Recipients can’t charge penalties for, or engage in, evictions solely for nonpayment, must provide a written notice of tenant rights, flexibility in repayment and, where applicable, 30-day vacate notices.
-
In memos to their staffs, acting Comptroller of the Currency Brian Brooks and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Kathy Kraninger denounced the violence perpetrated by President Trump's supporters and said both agencies remain in operation.
January 7 -
Deals, trends and research in structured finance and asset-backed securities for the week of Dec. 31-Jan.7
January 7 -
The share of 72-84 month loans is 15.56% in GMF's 2021-1 transaction, up from 12.24% in its prior prime-auto issuance.
January 7 -
The organizations renewed pledges to work with the incoming Biden administration.
January 7 -
Now that Democrats have won control of the Senate following the Georgia runoffs, experts say tax increases, progressive regulators and stricter congressional oversight await. Still, there could be some positives for banks, too.
January 7
-
When the Uniform Residential Loan Application transition deadline hits on March 1, a data set within Fannie Mae’s Desktop Underwriter Program, which many lenders have used for a host of functions, will no longer be supported and unprepared lenders could later experience disruption.
January 6 -
Acting Comptroller of the Currency Brian Brooks pushed back on a recommendation from a task force — appointed by Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — suggesting that Congress should give the CFPB the authority to charter and regulate fintechs.
January 6 -
The first commercial mortgage securitization is backed by eight recently acquired garden-style apartments in five states.
January 6 -
The regulator's demands for ending the action were excessive, Ocwen claimed.
January 6 -
A panel appointed by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau said Congress should consider authorizing the bureau — and not the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency — to issue federal charters to fintech companies.
January 5 -
Seven states and the District of Columbia want to invalidate a new federal rule that threatens to hinder states’ power to cap interest rates on consumer loans.
January 5 -
While the balance of newly delinquent loans fell by 50% from November, the ratings agency warned that many borrowers will likely struggle to bring loans current under ongoing pandemic conditions.
January 5