Policy Guidance on Supervisory and Enforcement Considerations Relevant to Mortgage Brokers Transitioning to Mini-Correspondent Lenders, 41671-41675 [2014-16779]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 137 / Thursday, July 17, 2014 / Notices
Frequency: Biennially.
Respondent’s Obligation: None.
This information collection request
may be viewed at reginfo.gov. Follow
the instructions to view Department of
Commerce collections currently under
review by OMB.
Written comments and
recommendations for the proposed
information collection should be sent
within 30 days of publication of this
notice to OIRA_Submission@
omb.eop.gov or fax to (202) 395–5806.
Dated: July 11, 2014.
Gwellnar Banks,
Management Analyst, Office of the Chief
Information Officer.
[FR Doc. 2014–16789 Filed 7–16–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
Proposed Information Collection;
Comment Request; Pacific Islands
Region Permit Family of Forms
National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Department of
Commerce, as part of its continuing
effort to reduce paperwork and
respondent burden, invites the general
public and other Federal agencies to
take this opportunity to comment on
proposed and/or continuing information
collections, as required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
DATES: Written comments must be
submitted on or before September 15,
2014.
SUMMARY:
Direct all written comments
to Jennifer Jessup, Departmental
Paperwork Clearance Officer,
Department of Commerce, Room 6616,
14th and Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20230 (or via the
Internet at JJessup@doc.gov).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of the information collection
instrument and instructions should be
directed to Walter Ikehara, (808) 725–
5175, or Walter.Ikehara@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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ADDRESSES:
I. Abstract
This request is for extension of a
current information collection.
Regulations at 50 CFR Part 665,
Subpart F, require that a vessel must be
registered to a valid federal fishing
permit if it is used to fish with longline
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gear for Pacific pelagic management unit
species (PMUS), land or transship
longline caught PMUS, or receive
longline caught PMUS from a longline
vessel, within the Exclusive Economic
Zone (EEZ) of United States (U.S.)
islands in the central and western
Pacific, or to fish with troll and
handline gear for PMUS within the EEZ
around each of the Pacific Remote
Island Areas (PRIA).
Regulations at 50 CFR parts 665,
Subparts D and E, require that the
owner of a vessel used to fish for, land,
or transship bottomfish management
unit species (BMUS) using a large vessel
(50 ft or longer) around Guam, or using
a vessel within the EEZ around each of
the PRIA, must register it to a valid
federal fishing permit they hold.
Regulations at 50 CFR Part 665,
Subparts B, C, D and E, require that a
vessel used to fish for precious corals
within the EEZ of U.S. islands in the
central and western Pacific, must be
registered to a valid federal fishing
permit for a specific precious coral
permit area.
This collection of information is
needed for permit issuance, to identify
actual or potential participants in the
fishery, determine qualifications for
permits, and to help measure the
impacts of management controls on the
participants in the fishery. The permit
program is also an effective tool in the
enforcement of fishery regulations and
facilitates communication between the
National Marine Fisheries Service
(NMFS) and fishermen.
II. Method of Collection
Documents may be submitted via
mail, fax, email or via Web-based
application (National Permit System).
III. Data
OMB Control Number: 0648–0490.
Form Number: None.
Type of Review: Regular submission
(extension of a current information
collection).
Affected Public: Business or other for
profit organizations; individuals or
households.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
246.
Estimated Time per Response: Hawaii
longline limited entry permit transfer, 1
hour; American Samoa longline limited
entry permit renewal and additional
permit application, 45 minutes;
American Samoa longline permit
transfer, 1 hour, 15 minutes; Main
Hawaiian Islands longline prohibited
area exemptions and permit appeals, 2
hours; all other permits, 30 minutes.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 145.
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Estimated Total Annual Cost to
Public: $8,800 (including $8,155 in
processing fees).
IV. Request for Comments
Comments are invited on: (a) Whether
the proposed collection of information
is necessary for the proper performance
of the functions of the agency, including
whether the information has practical
utility; (b) the accuracy of the agency’s
estimate of the burden (including hours
and cost) of the proposed collection of
information; (c) ways to enhance the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and (d)
ways to minimize the burden of the
collection of information on
respondents, including through the use
of automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology.
Comments submitted in response to
this notice will be summarized and/or
included in the request for OMB
approval of this information collection;
they also will become a matter of public
record.
Dated: July 11, 2014.
Gwellnar Banks,
Management Analyst, Office of the Chief
Information Officer.
[FR Doc. 2014–16788 Filed 7–16–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL
PROTECTION
Policy Guidance on Supervisory and
Enforcement Considerations Relevant
to Mortgage Brokers Transitioning to
Mini-Correspondent Lenders
Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Policy Guidance.
The Bureau of Consumer
Financial Protection (CFPB or Bureau) is
issuing supervisory and enforcement
guidance entitled ‘‘Policy Guidance on
Supervisory and Enforcement
Considerations Relevant to Mortgage
Brokers Transitioning to MiniCorrespondent Lenders,’’ (Policy
Guidance) which relates to the Bureau’s
exercise of its authority to supervise and
enforce compliance with RESPA and
Regulation X and TILA and Regulation
Z in certain transactions involving
‘‘mini-correspondent lenders.’’
SUMMARY:
Paul
S. Ceja, Senior Counsel and Special
Advisor; Office of Regulations at (202)
435–7700.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 137 / Thursday, July 17, 2014 / Notices
I. Introduction
The Bureau has become aware of
increased interest among some mortgage
brokers to restructure their business to
become mini-correspondent lenders
(mini-correspondents) in the possible
belief that doing so will alter the
applicability of important consumer
protections that apply to transactions
involving mortgage brokers. These
protections include provisions in the
Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act
(RESPA) and Regulation X and the
Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and
Regulation Z, as amended by title XIV
of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act of 2010
(Dodd-Frank Act). The Bureau has
implemented the title XIV amendments
to RESPA and TILA through final rules
amending Regulations X and Z, issued
beginning in January 2013. These rules
generally took effect in January 2014.
The Bureau is issuing this Policy
Guidance to identify for mortgage
industry stakeholders, consumers, and
the public generally questions the
Bureau may consider in exercising its
supervisory and enforcement authority
under RESPA and TILA with respect to
transactions involving minicorrespondent lenders.
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II. Description of Policy Guidance
The Policy Guidance begins by
providing background on the Bureau’s
concern regarding the shift of some
mortgage brokers to the minicorrespondent lender role, the RESPA
and TILA consumer protections
potentially affected by the transition of
a mortgage broker to a minicorrespondent lender, and an overview
of correspondent lending. The Policy
Guidance follows this with a discussion
of the regulatory framework under
Regulation X and Regulation Z that
determines the role and obligations of
the parties in a mortgage transaction.
