Tag: RESPA/TILA disclosures

We’ve all been hearing about consolidation, “the new normal” and other varieties of the end-of-the-world-as-we-know it now for about six years.  There’s no doubt that the mortgage industry (including its satellite in the title and settlement services world) has changed.  We have a new sheriff in town with a much bigger sidearm.  We’ve got a lot more attention focused on us.  And we’ve had a market turbulent and inconsistent enough to make most of us believe that “upheaval” would be a calmer state than what we see now.

And yet, through it all, I’ve seen a tremendous number of players sticking to their guns, playing the game the way it has always been played.

Until this year.

Ok.  Maybe it's not THIS bad.  But it never hurts to prepare...

Ok. Maybe it’s not THIS bad. But it never hurts to prepare…

Although you’d have to be living under a rock, lodged under a larger rock in the back of a cave, not to have heard about the changes happening now (ATR, QM, soft market/impending purchase market) and in the future (possible GSE “reform,” RESPA/TIL disclosure form change), there do seem to be some cave dwellers out there when it comes to compliance.  That’s not meant to be disparaging.  But it’s the truth.  I’m hearing things like “August, 2015 (the date the RESPA/TIL forms become reality) is a long way away.  I have to find a way to stay in business until then, first.”  A good number of title professionals I talk to are paying attention to the regulatory changes affecting their operations and doing their best to comply.  But they’re much, much more focused on where the next orders will come from.  Compliance is affecting the market.  And while the CFPB or any state regulator can put you out of business for failure to comply, a lack of orders will put you out of business. Period.

Which leads me to believe that maybe, just maybe, we’re not dealing with cave dwellers after all, but rather, reality.

It’s tough making a living in the title industry these days.  Compliance is not an optional course, but if you’re struggling to keep the lights on, preparing for next month or next year’s rule may not seem realistic.

This is the point, of course, where I should be telling you that now’s the time to figure out how to cut costs.  There’s great tech out there, legitimate outsourcing and other ways of optimizing your business to ensure you’re not wasting a dime.  Most of this, however, can be expensive and/or painful in the short term.  One doesn’t just snap one’s fingers and awaken to a whole new way of business.  Then again, the alternat

However, it appears to me that, this time, a “new normal” really is emerging.  Hunkering down no longer seems to be an option.  While the mortgage lending industry will indeed stabilize eventually, it won’t be going back to the way it was in 2006.  And those who survive will really be those willing to make some life-changing decisions now.