Fed Wades Into the Subprime Mortgage Mess
The Truth in Lending Act (TILA) offers the Fed some say in mortgage regulation. Indeed, the Fed is changing parts of TILA’s regulation Z in order to curb some of the practices that led to the current subprime mortgage mess (and contributed to the current wider economic troubles). Bloomberg reports on the thrust of the Fed’s new rules concerning subprime mortgage loans:
The Federal Reserve proposed new rules for subprime mortgages, including a ban on low- documentation loans and limits on penalties for borrowers who prepay their debts. …
Board members unanimously voted in a hearing today to make lenders responsible for determining whether borrowers can afford their mortgages even after low starter rates expire.
Lenders will now be required to document borrowers’ income, as well as determine whether they can make payments after a mortgage rate reset. The ideas is to force lenders to make mortgage loans only to those who can actually pay them — and prove it.
Additionally, the new Fed rules on subprime mortgage loans require that pre-payment penalties be limited. Pre-payment penalties are favorite tools of subprime lenders, since it precludes the borrower from getting out of the bad loan if his or her economic situation improves, or if he or she wants to refinance to a better loan.
Not everyone is happy, though. Some feel that the Fed didn’t go far enough in fixing the subprime mortgage mess. And, of course, this won’t unilaterally fix the economy. However, I feel that the Fed got this one right (unlike the cash liquidity plan). It places a measure of responsibility on the lenders by forcing them to carefully evaluate borrowers. Many people who should never have gotten mortgage loans in the first place would not be facing foreclosure right now if lenders knew they would be in trouble for making the loans.
Besides, borrowers need to take some of the responsibility, too.
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Fed rules subprime mortgage, mortgage lenders, mortgage news



The stock market is down today as credit ratings remain in doubt over losses related to the subprime mortgage crash. Additionally, Alan Greenspan is warning of a possible recession, and that isn’t helping the stock market, either.