The Policy Guidance then provides a
non-exhaustive list of questions the
Bureau may consider in the exercise of
its supervisory and enforcement
authority with respect to transactions
involving mini-correspondent lenders.
The Policy Guidance makes clear that
no single question listed in the Policy
Guidance is necessarily determinative of
how the Bureau may exercise its
supervisory and enforcement
authorities. The Policy Guidance also
makes clear that the facts and
circumstances of the particular mortgage
transaction being reviewed would be
relevant to how the Bureau exercises
these authorities.
The Policy Guidance states that the
Bureau will closely monitor the
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practices of mini-correspondents,
including former mortgage brokers that
have converted to this form, to ensure
that the protections afforded to
consumers under federal consumer
financial law, including the Bureau’s
implementing regulations, are not being
evaded. Finally, the Policy Guidance
also states that the Bureau will use all
appropriate tools to assess whether
supervisory, enforcement, or other
actions are necessary.
III. Policy Guidance
The text of the Policy Guidance
follows:
Policy Guidance on Supervisory and
Enforcement Considerations Relevant
to Mortgage Brokers Transitioning to
Mini-Correspondent Lenders
The Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection (CFPB or Bureau) is issuing
this ‘‘Policy Guidance on Supervisory
and Enforcement Considerations
Relevant to Mortgage Brokers
Transitioning to Mini-Correspondent
Lenders’’ (Policy Guidance) to identify
the questions the Bureau may consider
in exercising its supervisory and
enforcement authority under the Real
Estate Settlement Procedures Act
(RESPA) and Regulation X and the
Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and
Regulation Z with respect to mortgage
transactions involving minicorrespondent lenders (minicorrespondents), including transactions
involving mortgage brokers that
transition to mini-correspondent lender
roles.
Background
The Bureau has become aware of
increased mortgage industry interest in
the transition of mortgage brokers from
their traditional roles to minicorrespondent lender roles. The Bureau
is concerned that some mortgage brokers
may be shifting to the minicorrespondent model in the belief that,
by identifying themselves as minicorrespondent lenders, they
automatically alter the application of
important consumer protections that
apply to transactions involving
mortgage brokers. These protections
include provisions in RESPA and
Regulation X 1 and TILA and Regulation
Z,2 as amended by title XIV of the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd-Frank
Act).3 The Bureau has implemented the
title XIV amendments to RESPA and
TILA through final rules amending
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1 12
U.S.C. 2601 et seq., 12 CFR part 1024.
U.S.C. 1601 et seq., 12 CFR part 1026.
3 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
2 15
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Regulations X and Z, issued beginning
in January 2013. These rules generally
took effect in January 2014.
Regulations X and Z apply certain
requirements and prohibitions to
compensation paid to a mortgage broker.
These provisions include:
• Disclosure of mortgage broker
compensation. Regulation X requires
that the lender’s compensation to the
mortgage broker be disclosed on the
Good-Faith Estimate and HUD–1
Settlement Statement.4 By contrast,
payments received by the lender from
an investor as compensation for a ‘‘bona
fide’’ transfer of the loan in the
secondary market need not be
disclosed; 5
• Inclusion of mortgage broker
compensation in ‘‘points and fees.’’
Under Regulation Z, compensation paid
to a mortgage broker by a consumer or
creditor is included in points and fees
for purposes of the points-and-fees cap
for ‘‘qualified mortgages’’ and for the
points-and-fees test for determining
whether a mortgage is a ‘‘high-cost
mortgage’’ under the Home Ownership
and Equity Protection Act (HOEPA).6
Interest paid to a creditor is not
included in points and fees; nor is any
compensation a creditor (not otherwise
defined as a ‘‘loan originator’’ for
purposes of the loan originator
compensation restrictions discussed
further below) receives from a third
party that purchases the loan included
in points and fees; 7
4 See 12 CFR part 1024, appendix A and appendix
C. The Bureau’s TILA–RESPA Integrated Disclosure
Rule (78 FR 79730 (Dec. 31, 2013)) effective August
1, 2015, requires that the creditor compensation’s
to the mortgage broker be on the Closing Disclosure
(although not on the Loan Estimate). See 12 CFR
1026.38(f)(1).
5 12 CFR 1024.5(b)(7). Coverage under section 8
of RESPA, implemented at 12 CFR 1024.14,
prohibiting the payment of kickbacks for the referral
of settlement services, and splits of charges other
than for services performed, is also implicated by
whether compensation is being paid in a secondary
market transaction. For example, compensation for
the sale of a mortgage loan is a secondary market
transaction rather than a referral fee and is ‘‘beyond
the scope of section 8.’’ See 12 CFR part 1024,
appendix B, illustration 5.
6 12 CFR 1026.32(b)(1)(ii). This section cross
references the definition of ‘‘loan originator’’ in 12
CFR 1026.36(a)(1). 12 CFR 1026.36(a)(2) defines
‘‘mortgage broker’’ for purposes of § 1026.36, as
‘‘any loan originator that is not an employee of the
creditor.’’ See also 12 CFR 1026.32(a)(1)(ii)
(threshold for points and fees for high-cost
mortgages); 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(3) (limit on points
and fees for qualified mortgages). See also 15 U.S.C.
1602(bb)(1)(A) (definition of high-cost mortgage); 15
U.S.C. 1602(bb)(4) (points and fees included for
high-cost mortgages); 15 U.S.C. 1639c(b)(2)(A)(vii)
(limit on points and fees for qualified mortgages);
and 15 U.S.C. 1639c(b)(2)(C) (definition of points
and fees for purposes of qualified mortgages).
7 12 CFR 1026.32(b)(1)(i)(A) (excluding interest
from points and fees); 12 CFR 1026.32(b)(1)(ii)
(generally including compensation paid directly or
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• Restrictions on mortgage broker
compensation. TILA and Regulation Z 8
prohibit certain compensation
arrangements between creditors and
loan originators, including mortgage
brokers.9 Mortgage brokers may not
receive compensation from both the
consumer and the creditor or any
another person; 10 and mortgage brokers
may not receive compensation based on
loan terms.11 These restrictions do not
apply to compensation by a third party,
such as an investor, to a creditor that is
not also defined as a loan originator for
purposes of these compensation
restrictions; and
• Prohibition on steering to increase
mortgage broker compensation. TILA
and Regulation Z prohibit loan
originators, including mortgage brokers,
from ‘‘steering’’ consumers to
transactions not in their interest, to
increase the mortgage broker’s
compensation.12
A correspondent lender, as generally
understood in the mortgage industry,
performs the activities necessary to
originate a mortgage loan, i.e., it takes
on the tasks usually performed by the
originating lender. The correspondent
lender takes and processes applications,
provides required disclosures, and
often, although not always, underwrites
loans and makes the final credit
approval decision. The correspondent
lender closes loans in its name, funds
them (often through a warehouse line of
credit), and sells them to an investor by
prior agreement. A full correspondent
lender may have such agreements with
multiple investors.
