,
two for consumers.
Briggs. In 1996 an Alabama district court held that a yield spread
premium "could well be classified as an illegal kickback under RESPA
where the borrower has also paid the broker for services rendered."
Mentecki. In January, 1997 a federal court in Virginia squarely
held, in the context of denying the lender's motion to dismiss, that the payment
of a yield spread premium is a prohibited referral fee because, by its very
nature, yield spread premiums are not compensation given for services actually
performed by the broker where the broker has already charged the borrower
directly for all services provided. In this case, one of the named plaintiffs
paid an origination fee of $12,925 to the broker. Then the lender also
paid the broker a yield spread premium of $2,204.30.
Culpepper. Barely after the ink dried on the Virginia opinion, another
Alabama district court threw down the gauntlet by finding that a yield spread
premium was a permitted "payment for goods." The court rationalized
that because the broker was funded by the lender to make the loan, the yield
spread premium was a fair market value cost paid to the broker by the lender
for the broker's creation of the loan and sale of that loan to the lender.
This reasoning is problematic because it measures the value to the lender,
rather than the consumer. Since the consumer actually bears the burden of
the cost of the yield spread premium in the form of a higher interest rate,
the services justifying the fee must be provided to the consumer.
Barbosa. Just a few weeks ago, a district court in Florida also
ruled in the industry's favor, holding that the payment by the lender of a
yield spread premium is not a "referral fee" because the lender
paid the fee for the broker's procurement of the loan. In this case, the broker
received total compensation worth 5.1% of the loan whereas brokers receive
an average of 1.5% industry-wide. The yield spread premium on this $70,000
loan caused the interest rate to rise from 8.75% to 9.5%, bloating the homeowner's
costs by over $18,000 over the life of the loan.
Consumers are being harmed
by the payment of yield spread premiums. The courts around the nation are busy
determining whether the payment of these fees violates RESPA. It would be outrageous
for Congress to intercede in the judicial process and provide blanket immunity
for lenders on this complicated issue. A moratorium on class action lawsuits
only assists the industry if it is followed by retroactive protections for industry.
Consumers need the protection, not lenders and brokers.
There is No Justification
for Extending the Moratorium on HUD's Employee Compensation Rule. There
is little doubt that implementation of HUD's rule will provide more protections
for homeowners than do the current regulation. Moreover, while NCLC is participating
actively in the mortgage reform process, we are less sanguine as to its eventual
happy conclusion for consumers. The only way that the mortgage industry will
actually consider the true needs of consumers in the mortgage reform process
is if it's representatives believe that Congress will insist that consumers'
requirements be included. If Congress bows to the will of the industry and protects
the industry from consumer friendly judicial and administrative rulings, industry
will have no reason to believe that it need pay anything more than lip service
to the needs of consumers in the mortgage reform process. Moreover, the integrity
of the regulatory process is at stake. It is for Congress to write laws, and
for the administrative branch to write regulations implementing those laws.
If it is the will of Congress to change the law, then change the law, but the
delay of an administrative regulation is not appropriate.
In terms of protecting homeowners, the success of the mortgage reform process
hinges on Congress' insistence that consumers' needs be met. The only way this
can be assured is if Congress makes this industry play by the rules. Protecting
the industry from consumer friendly judicial and administrative rulings would
send the wrong message.
Conclusion
This testimony does not
address many of the technical questions involved in changing TILA and RESPA
to coordinate the two statutes: which statutes would have to be amended, in
exactly what way, for example. But it does provide an outline of how both statutes
can be improved and coordinated to the benefit of both consumers and lenders.
Disclosures would be simplified, uniform, and far more understandable if the
finance charge includes all costs of the extension of credit, and these charges
are disclosed in the same format after application and at closing. Lenders will
benefit because of the simplicity in complying once the new forms are developed.
Consumers will benefit because protections will be provided on federal, uniform
level against abusive loans, and foreclosures will be reduced.
Appendix 1
PROPOSED COMBINED TILA/RESPA DISCLOSURE FOR CLOSED-END LOANS
AMOUNT
FINANCED
FINANCE
CHARGE
TOTAL
# OF PAYMENTS
ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE RATE
Repayment
terms:
1
@ $ due __________
359 @ $ due xxx of
each month
1.The AMOUNT FINANCED consists of
$__________the financed
purchase price of your home/ first mortgage payoff
This includes:
$____ ____for the purchase
of your home/or payoff of 1st mortgage.
$____ ____to pay off another
loan secured by your home.
$____ ____to pay off other
credit.
$____ ____cash to you.
(NOTE: The amount financed
may be a lesser amount than the principal on your mortgage note if you are financing
some of your settlement costs which are also called prepaid finance charges.)
