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Fed stiffens restrictions on mortgage lenders

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New rules, aimed mostly at subprime loans, prohibit shady promotional practices and lending to home purchasers who lack the ability to repay.

WASHINGTON -- The nation's central bank clamped down hard Monday on mortgage lenders, issuing new rules designed to curb the kind of shady practices that led to the subprime mortgage crisis.


Among the new rules is a restriction on the use of the word "fixed" to describe the terms of a loan whose rate will change over time, increased disclosure requirements for refinancing and home equity loans, and a prohibition on making subprime loans without verifying a borrower's income or ability to repay a mortgage even after a rate reset.

 

 

The new rules, which will take effect Oct. 1, will apply to all lenders, not just those already regulated by the central bank.

 

"Rates of mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures have been increasing rapidly lately, imposing large costs on borrowers, their communities, and the national economy," Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said as he opened a meeting of the Fed board, which approved the new rules.

"Although the high rate of delinquency has a number of causes, it seems clear that unfair or deceptive acts and practices by lenders resulted in the extension of many loans, particularly high-cost loans, that were inappropriate for or misled the borrower."

 

The new regulations particularly target abuses in the subprime mortgage market, which has been largely unregulated because the loans are securitized and held by private investors. Subprime mortgages, designed to make loans available to borrowers with low incomes or poor credit, carry above-market interest rates to compensate investors for the added risk of default.

 

For subprime loans, the new rules will:

 

* Prohibit lenders from loaning to borrowers who cannot repay the loan from income and assets other than a home's value.

 

* Require lenders to verify a borrower's income and assets.

 

* Ban prepayment penalties for the first four years of any adjustable-rate subprime mortgage; other subprime mortgages could have no prepayment penalties for two years.

 

* Require lenders to establish escrow accounts for property taxes and homeowner insurance for all first-lien mortgages.

 

For all mortgages, prime and subprime, the new rules will:

 

* Prohibit seven misleading advertising practices, including representing that a rate or payment is "fixed" if it will change over the course of the loan.

 

* Prohibit advertising in which different loans are compared unless all payments and rates are also disclosed.

* Prohibit foreign-language mortgage ads in which required disclosures are presented in English.

 

* Prohibit a lender from encouraging or coercing an appraiser to misrepresent a home's assessed value.

 

* Require lenders to credit borrowers' payments on the day of receipt

 

* Prohibit pyramiding late fees.

 

* Require a lender to provide a payoff statement within a reasonable amount of time.

 

* Require a good-faith estimate of all loan costs and payments within three days of an application for any loan secured by a home's value, including home equity loans and refinancing of the original mortgage.

(Currently, early disclosure is required only for home-purchase loans.) Borrowers cannot be charged any fees before receiving the estimates except for a fee to obtain the borrower's credit history.

 

One previously proposed regulation that has since been withdrawn was disclosure of the bonuses, or "yield-spread premiums" that mortgage originators receive to underwrite subprime or other high-cost loans. The Fed said that consumer testing cast doubt on the effectiveness of the disclosure rule as proposed, and that the board is considering alternatives.

 

The rules "are intended to protect consumers from unfair or deceptive acts and practices in mortgage lending, while keeping credit available to qualified borrowers and supporting sustainable homeownership,"

Bernanke said.

 

By Maura Reynolds, Times Staff Writer

 

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