The Bureau understands that some
entities may transition from being a
mortgage broker to being a
correspondent lender and, in so doing,
may begin as a small correspondent
with agreements with only a few
investors. Entities attempting to move to
the role of a correspondent lender may
start by obtaining a warehouse line of
indirectly by a consumer or creditor to a loan
originator).
8 See Loan Originator Compensation
Requirements Under the Truth in Lending Act
(Regulation Z) 78 FR 11279 (Feb. 15, 2013); see also
Amendments to 2013 Mortgage Rules Under the
Equal Credit Opportunity Act (Regulation B), Real
Estate Settlement Procedures Act (Regulation X),
and the Truth in Lending Act (Regulation Z), 78 FR
60382 (Oct.1, 2013).
9 In Regulation Z these prohibitions apply to
compensation paid to ‘‘loan originators’’ (including
‘‘loan originator organizations’’). See 12 CFR
1026.36(a)(1)(i), (iii). However, for clarity this
Policy Guidance refers to mortgage brokers which,
as noted, are included in the definition of ‘‘loan
originator.’’ See 12 CFR 1026.36(a)(2) and footnote
6.
10 12 CFR 1026.36(d)(2).
11 12 CFR 1026.36(d)(1).
12 12 CFR 1026.36(e).
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credit, typically from a third-party
‘‘warehouse bank.’’ The warehouse line
of credit will provide the funding for the
mortgage loans the entities originate and
sell to a third-party investor. Over time,
the number of third-party investors with
which the correspondent lender has
agreements may grow.
Since the Bureau issued the title XIV
rules, it understands that some mortgage
brokers may be setting up arrangements
with wholesale lenders in which they
purport to act as mini-correspondent
lenders. Under such arrangements, the
mortgage broker may in form appear to
be the lender or creditor in each
transaction by engaging in activities
such as closing the loan in its own
name, funding the loan from what is
designated as a warehouse line of credit,
and receiving compensation through
what may nominally take the form of a
premium for the sale of the loan to an
investor.
However, in substance, these
mortgage brokers may not have
transitioned to the mini-correspondent
lender role and may be continuing to
serve effectively as mortgage brokers.
That is, these mortgage brokers may
continue to facilitate brokered loan
transactions between borrowers and
wholesale lenders (i.e., entities which
typically provide the funding for loans
in transactions involving mortgage
brokers). For example, the mortgage
broker may enter into an arrangement
with a lender designated as an
‘‘investor,’’ but that investor may
function as the mortgage broker’s
wholesale lender, and not as a
purchaser of loans in the secondary
market. Such an ‘‘investor’’ may
continue to perform the same
origination activities it would perform
as a traditional wholesale lender for the
loans that it now ‘‘buys’’ from the
mortgage broker. As well as performing
these functions and agreeing to
purchase the loans from the mortgage
broker designated as a ‘‘minicorrespondent, the ‘‘investor’’ may also
provide the warehouse line of credit
that the ‘‘mini-correspondent’’ uses to
fund its loans.
As discussed below, the requirements
and restrictions that RESPA and TILA
and their implementing regulations
impose on compensation paid to
mortgage brokers do not depend on the
labels that parties use in their
transactions. Rather, under Regulation
X, whether compensation paid by the
‘‘investor’’ to the ‘‘lender’’ must be
disclosed depends on determinations
such as whether that compensation is
part of a secondary market transaction,
as opposed to a ‘‘table-funded’’
transaction. Likewise, under Regulation
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41673
Z, whether compensation paid by the
‘‘investor’’ to the ‘‘creditor’’ must be
included in the points-and-fees
calculation and whether the ‘‘creditor’’
is subject to the compensation
restrictions as a mortgage broker
depends on determinations such as
whether the ‘‘creditor’’ finances the
transaction out of its own resources as
opposed to relying on table-funding by
the ‘‘investor.’’
In exercising its supervisory and
enforcement authority, the Bureau may
consider factors that evidence the true
nature of the mortgage transaction, i.e.,
whether the parties are engaging in good
faith in a secondary market transaction
between a lender and a third-party
investor or, in fact, a typical primary
market transaction involving a mortgage
broker and a wholesale lender.
Discussion
RESPA and TILA Regulatory
Framework: The mortgage broker
compensation requirements imposed by
RESPA and Regulation X do not apply
to exempt bona fide secondary-market
transactions, but those requirements do
apply to table-funded transactions.
Whether a transaction is deemed to be
a bona fide secondary market sale of a
loan turns on the ‘‘real source of
funding’’ and the ‘‘real interest of the
funding lender.’’
Regulation X defines a mortgage
broker as a person, other than an
employee of a lender, who renders
origination services and serves as an
intermediary between a borrower and
lender in a federally-related mortgage
loan transaction, including such a
person that closes the loan in its own
name in a ‘‘table-funded transaction.’’ 13
‘‘Table-funding’’ occurs when the loan
is funded by a contemporaneous
advance of loan funds and an
assignment of the loan to the person
advancing the funds.14 In table-funding,
the third party who advances the loan
funds and takes initial assignment of the
loan at or after settlement is the lender
for purposes of Regulation X, and the
entity which acts as the intermediary in
bringing that lender and the borrower
together is the mortgage broker (even
though that entity closes the loan in its
own name).15 However, a ‘‘bona fide
transfer of a loan obligation in the
secondary-market’’ is not covered by
RESPA under Regulation X (with
exceptions not relevant here).16
Regulation X explains that the Bureau
13 12
CFR 1024.2.
14 Id.
15 Id. A lender is otherwise generally defined as
the secured creditor named on the debt obligation.
16 12 CFR 1024.5(b)(7).