2.The FINANCE CHARGE
consists of two separate kinds of charges
A._____Interest to be paid
over the life of the loan
B._____Prepaid finance charges,
which include settlement closing costs. This amount is the total of the following:
$____ ____(i)Prepaid interest;
$____ ____(ii)Per diem interest;
$____ ____(iii)Loan discount
fee;
$____ ____(iv)Loan application
fee;
$____ ____(v)Points, or other
charges paid by you directly to the creditor at the time the credit is extended;
$____ ____(vi)Finder's fee,
or broker's fee paid by you;
$____ ____(vii)Fee for an
investigation or credit report;
$____ ____(viii)Fees or premiums
for title examination, title insurance, or similar purposes;
$____ ____(ix)Fees for preparation
of a deed, settlement statement, or other documents;
$____ ____(x)Fees for notarizing
deeds and other documents;
$____ ____(xi)Appraisal and
survey fees;
$____ ____(xii)Fees for a
closing agent; and
$____ ____(xiii)Any other
expenses related to closing.
C.Credit Insurance Premiums
totaling $____ ____, which includes the following:
__________credit life
__________accident
__________health
__________other insurance
written in connection with the transaction
__________GAP and debt cancellation
agreements.
3.The ANNUAL PERCENTAGE
RATE (APR) is ___________. It is the real cost of your credit, expressed
as an annual percentage rate, and takes into account both the interest to be
paid over the life of the loan, and the prepaid finance charges.
(NOTE: The interest rate
of ________% on your mortgage note is lower than the APR, because the note rate
only takes into account the interest to be paid over the life of the loan; it
ignores the impact of the prepaid finance charges on the total cost of this
loan.)
4.Amount of the fee paid
by the lender to your loan broker/correspondent: $____ ____.
5.In addition, you will
need $____ ____in cash at closing to cover the following items:
A. Any items listed above
that you do not wish financed (the sum of these items is not included in the
calculation of the number in this paragraph);
B. $____ ____for escrow of
real estate taxes.
C. $____ ____for escrow for
premiums for insurance, against loss of or damage to property or against liability
arising out of the ownership or use of property.
6.Amount you will pay up-front
that is not refundable if the loan does not close: $____ ____.
7.Points or other fees to
be paid by the seller at settlement: $____ ____.
8.Security: You are
giving a security interest in your home located at ________
9.Late Charge: If
a payment is late, you will be charged $____ or _____% of the payment.
10.Prepayment: If
you pay off early, you will/will not have to pay a penalty.
11.Assumption: Someone
buying your home may/may not be allowed to assume the remainder of your mortgage
on the original terms.
Appendix 2
PROPOSED COMBINED TILA/RESPA DISCLOSURE FOR OPEN-END, VARIABLE
RATE LOANS
Assuming that you borrow
the maximum you are permitted under the LINE OF CREDIT, make only the minimum
payments due under the contract during the term of the agreement, and do not
make further draws on your LINE OF CREDIT:
1.Your beginning ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE (APR) is _______%.
[If teaser, add: It will go up to ________% after _________month/years.] This
annual percentage rate is based upon the initial amount you are borrowing rounded
up to the nearest $5,000. The APR is the real cost of your credit, expressed
as an annual percentage rate, and takes into account both the interest to be
paid over the life of the loan, and the prepaid finance charges.
(NOTE: The interest rate of ________% on your line of credit is lower than
the APR, because the interest rate only takes into account the interest to be
paid over the life of the loan; it ignores the impact of the prepaid finance
charges on the total cost of this loan.)
a.Your minimum monthly payments would be $________. [IF TEASER, add: They would
go up to _____% after ____ months/years.]
b.If this APR does not change, it would take ____ months to pay off this loan
at the minimum monthly payment, plus one balloon of _____ at the end of ________years.
c. The total of your payments would be $_____.
2. Historical Information About Your Annual Percentage
Rate. Your rate is based on an index. IF THE INDEX CHANGES DURING THE LIFE
OF YOUR LOAN, THE SAME WAY AS IT DID THE PAST ___ YEARS (____There is no guarantee
it will____):
a.The highest annual percentage
rate would have been: _____%
b.The highest monthly payment
would have been: _____
c.It would have taken _____
months of the highest monthly payments (and some lower ones) to pay off the
loan, plus a balloon payment of ______ at the end of the ____ years.
d.The total of payments
would have been $_____.
3. Worst Case (or Most Expensive) Example. IF THE RATE GOES AS HIGH
AS IT COULD UNDER YOUR CONTRACT:
a.The highest annual percentage
rate would be: _____%
b.The highest minimum monthly
payment would be: ______.
c.It would take _____ months
of to pay off the loan, plus a balloon payment of ______ at the end of the ____
years.