Why would anyone believe Chris Dodd or Barney Frank would actually do anything for the financial markets that resembles common sense or logic? The problem that caused the collapse of the housing market was designed by Barney Frank back in the 1990's with the help of Bill Clinton's administration.
This is old news, but the question that doesn't seem to go away is how did Barney Frank and Chris Dodd manage to write another bill to control the financial markets and have it pass congress's scrutiny when everyone knew these two men were the authors of the Community Reinvestment Act that caused our economic catastrophic destruction in the first place?
How does a thing like this happen in a sane world? or maybe the world isn't same any longer given the results of the past six years of all aspects of government when the progressive socialist liberal left democrats are in control.
Dodd-Frank Act and Mortgage Reform
Source: Mark A. Calabria, "Mortgage Reform under the Dodd-Frank Act," Cato Institute, January 27, 2014.
February 21, 2014
The Dodd-Frank Act is full of new provisions that will impact the mortgage market, says Mark Calabria, director of financial regulation studies at the Cato Institute.
One financial services law firm has estimated that Dodd-Frank will require 49 different mortgage reform rulemakings, as the reform bill left it to regulators to make most of the changes to the law.
Some of the significant provisions include changes to the "Qualified Mortgage" (QM) and "Qualified Residential Mortgage" (QRM) rules, which have impacts across the board.
One financial services law firm has estimated that Dodd-Frank will require 49 different mortgage reform rulemakings, as the reform bill left it to regulators to make most of the changes to the law.
Some of the significant provisions include changes to the "Qualified Mortgage" (QM) and "Qualified Residential Mortgage" (QRM) rules, which have impacts across the board.
- Impact on predatory lending: The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) issued the QM rule in January 2013, prohibiting lenders from making mortgages unless the lender makes a good faith determination that the borrower has a reasonable ability to repay such a loan. Determining "ability to pay" will be very costly for lenders, and those costs will be passed on to consumers. The law provides a safe harbor -- if lenders meet the definition of a QM, they are safeguarded from liability. QM bans mortgage features such as balloon payments and negative amortization, and limits fees to no more than 3 percent of the loan, among other things.
- Impact on mortgage availability: Because Dodd-Frank is an attempt to remove certain practices and offerings from the mortgage market, choices for borrowers will be reduced. Self-employed borrowers are likely to see the greatest reduction in mortgage availability, thanks to new Dodd-Frank documentation requirements.
- Impact on mortgage default: It does not appear that the new QM and QRM rules will have a strong impact on defaults, and any reduction could be offset by other Dodd-Frank rules regarding the foreclosure process that actually could increase defaults.
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