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will consider the ‘‘real source of
funding’’ for the loan and the ‘‘real
interest of the funding lender’’ in
determining what constitutes a bona
fide transfer.17 Under Regulation X, a
table-funded transaction is not a
secondary-market transaction.18
Similarly, the TILA and Regulation Z
loan originator compensation
requirements discussed above cover
compensation paid to mortgage brokers
in ‘‘table-funded’’ transactions. Under
Regulation Z, a creditor is defined in
relevant part as a person who regularly
extends credit and to whom the
obligation is initially payable on the
face of the note.19 For purposes of the
loan originator compensation
requirements discussed above, however,
a ‘‘loan originator’’ is defined to include
such a creditor if it engages in loan
origination activity and ‘‘does not
finance the transaction at
consummation out of the creditor’s own
resources, including by drawing on a
bona fide warehouse line of credit.’’ 20
In other words, the term loan originator,
for purposes of the loan originator
requirements discussed above, includes
any creditor that otherwise satisfies the
definition of loan originator and makes
use of ‘‘table funding’’ by a third
party.21 A table-funded transaction is
consummated with the debt obligation
initially payable by its terms to one
person, but another person provides the
funds for the transaction at
consummation and receives an
immediate assignment of the note.22
By defining mortgage brokers to
include entities which close loans in
their own names in table-funded
transactions—and by excluding from
RESPA only bona fide secondary-market
transactions—Regulation X recognizes
that it is possible to structure
transactions that take the form of the
sale of a loan to an investor but where,
in substance, the purchaser functions as
the lender and the entity whose name is
on the note is a mortgage broker.
Regulation Z recognizes this as well by
defining the term loan originator to
include creditors in table-funded
transactions and differentiating between
such transactions and those in which a
creditor draws upon a bona fide
warehouse line of credit.
Questions the Bureau May Consider
in Exercising Its Supervisory and
Enforcement Authority Under RESPA
17 Id. See also 12 CFR part 1024, appendix B,
illustration 5.
18 Id.
19 12 CFR 1026.2(a)(17).
20 12 CFR 1026.36(a)(1)(i).
21 Comment 36(a)–1.i.C.
22 Comment 36(a)–1.ii.
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and TILA in Transactions Involving
Mini-Correspondents: As discussed
above, the Bureau understands that
some mortgage brokers have
successfully transitioned to
correspondent lenders (small or large)
that do not act as mortgage brokers in
covered mortgage transactions. Such
correspondent lenders often perform a
majority of the principal origination
activities with the funds provided by a
bona fide warehouse line of credit. The
correspondent lenders then sell the
loans in secondary market transactions
to third-party investors. The Bureau also
understands that other mortgage brokers
may be seeking to adopt the form of a
mini-correspondent lender out of a
belief that doing so avoids application
of various provisions of Regulations X
and Z.
In exercising its supervisory and
enforcement authority under RESPA
and TILA in transactions involving
mini-correspondents, the Bureau asks
various questions relevant to
understanding the true nature of the
mortgage transaction.
Among the questions the Bureau asks
are the following:
• Beyond the mortgage transaction at
issue, does the mini-correspondent still
act as a mortgage broker in some
transactions, either brokering to the
same wholesale lender that supplies the
warehouse line of credit or otherwise?
Æ If so, what distinguishes the minicorrespondent’s ‘‘mortgage broker’’
transactions from its ‘‘lender’’
transactions?
• How many ‘‘investors’’ does the
mini-correspondent have available to it
to purchase loans?
• Is the mini-correspondent using a
bona fide warehouse line of credit as the
source to fund the loans that it
originates?
Æ Is the warehouse line of credit
provided by a third-party warehouse
bank?
Æ How thorough was the process for
the mini-correspondent to get approved
for the warehouse line of credit?
Æ Does the mini-correspondent have
more than one warehouse line of credit?
Æ Is the warehouse bank providing
the line of credit one of, or affiliated
with any of, the mini-correspondent’s
investors that purchase loans from the
mini-correspondent?
Æ If the warehouse line of credit is
provided by an investor to whom the
mini-correspondent will ‘‘sell’’ loans to,
is the warehouse line a ‘‘captive’’ line
(i.e., the mini-correspondent is required
to sell the loans to the investor
providing the warehouse line (or
affiliates of the investor))?
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Æ What percentage of the minicorrespondent’s total monthly
originated volume is sold by the minicorrespondent to the entity providing
the warehouse line of credit to the minicorrespondent, or to an investor related
to the entity providing the warehouse
line of credit?
Æ Does the mini-correspondent’s total
warehouse line of credit capacity bear a
reasonable relationship, consistent with
correspondent lenders generally, to its
size (i.e., its assets or net worth)?
• What changes has the minicorrespondent made to staff,
procedures, and infrastructure to
support the transition from mortgage
broker to mini-correspondent?
• What training or guidance has the
mini-correspondent received to
understand the additional compliance
risk associated with being the lender or
creditor on a residential mortgage
transaction?
• Which entity (mini-correspondent,
warehouse lender, investor) is
performing the majority of the principal
mortgage origination activities?
Æ Which entity underwrites the
mortgage loan before consummation and
otherwise makes the final credit
decision on the loan?
Æ What percentage of the principal
mortgage origination activities, such as
the taking of loan applications, loan
processing, and pre-consummation
underwriting, is being performed by the
mini-correspondent, or an independent
agent of the mini-correspondent?
Æ If the majority of the principal
mortgage origination activities are being
performed by the investor, is there a
plan in place to transition these
activities to the mini-correspondent?
D What conditions must be met to
make this transition (e.g., number of
loans, time)?
This document is intended to provide
guidance to mortgage industry
stakeholders, consumers, and the public
related to the considerations that the
Bureau may employ in the exercise of
its supervisory and enforcement
authority with respect to mortgage
transactions involving minicorrespondents, including mortgage
brokers transitioning into becoming
mini-correspondents. The above list of
questions is not an exhaustive list of the
Bureau’s considerations relevant to the
exercise of its supervisory and
enforcement authorities. In addition, no
single question listed above is
necessarily determinative of how the
Bureau may exercise its supervisory and
enforcement authorities. Furthermore
the facts and circumstances of the
particular mortgage transaction being
E:\FR\FM\17JYN1.SGM
17JYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 137 / Thursday, July 17, 2014 / Notices
reviewed are relevant to the exercise of
these authorities.
Conclusion
The Bureau will closely monitor the
practices of mini-correspondents,
including former mortgage brokers that
have converted to this form, to ensure
that the protections afforded to
consumers under federal consumer
financial law, including the Bureau’s
implementing regulations, are not being
evaded. In doing so, the Bureau will use
all appropriate tools to assess whether
supervisory, enforcement or other
actions are necessary.
