DS News

DS News March 2022

DSNews delivers stories, ideas, links, companies, people, events, and videos impacting the mortgage default servicing industry.

Issue link: http://digital.dsnews.com/i/1457832

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 26 of 99

25 NONBANK MORTGAGE SERVICERS SHOULD EXPECT INCREASED REGULATOR SCRUTINY According to Fitch Ratings, nonbank mortgage servicers should expect increased regulatory scrutiny in the coming months as pandemic-related government forbearance programs expire and borrowers transition into other permanent loss mitigation alternatives or default. "e U.S. mortgage industry is subject to extensive federal- and state-level regulations, which rapidly evolved during the economic fallout from the pandemic amid the transition to more automated and remote business platforms," Fitch said. "e Consumer Finance Protection Bureau has prioritized mortgage servicing oversight under the new administration." An increase in fines and/or higher regulatory capital requirements could be seen with the possible reintroduction of the Federal Housing Finance Agency's (FHFA) increased net worth, liquidity ,and capital requirements following two years of record profitability. About eight million homeowners have enrolled in some sort of forbearance or loss mitigation programs since the COVID-19 pandemic started in March 2020. About six million homeowners have since exited these programs. ese programs have played a key role in keeping the 30-day delinquency transition rate down; the rate fell from 3.4% in April 2020 to 0.7% in October 2021. April 2020 also was also marked as a peak period for consumer complaints against servicers. e national delinquency rate was 3.38% in December, 10 basis points above the record low seen in February 2020. However, loans in active foreclosure were at an all-time low in December 2021; the rate of foreclosure stood at 0.24% with 4,100 foreclosure starts, 90% below levels seen over the same period in 2019 before the pandemic started. Fitch is expecting foreclosure activity to pick up this year, which likely means additional regulatory scrutiny. e 90-day delinquency rate in December 2021 was twice what it was before the pandemic, but 30-day delinquencies were lower than they historically were due to an improving economic situation. According to Fitch research, forbearance plans for nonprime, nonbank servicers, which peaked at 71% of all loan workout options in the Q1of 2021, saw a 10% decline by Q3 as borrowers exited forbearance agreements, while the number of loan modifications tripled to 19% from 6.6% year over year. Journal

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of DS News - DS News March 2022