Source : Channel NewsAsia, 15 July 2008
WASHINGTON - The US Federal Reserve on Monday tightened home mortgage lending in a bid to improve consumer protection from practices blamed in part for the worst US real-estate crisis in decades.
The Fed said its board of governors approved rules for home mortgage loans "to better protect consumers and facilitate responsible lending."
"The proposed final rules are intended to protect consumers from unfair or deceptive acts and practices in mortgage lending, while keeping credit available to qualified borrowers and supporting sustainable homeownership," Fed chairman Ben Bernanke said in a statement.
"Importantly, the new rules will apply to all mortgage lenders, not just those supervised and examined by the Federal Reserve."
The new rules address two categories: all home mortgages and a newly defined category of "higher-priced mortgage loans" -- effectively the subprime, or high-risk, home loans at the heart of spiraling loan defaults that burst a housing bubble two years ago.
In the sub-prime category, lenders will have to assess borrowers' ability to repay the loan, verify their income sources and will be barred from penalising prepayment except in certain circumstances.
For all home mortgage loans, the rules prohibit certain practices such as pyramiding late fees, coercing a real-estate appraiser to misstate a home's value and providing deceptively low cost estimates for the loan.
"Although the high rate of delinquency has a number of causes, it seems clear that unfair or deceptive acts and practices by lenders resulted in the extension of many loans, particularly high-cost loans, that were inappropriate for or misled the borrower," Bernanke said.
The approved rules mainly encompass proposals the Fed made in December. Most of them take effect on October 1, 2009. - AFP /ls
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