The CFPB has made it crystal clear that you credit unions are playing by a different set of rules than the banks, and not to your benefit driving many out of mortgage lending.AZGrizFan wrote:As a "smart lender", if we waited 3 years to foreclose on a property just because "it was so upside down" we didn't want it back we'd get flame sprayed by the regulators for misstating our financials, not doing our fiduciary responsibility, and get thrown out on our ear. But I guess that's just the credit union industry.blueballs wrote:
Not to change the subject because it is so entertaining but we saw quite a bit of that here in Florida during the meltdown and subsequent (lukewarm) recovery.
Smart lenders and servicers would file a lis pendens, get the foreclosure judgment but never enforce the certificate of title and then let the property sit because it was so upside down and the occupant was still maintaining it. As soon as the values started to rise "bang" they enforced the judgment and kicked the former mortgagor out and resold it.
In other situations they rushed to get the judgment (however shady it was, remember the "robosignings'") becasue they had hedge funds waiting to pay retail for the properties and they could get HAFA $$$ out of it.
Yet another example of the unfair regulatory stranglehold Obama has put on the industry through Dodd Frank... of course you, 89Hen, and me are the only ones who have even the vaguest idea of what I'm referring to.




