Feds ask: Is that mortgage really right for you? |
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Consumer advocates believe that lenders should subject
that last group to some sort of suitability test -- "some duty
to the borrower to make sure they're not put in a loan that's not
appropriate," says Stella Adams, executive director of the
North Carolina Fair Housing Center.
Adams imagines a trade group coming
up "with a general script that explains the differences between
the products and is uniformly applied, so that people can hear an
explanation. I tell you, three-page disclosures with 'wherefores'
and 'therefores' don't cut it."
Screening out the worst
A suitability standard "would put some obligation on some part
of mortgage lenders and mortgage brokers to not squeeze people into
loans where they have no reasonable prospect of being able to repay
them," says Allen Fishbein, director of housing and credit
policy for the Consumer Federation of America.
If that sounds imprecise, that's because it is. A
suitability standard would be applied subjectively in a lot of cases.
It would screen out egregiously risky loans.
Adams and Fishbein spoke in favor of suitability
tests at the FTC workshop. Bankers countered that the lending industry
has built-in suitability standards. Riskier borrowers pay higher
interest rates and sometimes must buy mortgage insurance. Mortgages
are bundled together and sold on the secondary market to investors,
who have powerful analytical tools to gauge just how risky a particular
pool of loans is.
"If loans are being underwritten that
will inevitably fail, there will be no buyers for those loans on
the secondary market," says Robert McKew, general counsel for
the American Financial Services Association. "The secondary
market acts as a regulator in addition to government regulation."
But consumer advocates argue that the secondary market
allows the mortgage industry to view foreclosures as just another
cost of doing business. One foreclosure in a package of hundreds
of loans is a blip on an investor's computer screen, but it's long-lasting
trauma to the family that loses a house.
Businesses can insulate themselves from high-risk
loans, but the same can't be said for homeowners, Alys Cohen, staff
attorney for the National Consumer Law Center, said at the workshop.
"Should all the risk be on the borrower?" she asks. "Is
that a fair assumption in light of the market today?"
Ultimately, burden falls to
consumers
No, it's not a fair assumption, says Peter Macdonald, general counsel
for LendingTree Loans. Lenders bear reputational and regulatory
risk, he says: The press and the government jump on lenders' backs
if they are poor citizens.
"Ultimately, suitability is about financial
literacy," Macdonald says. "That can't be just within
the industry. The American public can and will rise to the challenge
of learning how these loans work."
Michael Williams, vice president for legislative
affairs for The Bond Market Association, agrees that "you have
to put the burden on the consumer to be educated." On the other
hand, he says, people don't want to be educated. They just want
the loan.
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