Find out why a top-ten mortgage lender with a proprietary loan origination system (LOS) needed to convert from a legacy document platform.
For mortgage lenders, the mortgage process can be daunting, with its myriad regulations and requirements. Among these, the TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosure (TRID) Rule, implemented by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) in 2015, stands out for its impact on disclosure timing and tolerance requirements for mortgage lenders. In the first two posts of this series (Part 1, Part 2) we reviewed some of the key requirements and limitations the TRID Rule imposes on lenders. In this blog post, we’ll delve into some of the legacy thresholds reviewed in TRID examinations as well as provide some useful recommendations for lenders to ensure ongoing TRID compliance.
Overview
The goal of the TRID Rule was to simplify mortgage disclosures and enhance consumer understanding by consolidating the disclosures into more consumer-friendly formats. It integrated the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), requiring lenders to provide borrowers with specific disclosures at various stages of the mortgage process. By receiving disclosures well in advance (a Loan Estimate) and having a waiting period before closing (a Closing Disclosure), the TRID Rule aimed to give borrowers more time to compare offers, ask questions, and make informed choices about their mortgage. The streamlined structure of the disclosures also provides entities buying, securing, or examining loans with a clearer and more consistent way to measure compliance and mitigate risk.
Examination
Examinations are a powerful tool employed by the CFPB and other agencies to assess a lender’s compliance with applicable laws and regulations, including the TRID Rule. While these examinations help ensure that lenders remain in compliance and treat consumers fairly, they can be a real headache for the unprepared lender. The good news is the agencies conducting the examinations, including the CFPB, typically make available their examination playbook so that lenders can be prepared. For the TRID Rule, the CFPB published Subpart C of the TILA Examination Procedures guide to outline the process for lenders. It is important to note, however, the guide also covers the restrictions from both TILA and RESPA before the rules were combined under the TRID Rule. Below we provide an overview of the topics covered under Subpart C of the TILA Exam Procedures guide.
Accuracy Tolerances
The TILA Rule defines the accuracy tolerances required for certain calculations. These tolerances follow the mandate to accurately disclose terms like the finance charge and the annual percentage rate (APR) to consumers who apply for closed-end credits.
Please note for the purposes of right of rescission and foreclosures the thresholds are more stringent.
Other Notable Calculations
While there are no explicit thresholds for the following items, these calculations are still closely reviewed for accuracy:
Disclosure Requirements
Recommendations for Lenders
Lenders can follow a few best practices to mitigate potential issues and become more comfortable with examination procedures. Below are some tips to help be better prepared for upcoming examinations.
Relationship with Vendors
Your due diligence with vendors shouldn’t end once you have signed a contract. It should be an evolving relationship to make sure your needs are met and that you are taking advantage of all the features and services available to you. Below are some areas that you may or may not know that certain vendors offer to help you in your compliance journey.
Most loan origination systems (LOS)POS/LOS have this type of feature through client settings or templates. Some fee services also have this capability so it may be worthwhile to see how the two align and make edits as needed.
Establish Strong Quality Control Systems
An independent quality control system is important and oftentimes a required component of an originator’s structure. QC processes may include different components including underwriting decisioning, process adherence, as well as regulatory compliance. Quality Control can happen before and after a loan closes and can be done internally or externally.
Prefunding
It is recommended that all originators have checks and balances as the live file moves through the origination process to ensure ongoing compliance. Depending on the size of your institution, lenders should aim to have a certain percentage of the expected monthly loan files independently verified by their quality control/compliance team.
Post-Closing
Post-close loan reviews are typically a standard practice for most lenders nowadays, and depending on the size of the institution, all loans may be reviewed. Whether this exercise is conducted monthly or quarterly, make sure you are incorporating a feedback loop to notify relevant parties of repeated issues and solutions to address them.
External Party Reviews
If you are new to operating a quality control system or resources are limited, consider engaging with an external party to complete a portion of the reviews for you. Some QC vendors and law firms have examination preparation or mock audits that pinpoint deficiencies on your current process. It is certainly preferable having a third party identify these weak points in advance and not a regulator during an examination.
Analyze Your Findings!
You have a prefunding and post-closing review process in place. Your team may even provide reports on a regular basis, what else can you do? Analyze and provide a feedback loop of the report findings. Review the previous monthly, quarterly, and annual findings and compare with current findings. Are the same issues occurring at the same frequency? If so, the QC process is not working. The purpose of QC is to address issues and see a reduction or elimination of them in future reviews.
Get to Know Your Examiners
Do not wait to get a notification letter from your regulator to try to figure out what they will be looking for. Make it part of your QC process or even hold mock-audits with a trusted third-party vendor on a regular basis. The majority of the regulators have published their examination procedures online.
Conclusion
While the TRID Rule may somewhat be recent, examinations that cover the TRID Rule also cover thresholds that were introduced well before the CFPB combined TILA and RESPA. Fortunately, there are tools, technology, and vendors available to lenders to ensure consistent and accurate compliance.
If you’re new to the mortgage compliance or quality control space or if it’s just been a while since you have reviewed your procedures, a good place to start and refresh are the regulator and agency sites and their reference materials:
Did You Know?
RegCheck®, Asurity’s automated mortgage compliance solution, allows lenders to detect mortgage compliance issues in real time, saving lenders valuable time and money. In addition, having a third Testing requirements in RegCheck are highly customizable, allowing lenders to quickly identify those issues that matter the most according to their business practices. If you have any questions regarding the TRID functionality in RegCheck, please contact Franci Webster at fwebster@asurity.com.
Karol Villavicencio is the Director of RegCheck Operations and Product Management. With over a decade of residential mortgage experience, she’s held various roles across the loan origination cycle and eventually found a home in the cross-section of technology and mortgage compliance space. As a compliance leader for RegCheck product, Karol looks to pair the advantages of technology with Asurity’s extensive domain expertise to reduce the burden of manual checks and increase visibility to the compliance health of an entity. Karol has taken on a leadership role in the creation of MISMO’s Mortgage Compliance Dataset (MCD). The new dataset will standardize the exchange of information used by state and other regulators for loan portfolio review examinations.
Jonas Hoerler is Chief Regulatory Counsel for RegCheck at Asurity. Jonas has worked in mortgage regulatory compliance for nearly 20 years, acting as staff attorney and later as senior regulatory counsel prior to joining the RegCheck team. In his current role, Jonas manages the legal and compliance requirements of RegCheck and oversees all aspects regarding legislative review and product implementation.
The information provided in this article does not, and is not intended to, constitute legal advice and is presented for general informational purposes only.
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