IV. Regulatory Requirements
This Policy Guidance is a non-binding
policy guidance articulating
considerations relevant to the Bureau’s
exercise of its supervisory and
enforcement authority under Regulation
X and RESPA, and Regulation Z and
TILA. It is therefore exempt from the
notice and comment rulemaking
requirements under the Administrative
Procedure Act pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
553(b).
Because no notice of proposed
rulemaking is required, the Regulatory
Flexibility Act does not require an
initial or final regulatory flexibility
analysis. 5 U.S.C. 603(a), 604(a).
The Bureau has determined that this
Policy Guidance does not impose any
new or revise any existing
recordkeeping, reporting, or disclosure
requirements on covered entities or
members of the public that would be
collections of information requiring
OMB approval under the Paperwork
Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq.
Dated: July 9, 2014.
Richard Cordray,
Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.
[FR Doc. 2014–16779 Filed 7–16–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–AM–P
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
Public Availability of Consumer
Product Safety Commission FY 2013
Service Contract Inventory
Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
pmangrum on DSK3VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
AGENCY:
The Consumer Product Safety
Commission (CPSC or we), in
accordance with section 743(c) of
Division C of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2010 (Pub. L. 111–
117, 123 Stat. 3034, 3216), is
announcing the availability of CPSC’s
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:01 Jul 16, 2014
Jkt 232001
service contract inventory for fiscal year
(FY) 2013. This inventory provides
information on service contract actions
that exceeded $25,000 that CPSC made
in FY 2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Eddie Ahmad, Procurement Analyst,
Division of Procurement Services,
Division of Procurement Services, U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission,
4330 East West Highway, Bethesda, MD
20814. Telephone: 301–504–7884;
email: aahmad@cpsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On
December 16, 2009, the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2010 (Consolidated
Appropriations Act), Public Law 111–
117, became law. Section 743(a) of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, titled,
‘‘Service Contract Inventory
Requirement,’’ requires agencies to
submit to the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB), an annual inventory of
service contracts awarded or extended
through the exercise of an option on or
after April 1, 2010, and describes the
contents of the inventory. The contents
of the inventory must include:
(A) A description of the services purchased
by the executive agency and the role the
services played in achieving agency
objectives, regardless of whether such a
purchase was made through a contract or task
order;
(B) The organizational component of the
executive agency administering the contract,
and the organizational component of the
agency whose requirements are being met
through contractor performance of the
service;
(C) The total dollar amount obligated for
services under the contract and the funding
source for the contract;
(D) The total dollar amount invoiced for
services under the contract;
(E) The contract type and date of award;
(F) The name of the contractor and place
of performance;
(G) The number and work location of
contractor and subcontractor employees,
expressed as full-time equivalents for direct
labor, compensated under the contract;
(H) Whether the contract is a personal
services contract; and
(I) Whether the contract was awarded on a
noncompetitive basis, regardless of date of
award.
Section 743(a)(3)(A) through (I) of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act.
Section 743(c) of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act requires agencies to
‘‘publish in the Federal Register a
notice that the inventory is available to
the public.’’
Consequently, through this notice, we
are announcing that the CPSC’s service
contract inventory for FY 2013 is
available to the public. The inventory
provides information on service contract
actions over $25,000 that CPSC made in
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
41675
FY 2013. The information is organized
by function to show how contracted
resources are distributed throughout the
CPSC. We developed the inventory in
accordance with guidance issued on
December 19, 2011, by the OMB. (The
OMB guidance is available at: https://
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/
omb/procurement/memo/servicecontract-inventories-guidance11052010.pdf.) The CPSC’s Division of
Procurement Services has posted its
inventory, and a summary of the
inventory can be found at our homepage
at the following link: https://
www.cpsc.gov/About-CPSC/AgencyReports/Service-Contract-Inventory/.
Dated: July 10, 2014.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. 2014–16793 Filed 7–16–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Office of the Secretary
[Docket ID: DoD–2012–OS–0152]
Proposed Collection; Comment
Request
Defense Logistics Agency, DoD.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
In compliance with Section
3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, the Defense
Logistics Agency announces a proposed
public information collection and seeks
public comment on the provisions
thereof. Comments are invited on: (a)
Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency, including whether the
information shall have practical utility;
(b) the accuracy of the agency’s estimate
of the burden of the proposed
information collection; (c) ways to
enhance the quality, utility, and clarity
of the information to be collected; and
(d) ways to minimize the burden of the
information collection on respondents,
including through the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology.
DATES: Consideration will be given to all
comments received by September 15,
2014.
SUMMARY:
You may submit comments,
identified by docket number and title,
by any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
ADDRESSES:
E:\FR\FM\17JYN1.SGM
17JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 137 (Thursday, July 17, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 41671-41675]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-16779]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION
Policy Guidance on Supervisory and Enforcement Considerations
Relevant to Mortgage Brokers Transitioning to Mini-Correspondent
Lenders
AGENCY: Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.
ACTION: Policy Guidance.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (CFPB or Bureau)
is issuing supervisory and enforcement guidance entitled ``Policy
Guidance on Supervisory and Enforcement Considerations Relevant to
Mortgage Brokers Transitioning to Mini-Correspondent Lenders,'' (Policy
Guidance) which relates to the Bureau's exercise of its authority to
supervise and enforce compliance with RESPA and Regulation X and TILA
and Regulation Z in certain transactions involving ``mini-correspondent
lenders.''
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Paul S. Ceja, Senior Counsel and
Special Advisor; Office of Regulations at (202) 435-7700.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
[[Page 41672]]
I. Introduction
The Bureau has become aware of increased interest among some
mortgage brokers to restructure their business to become mini-
correspondent lenders (mini-correspondents) in the possible belief that
doing so will alter the applicability of important consumer protections
that apply to transactions involving mortgage brokers. These
protections include provisions in the Real Estate Settlement Procedures
Act (RESPA) and Regulation X and the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and
Regulation Z, as amended by title XIV of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd-Frank Act). The Bureau
has implemented the title XIV amendments to RESPA and TILA through
final rules amending Regulations X and Z, issued beginning in January
2013. These rules generally took effect in January 2014.
The Bureau is issuing this Policy Guidance to identify for mortgage
industry stakeholders, consumers, and the public generally questions
the Bureau may consider in exercising its supervisory and enforcement
authority under RESPA and TILA with respect to transactions involving
mini-correspondent lenders.
