New Research: Homeowner Bill of Rights Could Speed Economic Recovery

More than 80 percent of California homeowners who received modifications in 2010 stayed current and avoided re-default despite the continued recession, according to a new Center for Responsible Lending analysis. These new data indicate that the Homeowner Bill of Rights is critical for large numbers of borrowers, their communities and the overall California housing market. The legislation, which has undergone...

CRL Statement on Fed/OCC Servicer Compensation

The remedies are deeply inadequate in fundamental ways. The money will too often be too little too late, particularly for borrowers who were wrongfully denied loan modifications. The federal bank regulators continue to withhold too many details from the public, when transparency would be to everyone's benefit. Further, the Sept. 31 st deadline to apply for compensation for borrowers who...

Bankers Nationwide Fight Lending Protections in California

Californians need Attorney General Harris' Homeowner Bill of Rights to fix mortgage lending abuses and speed economic recovery. But lobbyists fighting it in Sacramento have now enlisted mortgage bankers from around the country to help them defeat it. (Read the e-mail sent by the Mortgage Action Alliance, the Mortgage Bankers Association's national e-advocacy division.) The MBA urged members nationwide to...

CRL-California Statement on Gov. Brown's May Revise

California's dire budget situation claimed a new casualty in the governor's May Revise yesterday: $410 million in bank penalty funds from the National Mortgage Settlement intended to assist California homeowners.The governor instead proposed to use the funds to reduce the state's deficit rather than to help borrowers access settlement programs. Attorney General Kamala Harris worked for well over a year...

Predatory Credit Card Practices Hurt Banks’ Bottom Line

Credit card losses in the current downturn mounted faster at banks using unfair, deceptive card practices, new CRL research finds. That's because high-cost penalty fees and interest rates were not used to mitigate risk—as credit card issuers claimed—but instead were the risk that led to higher default rates. Read the report, " Predatory Credit Card Lending: Unsafe, Unsound for Consumers...

Voters Want Missouri to be Fourth State to End 400% Interest Rates by Ballot

Missourians hope to vote in November on a proposal to limit the interest rate on payday, car title, and installment loans. If successful, Missouri will be the fourth state in four years to approve a reduction of interest rates on payday loans from 400% annual interest to 36% or less. The other states include Montana, Arizona, and Ohio, and in...

“Yo-Yo” Car-Dealer Scams Rig the Game, Push Buyers into Bad Loans

Car dealers often target consumers with poor or no credit for yo-yo scams, a new CRL report demonstrates. "Yo-yo scams occur when a dealer leads a car buyer to believe financing is final," says CRL senior researcher Delvin Davis, author of the report, Deal or No Deal: How Yo-Yo Scams Rig the Game against Car Buyers. "The dealer lures the...

End predatory bank payday lending now, 250 groups tell bank regulators

Two hundred and fifty national, state and local organizations and individual advocates have asked bank regulators to stop banks from making predatory payday loans, which carry triple-digit annual interest rates of as much as 400 percent. On Wednesday, a New York consumer group presented a letter signed jointly by the groups to Richard Cordray, Director of the Consumer Financial Protection...

AG Settlement Ends Robo-Signing, Provides Model

"The foreclosure settlement announced today will help build a stronger housing market while keeping more people in their homes. But while a significant step toward fixing the foreclosure crisis, this settlement was never intended or able to provide a comprehensive remedy. Much more work is required. Despite its limitations, the settlement requires real reforms in the mortgage servicing industry to...

CRL Response to Wall Street Journal Editorial (1/31/12) on Payday Lending

Dear Wall Street Journal: Your editorial, "Bashing Payday Lenders; Obama targets another industry that serves low-income Americans," is wrong on every point. Payday lending doesn't help low-income families; it traps them in a cycle of debt leaving them worse off. Imagine paying $90 dollars in interest each month if you carried a $300 credit card balance that you couldn't afford...