| MBA Demonstrates Interest in Risk Retention Proposals |
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| Secondary Market | |||
| Wednesday, 30 March 2011 19:37 | |||
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The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) responded rapidly to the publication of suggested rules for the Qualified Residential Mortgages (QRMs), the mortgages which will be left out of the risk retention lineaments of the Dodd-Frank Act. John A. Courson, President and CEO of the MBA said that it will take time for the Association to judge the complexity of regulations. And as well he also said he had a big concern about its impact on residential mortgage financing and the "the nation's economy today and for generations to come." Courson cited the "rigid and highly prescriptive nature of the proposed rule,” because this narrow definition of the risk retention exemption would restrain mortgage chances for qualified borrowers more than it would decrease the quantity of problems loans. If the plan followed as proposed, Courson said, it would as well reduce the role for independent mortgage banks and community lenders which, disregarding long histories as safe lenders may enable the balance sheets or capital to maintain loans or reserve against risk. The regulations need certain underwriting standards like including maximum front-end and back-end debt-to-income rations of 28 percent and 36 percent respectively, a loan-to-value ratio of 80 percent for purchase mortgages and 75 percent for credit restrictions including an absence of 60 day delinquencies for a two year period prior the loan. MBA state that meantime these factors can be exact predictors of loan performance, they shouldn´t be analyzed alone and the rule should permit for flexibility in analyzing each of the component portions. By: Enma Diaz, Editor
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| Last Updated on Wednesday, 30 March 2011 20:41 |
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