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Andy9999
19th April 2011, 11:08 AM
Assholes :boohoo

where were they 5-7 years ago????



On Tuesday April 19, 2011, 11:25 am EDT
By Dave Clarke

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Lenders would be required to make sure prospective borrowers have the ability to repay their mortgages before giving them a loan, under a proposal released by the Federal Reserve on Tuesday.

The rule, which is required by the Dodd-Frank financial reform law, is intended to tighten lending standards and combat home lending abuses that contributed to the 2007-2009 financial crisis.

The rule would establish minimum underwriting standards for most mortgages and lenders could be sued by the borrower if they do not take the proper steps to check a borrowers ability to repay the loan.

The law does provide protections from this type of liability if a loan meets the specific standards that are part of a "qualified mortgage."

In its proposal, the Fed is seeking comment on two possible ways of defining a qualified mortgage.

Under the first scenario the loan could not include interest-only payments, a balloon payment and regular payments could not result in the principle of the loan increasing.

Under the alternative, the loan would have to meet all the standards laid out under the first option and meet additional requirements such as having the lender verify a borrower's employment status and debt obligations.

The proposal lays out a general standard for complying with the rule, including verifying a borrowers income, their employment and the amount of debt they have.

Mortgage originators who serve rural and underserved areas would be allowed to give out loans with balloon payments.

"This option is meant to preserve access to credit for consumers located in rural or underserved areas where creditors may originate balloon loans to hedge against interest rate risk for loans held in portfolio," the Fed said in a statement.

The Fed is seeking comments on the proposal through July 22.

The final rule will be implemented by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which opens its doors on July 21.

(Reporting by Dave Clarke and Corbett B. Daly; Editing by Neil Stempleman

Sparky
19th April 2011, 12:33 PM
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Lenders would be required to make sure prospective borrowers have the ability to repay their mortgages before giving them a loan, under a proposal released by the Federal Reserve on Tuesday.

When you read this opening line, it's like you're waiting for the punch line somewhere.

Here's the thing: Once again, they are trying to achieve the opposing missions of reducing defaults and foreclosures while still loaning money to anyone who wants to buy a house. Impossible.

Note that they outline no definition of "qualified buyer", they still don't require a minimum down payment, and yet it gives the buyer the right to sue the lender for loaning them money if they default! This is a recipe for disaster.

Man, you couldn't make this sh!t up.

Andy9999
19th April 2011, 12:50 PM
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Lenders would be required to make sure prospective borrowers have the ability to repay their mortgages before giving them a loan, under a proposal released by the Federal Reserve on Tuesday.

:boohoo :boohoo :boohoo
Man, you couldn't make this sh!t up.

Horn
19th April 2011, 01:01 PM
My best interpretation of it is, that the lenders must be ready willing & able to provide slave labor to the tenants should they become unemployed by not being able to put gas in their tank?

Ponce
19th April 2011, 01:30 PM
But look as to who is coming up with the new rules (for your convinience) THE FED.......nothing good can come out of this.

Andy9999
19th April 2011, 01:51 PM
But look as to who is coming up with the new rules (for your convinience) THE FED.......nothing good can come out of this.


WHERE THE F@@k WERE THEY BEFORE IN 1996??? :boohoo :boohoo

madfranks
19th April 2011, 02:06 PM
Lenders would be required to make sure prospective borrowers have the ability to repay their mortgages before giving them a loan

The above is competent business practice and would be the way loans would be made if it weren't for all the regulation controlling who must get loans and at what rates, which results in mal-investment as we all know. The answer is simple, the gov't needs to get out of the way and let the market work.

Would you mortgage your house to a trashy black single mom with 5 kids living on welfare with no potential for self sufficiency? Neither would I, and neither would anyone else except when the gov't forces them to do so.

Olmstein
19th April 2011, 08:02 PM
There is no loan. The reason for this is that there is no money.


Interesting.