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Don’t Forget RESPA/TILA Changes Are Coming

Home Marketing
By Ken Trepeta
October 1, 2013, 5 pm
Reading Time: 2 mins read

dv1693025In all the excitement over the qualified mortgage, qualified residential mortgage, and Basel III capital rules, as well as the introduction of GSE and FHA reform, it is easy to forget that a major rule still remains to be finalized—the RESPA/TILA harmonization rule. Some may have forgotten the 1,100-page proposal, but the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) most certainly has not, and a final rule has been promised for fall 2013.

The rule was proposed in late summer 2012, and then largely forgotten as the CFPB scrambled to finalize rules that had 2013 deadlines. As with any proposal of its length, it was a mixed bag of good, bad and ugly. The good was the upfront disclosure. While it was a far cry from the simple one-page form promised by CFPB when it began its “Know before You Owe” campaign, it did seem to do a reasonable job aligning the RESPA Good Faith Estimate (GFE) and the TILA disclosure (TIL) in the document they refer to as the “loan estimate.” It remains to be seen what changes the CFPB makes in the upfront disclosure, but of all the elements of the proposal, this seemed to be the most well thought out.

The bad, or ugly, was the proposed transformation of the two laws and the attempt to create a unified settlement statement incorporating the HUD-1 and the final TIL, called the “closing disclosure.” The CFPB decided to propose implementing a three-day waiting period for the combined document, meaning it must be in the consumer’s hand—and accurate—three days prior to closing. NAR strongly discouraged changing the settlement process, or in the alternative, encouraged the CFPB to give consumers the ability to waive the three-day period. Many in the industry say we should be able to get these documents together and finalized three days prior to closing. It is certainly something to aspire to, but real estate transactions remain complex and decisions are not always made promptly, especially by consumers. Therefore, it is essential that consumers have the flexibility to at least waive issues that might cause closing delays.

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