II. Description of Policy Guidance
The Policy Guidance begins by providing background on the Bureau's
concern regarding the shift of some mortgage brokers to the mini-
correspondent lender role, the RESPA and TILA consumer protections
potentially affected by the transition of a mortgage broker to a mini-
correspondent lender, and an overview of correspondent lending. The
Policy Guidance follows this with a discussion of the regulatory
framework under Regulation X and Regulation Z that determines the role
and obligations of the parties in a mortgage transaction. The Policy
Guidance then provides a non-exhaustive list of questions the Bureau
may consider in the exercise of its supervisory and enforcement
authority with respect to transactions involving mini-correspondent
lenders. The Policy Guidance makes clear that no single question listed
in the Policy Guidance is necessarily determinative of how the Bureau
may exercise its supervisory and enforcement authorities. The Policy
Guidance also makes clear that the facts and circumstances of the
particular mortgage transaction being reviewed would be relevant to how
the Bureau exercises these authorities.
The Policy Guidance states that the Bureau will closely monitor the
practices of mini-correspondents, including former mortgage brokers
that have converted to this form, to ensure that the protections
afforded to consumers under federal consumer financial law, including
the Bureau's implementing regulations, are not being evaded. Finally,
the Policy Guidance also states that the Bureau will use all
appropriate tools to assess whether supervisory, enforcement, or other
actions are necessary.
III. Policy Guidance
The text of the Policy Guidance follows:
Policy Guidance on Supervisory and Enforcement Considerations Relevant
to Mortgage Brokers Transitioning to Mini-Correspondent Lenders
The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (CFPB or Bureau) is
issuing this ``Policy Guidance on Supervisory and Enforcement
Considerations Relevant to Mortgage Brokers Transitioning to Mini-
Correspondent Lenders'' (Policy Guidance) to identify the questions the
Bureau may consider in exercising its supervisory and enforcement
authority under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) and
Regulation X and the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and Regulation Z with
respect to mortgage transactions involving mini-correspondent lenders
(mini-correspondents), including transactions involving mortgage
brokers that transition to mini-correspondent lender roles.
Background
The Bureau has become aware of increased mortgage industry interest
in the transition of mortgage brokers from their traditional roles to
mini-correspondent lender roles. The Bureau is concerned that some
mortgage brokers may be shifting to the mini-correspondent model in the
belief that, by identifying themselves as mini-correspondent lenders,
they automatically alter the application of important consumer
protections that apply to transactions involving mortgage brokers.
These protections include provisions in RESPA and Regulation X \1\ and
TILA and Regulation Z,\2\ as amended by title XIV of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd-Frank
Act).\3\ The Bureau has implemented the title XIV amendments to RESPA
and TILA through final rules amending Regulations X and Z, issued
beginning in January 2013. These rules generally took effect in January
2014.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 12 U.S.C. 2601 et seq., 12 CFR part 1024.
\2\ 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq., 12 CFR part 1026.
\3\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regulations X and Z apply certain requirements and prohibitions to
compensation paid to a mortgage broker. These provisions include:
Disclosure of mortgage broker compensation. Regulation X
requires that the lender's compensation to the mortgage broker be
disclosed on the Good-Faith Estimate and HUD-1 Settlement Statement.\4\
By contrast, payments received by the lender from an investor as
compensation for a ``bona fide'' transfer of the loan in the secondary
market need not be disclosed; \5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See 12 CFR part 1024, appendix A and appendix C. The
Bureau's TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosure Rule (78 FR 79730 (Dec.
31, 2013)) effective August 1, 2015, requires that the creditor
compensation's to the mortgage broker be on the Closing Disclosure
(although not on the Loan Estimate). See 12 CFR 1026.38(f)(1).
\5\ 12 CFR 1024.5(b)(7). Coverage under section 8 of RESPA,
implemented at 12 CFR 1024.14, prohibiting the payment of kickbacks
for the referral of settlement services, and splits of charges other
than for services performed, is also implicated by whether
compensation is being paid in a secondary market transaction. For
example, compensation for the sale of a mortgage loan is a secondary
market transaction rather than a referral fee and is ``beyond the
scope of section 8.'' See 12 CFR part 1024, appendix B, illustration
5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Inclusion of mortgage broker compensation in ``points and
fees.'' Under Regulation Z, compensation paid to a mortgage broker by a
consumer or creditor is included in points and fees for purposes of the
points-and-fees cap for ``qualified mortgages'' and for the points-and-
fees test for determining whether a mortgage is a ``high-cost
mortgage'' under the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act
(HOEPA).\6\ Interest paid to a creditor is not included in points and
fees; nor is any compensation a creditor (not otherwise defined as a
``loan originator'' for purposes of the loan originator compensation
restrictions discussed further below) receives from a third party that
purchases the loan included in points and fees; \7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ 12 CFR 1026.32(b)(1)(ii). This section cross references the
definition of ``loan originator'' in 12 CFR 1026.36(a)(1). 12 CFR
1026.36(a)(2) defines ``mortgage broker'' for purposes of Sec.
1026.36, as ``any loan originator that is not an employee of the
creditor.'' See also 12 CFR 1026.32(a)(1)(ii) (threshold for points
and fees for high-cost mortgages); 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(3) (limit on
points and fees for qualified mortgages). See also 15 U.S.C.
1602(bb)(1)(A) (definition of high-cost mortgage); 15 U.S.C.
1602(bb)(4) (points and fees included for high-cost mortgages); 15
U.S.C. 1639c(b)(2)(A)(vii) (limit on points and fees for qualified
mortgages); and 15 U.S.C. 1639c(b)(2)(C) (definition of points and
fees for purposes of qualified mortgages).
\7\ 12 CFR 1026.32(b)(1)(i)(A) (excluding interest from points
and fees); 12 CFR 1026.32(b)(1)(ii) (generally including
compensation paid directly or indirectly by a consumer or creditor
to a loan originator).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 41673]]
Restrictions on mortgage broker compensation. TILA and
Regulation Z \8\ prohibit certain compensation arrangements between
creditors and loan originators, including mortgage brokers.\9\ Mortgage
brokers may not receive compensation from both the consumer and the
creditor or any another person; \10\ and mortgage brokers may not
receive compensation based on loan terms.\11\ These restrictions do not
apply to compensation by a third party, such as an investor, to a
creditor that is not also defined as a loan originator for purposes of
these compensation restrictions; and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See Loan Originator Compensation Requirements Under the
Truth in Lending Act (Regulation Z) 78 FR 11279 (Feb. 15, 2013); see
also Amendments to 2013 Mortgage Rules Under the Equal Credit
Opportunity Act (Regulation B), Real Estate Settlement Procedures
Act (Regulation X), and the Truth in Lending Act (Regulation Z), 78
FR 60382 (Oct.1, 2013).
\9\ In Regulation Z these prohibitions apply to compensation
paid to ``loan originators'' (including ``loan originator
organizations''). See 12 CFR 1026.36(a)(1)(i), (iii). However, for
clarity this Policy Guidance refers to mortgage brokers which, as
noted, are included in the definition of ``loan originator.'' See 12
CFR 1026.36(a)(2) and footnote 6.
\10\ 12 CFR 1026.36(d)(2).
\11\ 12 CFR 1026.36(d)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Prohibition on steering to increase mortgage broker
compensation. TILA and Regulation Z prohibit loan originators,
including mortgage brokers, from ``steering'' consumers to transactions
not in their interest, to increase the mortgage broker's
compensation.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ 12 CFR 1026.36(e).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A correspondent lender, as generally understood in the mortgage
industry, performs the activities necessary to originate a mortgage
loan, i.e., it takes on the tasks usually performed by the originating
lender. The correspondent lender takes and processes applications,
provides required disclosures, and often, although not always,
underwrites loans and makes the final credit approval decision. The
correspondent lender closes loans in its name, funds them (often
through a warehouse line of credit), and sells them to an investor by
prior agreement. A full correspondent lender may have such agreements
with multiple investors.
The Bureau understands that some entities may transition from being
a mortgage broker to being a correspondent lender and, in so doing, may
begin as a small correspondent with agreements with only a few
investors. Entities attempting to move to the role of a correspondent
lender may start by obtaining a warehouse line of credit, typically
from a third-party ``warehouse bank.'' The warehouse line of credit
will provide the funding for the mortgage loans the entities originate
and sell to a third-party investor. Over time, the number of third-
party investors with which the correspondent lender has agreements may
grow.
Since the Bureau issued the title XIV rules, it understands that
some mortgage brokers may be setting up arrangements with wholesale
lenders in which they purport to act as mini-correspondent lenders.
Under such arrangements, the mortgage broker may in form appear to be
the lender or creditor in each transaction by engaging in activities
such as closing the loan in its own name, funding the loan from what is
designated as a warehouse line of credit, and receiving compensation
through what may nominally take the form of a premium for the sale of
the loan to an investor.
However, in substance, these mortgage brokers may not have
transitioned to the mini-correspondent lender role and may be
continuing to serve effectively as mortgage brokers. That is, these
mortgage brokers may continue to facilitate brokered loan transactions
between borrowers and wholesale lenders (i.e., entities which typically
provide the funding for loans in transactions involving mortgage
brokers). For example, the mortgage broker may enter into an
arrangement with a lender designated as an ``investor,'' but that
investor may function as the mortgage broker's wholesale lender, and
not as a purchaser of loans in the secondary market. Such an
``investor'' may continue to perform the same origination activities it
would perform as a traditional wholesale lender for the loans that it
now ``buys'' from the mortgage broker. As well as performing these
functions and agreeing to purchase the loans from the mortgage broker
designated as a ``mini-correspondent, the ``investor'' may also provide
the warehouse line of credit that the ``mini-correspondent'' uses to
fund its loans.
As discussed below, the requirements and restrictions that RESPA
and TILA and their implementing regulations impose on compensation paid
to mortgage brokers do not depend on the labels that parties use in
their transactions. Rather, under Regulation X, whether compensation
paid by the ``investor'' to the ``lender'' must be disclosed depends on
determinations such as whether that compensation is part of a secondary
market transaction, as opposed to a ``table-funded'' transaction.
Likewise, under Regulation Z, whether compensation paid by the
``investor'' to the ``creditor'' must be included in the points-and-
fees calculation and whether the ``creditor'' is subject to the
compensation restrictions as a mortgage broker depends on
determinations such as whether the ``creditor'' finances the
transaction out of its own resources as opposed to relying on table-
funding by the ``investor.''
In exercising its supervisory and enforcement authority, the Bureau
may consider factors that evidence the true nature of the mortgage
transaction, i.e., whether the parties are engaging in good faith in a
secondary market transaction between a lender and a third-party
investor or, in fact, a typical primary market transaction involving a
mortgage broker and a wholesale lender.
Discussion
RESPA and TILA Regulatory Framework: The mortgage broker
compensation requirements imposed by RESPA and Regulation X do not
apply to exempt bona fide secondary-market transactions, but those
requirements do apply to table-funded transactions. Whether a
transaction is deemed to be a bona fide secondary market sale of a loan
turns on the ``real source of funding'' and the ``real interest of the
funding lender.''
Regulation X defines a mortgage broker as a person, other than an
employee of a lender, who renders origination services and serves as an
intermediary between a borrower and lender in a federally-related
mortgage loan transaction, including such a person that closes the loan
in its own name in a ``table-funded transaction.'' \13\ ``Table-
funding'' occurs when the loan is funded by a contemporaneous advance
of loan funds and an assignment of the loan to the person advancing the
funds.\14\ In table-funding, the third party who advances the loan
funds and takes initial assignment of the loan at or after settlement
is the lender for purposes of Regulation X, and the entity which acts
as the intermediary in bringing that lender and the borrower together
is the mortgage broker (even though that entity closes the loan in its
own name).\15\ However, a ``bona fide transfer of a loan obligation in
the secondary-market'' is not covered by RESPA under Regulation X (with
exceptions not relevant here).\16\ Regulation X explains that the
Bureau
[[Page 41674]]
will consider the ``real source of funding'' for the loan and the
``real interest of the funding lender'' in determining what constitutes
a bona fide transfer.\17\ Under Regulation X, a table-funded
transaction is not a secondary-market transaction.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ 12 CFR 1024.2.
\14\ Id.
\15\ Id. A lender is otherwise generally defined as the secured
creditor named on the debt obligation.
\16\ 12 CFR 1024.5(b)(7).
\17\ Id. See also 12 CFR part 1024, appendix B, illustration 5.
\18\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Similarly, the TILA and Regulation Z loan originator compensation
requirements discussed above cover compensation paid to mortgage
brokers in ``table-funded'' transactions. Under Regulation Z, a
creditor is defined in relevant part as a person who regularly extends
credit and to whom the obligation is initially payable on the face of
the note.\19\ For purposes of the loan originator compensation
requirements discussed above, however, a ``loan originator'' is defined
to include such a creditor if it engages in loan origination activity
and ``does not finance the transaction at consummation out of the
creditor's own resources, including by drawing on a bona fide warehouse
line of credit.'' \20\ In other words, the term loan originator, for
purposes of the loan originator requirements discussed above, includes
any creditor that otherwise satisfies the definition of loan originator
and makes use of ``table funding'' by a third party.\21\ A table-funded
transaction is consummated with the debt obligation initially payable
by its terms to one person, but another person provides the funds for
the transaction at consummation and receives an immediate assignment of
the note.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ 12 CFR 1026.2(a)(17).
\20\ 12 CFR 1026.36(a)(1)(i).
\21\ Comment 36(a)-1.i.C.
\22\ Comment 36(a)-1.ii.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By defining mortgage brokers to include entities which close loans
in their own names in table-funded transactions--and by excluding from
RESPA only bona fide secondary-market transactions--Regulation X
recognizes that it is possible to structure transactions that take the
form of the sale of a loan to an investor but where, in substance, the
purchaser functions as the lender and the entity whose name is on the
note is a mortgage broker. Regulation Z recognizes this as well by
defining the term loan originator to include creditors in table-funded
transactions and differentiating between such transactions and those in
which a creditor draws upon a bona fide warehouse line of credit.
Questions the Bureau May Consider in Exercising Its Supervisory and
Enforcement Authority Under RESPA and TILA in Transactions Involving
Mini-Correspondents: As discussed above, the Bureau understands that
some mortgage brokers have successfully transitioned to correspondent
lenders (small or large) that do not act as mortgage brokers in covered
mortgage transactions. Such correspondent lenders often perform a
majority of the principal origination activities with the funds
provided by a bona fide warehouse line of credit. The correspondent
lenders then sell the loans in secondary market transactions to third-
party investors. The Bureau also understands that other mortgage
brokers may be seeking to adopt the form of a mini-correspondent lender
out of a belief that doing so avoids application of various provisions
of Regulations X and Z.
In exercising its supervisory and enforcement authority under RESPA
and TILA in transactions involving mini-correspondents, the Bureau asks
various questions relevant to understanding the true nature of the
mortgage transaction.
Among the questions the Bureau asks are the following:
Beyond the mortgage transaction at issue, does the mini-
correspondent still act as a mortgage broker in some transactions,
either brokering to the same wholesale lender that supplies the
warehouse line of credit or otherwise?
[cir] If so, what distinguishes the mini-correspondent's ``mortgage
broker'' transactions from its ``lender'' transactions?
How many ``investors'' does the mini-correspondent have
available to it to purchase loans?
Is the mini-correspondent using a bona fide warehouse line
of credit as the source to fund the loans that it originates?
[cir] Is the warehouse line of credit provided by a third-party
warehouse bank?
[cir] How thorough was the process for the mini-correspondent to
get approved for the warehouse line of credit?
[cir] Does the mini-correspondent have more than one warehouse line
of credit?
[cir] Is the warehouse bank providing the line of credit one of, or
affiliated with any of, the mini-correspondent's investors that
purchase loans from the mini-correspondent?
[cir] If the warehouse line of credit is provided by an investor to
whom the mini-correspondent will ``sell'' loans to, is the warehouse
line a ``captive'' line (i.e., the mini-correspondent is required to
sell the loans to the investor providing the warehouse line (or
affiliates of the investor))?
[cir] What percentage of the mini-correspondent's total monthly
originated volume is sold by the mini-correspondent to the entity
providing the warehouse line of credit to the mini-correspondent, or to
an investor related to the entity providing the warehouse line of
credit?
[cir] Does the mini-correspondent's total warehouse line of credit
capacity bear a reasonable relationship, consistent with correspondent
lenders generally, to its size (i.e., its assets or net worth)?
What changes has the mini-correspondent made to staff,
procedures, and infrastructure to support the transition from mortgage
broker to mini-correspondent?
What training or guidance has the mini-correspondent
received to understand the additional compliance risk associated with
being the lender or creditor on a residential mortgage transaction?
Which entity (mini-correspondent, warehouse lender,
investor) is performing the majority of the principal mortgage
origination activities?
[cir] Which entity underwrites the mortgage loan before
consummation and otherwise makes the final credit decision on the loan?
[cir] What percentage of the principal mortgage origination
activities, such as the taking of loan applications, loan processing,
and pre-consummation underwriting, is being performed by the mini-
correspondent, or an independent agent of the mini-correspondent?
[cir] If the majority of the principal mortgage origination
activities are being performed by the investor, is there a plan in
place to transition these activities to the mini-correspondent?
[ssquf] What conditions must be met to make this transition (e.g.,
number of loans, time)?
This document is intended to provide guidance to mortgage industry
stakeholders, consumers, and the public related to the considerations
that the Bureau may employ in the exercise of its supervisory and
enforcement authority with respect to mortgage transactions involving
mini-correspondents, including mortgage brokers transitioning into
becoming mini-correspondents. The above list of questions is not an
exhaustive list of the Bureau's considerations relevant to the exercise
of its supervisory and enforcement authorities. In addition, no single
question listed above is necessarily determinative of how the Bureau
may exercise its supervisory and enforcement authorities. Furthermore
the facts and circumstances of the particular mortgage transaction
being
[[Page 41675]]
reviewed are relevant to the exercise of these authorities.
Conclusion
The Bureau will closely monitor the practices of mini-
correspondents, including former mortgage brokers that have converted
to this form, to ensure that the protections afforded to consumers
under federal consumer financial law, including the Bureau's
implementing regulations, are not being evaded. In doing so, the Bureau
will use all appropriate tools to assess whether supervisory,
enforcement or other actions are necessary.
IV. Regulatory Requirements
This Policy Guidance is a non-binding policy guidance articulating
considerations relevant to the Bureau's exercise of its supervisory and
enforcement authority under Regulation X and RESPA, and Regulation Z
and TILA. It is therefore exempt from the notice and comment rulemaking
requirements under the Administrative Procedure Act pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 553(b).
Because no notice of proposed rulemaking is required, the
Regulatory Flexibility Act does not require an initial or final
regulatory flexibility analysis. 5 U.S.C. 603(a), 604(a).
The Bureau has determined that this Policy Guidance does not impose
any new or revise any existing recordkeeping, reporting, or disclosure
requirements on covered entities or members of the public that would be
collections of information requiring OMB approval under the Paperwork
Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq.
Dated: July 9, 2014.
Richard Cordray,
Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.
[FR Doc. 2014-16779 Filed 7-16-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-AM-P